05/29/2026
America 250: Aurora’s Story - The Flood That Changed Aurora
As America prepares to mark its 250th anniversary, the Aurora Historical Society is looking back at the local stories that shaped our community, not only moments of celebration, but also moments of loss, resilience, and change.
One of those moments came in March 1913, when the Great Flood swept across Ohio. In Aurora, floodwaters along Silver Creek destroyed remnants of one of the community’s early industrial centers, including the old mill and factory landscape that had once helped power pioneer-era Aurora.
Across Ohio, the Great Flood of 1913 remains one of the state’s most devastating weather disasters, affecting communities throughout the region and reshaping how Ohioans thought about water, infrastructure, and public safety.
For Aurora, the flood reminds us that history is not only found in grand monuments or famous names. Sometimes it is found in a creek bed, a washed-out mill site, a forgotten factory foundation, or a story passed down because someone understood that change itself was worth remembering.
As we commemorate America 250, we honor Aurora’s place in the larger American story: a community shaped by pioneers, industry, disaster, rebuilding, and memory.
📍 Do you have family stories, photographs, or memories connected to Silver Creek, Aurora’s early mills, or the 1913 flood? We would love to hear from you.
Learn more by clicking here: https://youtu.be/W55jp2o85E8?si=1d4NdYHk6u9b2Pvf