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Campus Alert Archive
ECU

The Flood of the Century Strands ECU as the Tar River Drowns Greenville

NChurricaneemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Hurricane Floyd struck eastern North Carolina on September 16, 1999, dumping 15 to 20 inches of rain that pushed the Tar-Pamlico River over its banks and submerged much of Greenville and the East Carolina University campus. The university canceled classes and used radio, telephone trees, and word of mouth to tell students to shelter or evacuate as floodwaters cut off roads in and out of campus. Damage to Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium and other facilities forced ECU to move its September 25 football game against Miami to Raleigh.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
East Carolina University
Public R2 · NC
Campus radio, telephone tree, and local media (pre-mass-notification era)
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPhone
Approximate reconstruction278 chars
Hurricane Floyd is expected to make landfall in eastern North Carolina overnight. The University will be closed and all classes are canceled. Students remaining on campus should stay indoors, away from windows, and monitor local radio for instructions. Do not attempt to travel.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed: in 1999 ECU had no mass-text or mass-email system, so closure word spread via campus radio, residence-hall staff, telephone trees, and local broadcasters rather than a single verbatim alert.
The instruction to avoid travel proved critical: within hours flooded roads cut off the campus, stranding students who had not left.
UPDATEother
Approximate reconstruction261 chars
Severe flooding has closed roads throughout Greenville and Pitt County. The Tar River is over flood stage. Stay where you are unless directed to evacuate by emergency officials. Boil any water before drinking. The University remains closed until further notice.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed from the documented sequence of events; the flooding of the Tar-Pamlico watershed is confirmed by the National Weather Service service assessment.
Boil-water guidance reflects the contamination of the Greenville water supply documented during the Floyd flood recovery.
Context

Background

Hurricane Floyd made landfall near Cape Fear as a Category 2 storm on September 16, 1999, but its lasting damage in eastern North Carolina came from rainfall, not wind. The storm dropped 15 to 20 inches of rain onto soil already saturated by Hurricane Dennis weeks earlier, sending the Tar-Pamlico River to record levels and inundating Greenville and the East Carolina University campus. ECU's Joyner Library Special Collections documents how flooding forced the evacuation of several thousand students and employees and shut the university for days. With no modern mass-notification system, the university relied on campus radio, residence-hall staff, telephone trees, and local television and radio to tell people to shelter or get out before roads flooded. The damage was so severe that ECU's September 25 home football game against Miami had to be relocated to Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh, where the Pirates won 27-23. Floyd is remembered as the 'flood of the century' for eastern North Carolina and reshaped how the region and its universities plan for inland flooding.
Analysis

Key Findings

Floyd's damage at ECU came from inland flooding of the Tar-Pamlico River, not hurricane-force wind
With no mass-notification system in 1999, ECU used radio, telephone trees, and word of mouth to communicate closures and shelter guidance
Flooded roads stranded students on campus, underscoring why pre-landfall evacuation timing mattered
The disaster forced ECU to relocate a home football game and closed the university for several days
Outcome
No ECU student deaths were reported on campus, but the flooding forced thousands of students and employees to relocate, closed the university for several days, and caused widespread water damage to residence halls and academic buildings.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Source
  3. Report
Tags
hurricanefloodingnorth-carolinahistoricpre-modern-alerttar-riverevacuation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion