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Here's an image from the Facebook page
Mistakes on the Lake (haha) regarding the historic flooding seen in Cleveland. The view - if you aren't familiar - is the browse barn and Steffee Center, with the iconic Rainforest dome peeking over the trees at the top.
It's a stark reminder of the difficulties associated with continued expansion at the zoo. It is and always has been built on a floodplain of the Big Creek and occasionally the creek likes to remind everyone of that fact.
I recall the legend of the old Reptile Collection, which was housed in the basement of the original central building of the zoo. It existed in the same spot where this photo was taken if I'm remembering correctly.
In January 1959, the Big Creek flooded and inundated the entirety of the building, wiping out the entire collection - some 150 exotic reptiles - in the basement. The only survivors (the legend goes) were two turtles that held their breath long enough to be rescued. As a result, there wasn't a substantial reptile collection at the zoo until the Rainforest was constructed. It also (partly) explains the moats built for the bear grottos in WIlderness Trek.
I heard the story, not from the CMZ (although they acknowledge the incident on
their website) but the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. They benefitted from the tragedy by acquiring all the deceased reptiles. You can see many of the victims on display in the museum's galleries today.
That's a firsthand account from the late Larry Isard, the museum's taxidermist for decades.