L'Abue et Mathaux, France, 1910
Featured on this Vintage postcard is a black & white photograph of the devasting flooding in France that occurred on the 20th and 21st of January 1910. The location is in the Aube department in north central France. The number 10 and L’Aube et Mathaux is found at the bottom center. At the upper right, the event is identified as the floods, “Les Inondations á BAR sur AUBE (20 et 21 Janvier 1910. (G.L.)” The initials (G.L.) may be the photographer’s. No other information about the publisher or photographer is found on the card. This is a used card with a divided back that is postmarked 7/3/1910. The handwritten note has the date 3/7/10. This makes it difficult to tell if the date was the 7th of March or the 3rd of July. Usually European dates read DD/MM/YYYY unlike American dates that generally are written MM/DD/YYYY.
In the winter of 1909-1910 there were historic storms in Marseille and Toulon and higher than usual rainfall in many other parts of the country that saturated the ground. In addition, exceptionally warm weather caused snow melt resulting in rivers rising to flood stage in many different areas of France. There were several French rivers that reached flood stage causing considerable damage.
This would be considered a historically interesting card since it shows the result of a notable and catastrophic event. Although there are no people shown in the photograph it is possible to see flooding impacting the lower levels of the buildings, the road over run with water, and the trees with water up the trunks. The place is Mathaux, a small community within the Aube department.
For additional information, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathaux
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1910_Great_Flood_of_Paris
https://en.wikipedia.org./wiki/January_1910_Doubs-river-flood















































