FloodZoneMap.org

Flash Flood — Laclede, MO

Mar 18, 2008

Excessive rainfall developed over southern Missouri during the evening of 17 March. A line of training convection assumed a position roughly along a line from Anderson to Ozark to Licking. This convection expanded with time, eventually covering nearly all of extreme southeast Kansas and the Missouri Ozarks. Moderate to heavy rain continued into the overnight period and did not stop until the morning of 19 March.

Source: NOAA National Weather Service Storm Events Database (event 89098). Narrative written by NWS staff at the time of the event.

Flood Risk Context for Laclede, MO

This event is one of many recorded floods in Laclede County. See the full FEMA flood zone map, NFIP claim totals, and disaster history for the area.

View Laclede County flood data →

More Flood Stories

Flash Flood1 death$5.5M damage

Laclede, MO · Aug 20, 2007

The remnants of Tropical Storm Erin produced significant flash flooding along a line from northern Jasper County to northern Laclede County. Numerous roads were washed out across Lawrence, Greene, Polk, Dallas, and Webster counties. This prompted several water rescues.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood1 death

Laclede, MO · Jan 10, 2020

During the afternoon and evening of the 10th, strong to severe thunderstorms developed ahead of a cold front over eastern Oklahoma and southeast Kansas before spreading northeast into the Missouri Ozarks through the early morning of the 11th.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$1.0M damage

Laclede, MO · Apr 30, 2017

Multiple rounds of severe thunderstorms and extremely heavy rainfall over several days led to historic and devastating flash floods, record breaking river levels, large hail, wind damage, and at least one tornado across the Missouri Ozarks region.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$10K damage

Laclede, MO · Jan 10, 2020

During the afternoon and evening of the 10th, strong to severe thunderstorms developed ahead of a cold front over eastern Oklahoma and southeast Kansas before spreading northeast into the Missouri Ozarks through the early morning of the 11th.

Read the full account →