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Water from the Spicket River in Methuen, Mass. surges over a granite block dam in danger of collapse Tuesday. Rivers across the region crested and driving rains that drenched New England the past week let up Tuesday as New England began to assess the full scope of the damage caused by the worst flooding since the 1930s.
Water from the Spicket River in Methuen, Mass. surges over a granite block dam in danger of collapse Tuesday. Rivers across the region crested and driving rains that drenched New England the past week let up Tuesday as New England began to assess the full scope of the damage caused by the worst flooding since the 1930s.
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Methuen, Mass. – Driving rains that caused the worst flooding in New England since the 1930s finally eased up Tuesday, but washed-out roads and the danger of dam breaks prevented many people from returning to their homes.

More than a foot of rain fell across New Hampshire, Massachusetts and southern Maine between Friday and Tuesday, with up to 17 inches in some places. No deaths or serious injuries were reported.

Gov. Mitt Romney said the damage would reach tens of millions of dollars in Massachusetts alone. And more rain was forecast for the weekend.

But on Tuesday, the worst appeared to be over. In Maine, roads reopened and the threat against two dams on the Salmon Falls River eased.

In Methuen, Mass., state and federal engineers watched a granite dam in danger of collapse after it was reinforced with 5,000 sandbags.

Many property owners began cleaning up, although major rivers remained above flood stage.

Jeffrey Saba, 42, used a 20-foot canoe to inspect his swamped home in Lowell, Mass., near the swollen Merrimack River. The water flooded Saba’s garage and rose past his deck, 10 feet off the ground. “I just canoed over a 6-foot fence,” Saba said.

Water flooded the first floor of a nursing home in Lawrence, forcing officials to cut power to the place and evacuate 200 residents.

In Haverhill, officials worked to repair a burst sewage pipe dumping tens of millions of gallons of waste per day into the Merrimack River. State environmental officials said that the sewage posed no immediate threat to public health, and that a temporary fix should be in place by Friday.

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