Forty years ago, Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River caught fire.
People still joke about it today. But the Cuyahoga today is much, much cleaner than the oil- and debris-polluted Cuyahoga that ignited June 22, 1969.
Clevelanders recently held a lighthearted celebration to mark the event’s 40th anniversary. The menu centered on smoked or fire-roasted snacks, provided by the brewers of Burning River Pale Ale.
The U.S. Environmental Protection agency said the Lake Erie tributary supports much more life than it did then. A 2008 survey revealed 60 species of fish in the river, compared with 23 in a 1984 study.
The Cuyahoga’s comeback roughly parallels that of West Virginia’s Kanawha River, which in the late 1960s was too polluted to support carp. Now it’s one of the Mountain State’s top mixed-bag fisheries, with vibrant populations of bass, catfish, sauger, walleye and muskellunge.