#30 Postby donsutherland1 » Wed Dec 10, 2003 3:56 pm
Speaking of winters in the late 1700s, one of the harshest such winters was the Winter of 1779-80. During that winter the waters around NYC froze completely and navigation was shut down for several weeks. Jefferson reported that the Chesepeake Bay froze solid to the mouth of the Potomac.
At the same time, there was a memorable blizzard on January 2-4, 1780.
At the time, George Washington was based at Morristown, NJ. He wrote the following in his diary:
"2d. Very cold--about noon it began to Snow, & continued without intermission through the day, & night. The wind high & variable, but chiefly from the west and No. West.
3d. The same weather as yesterday--to wit cold & stormy--wind from the same point.
4th. Very cold with high winds from the west & No. West and intermitting Snow."
In his January 5, 1780 correspondence to the Continental Congress, Washington wrote that the blizzard "has so blocked up the roads that it will be some days before the scanty supplies in this quarter can be brought to Camp."
In a January 8, 1780 letter to the Magistrates of New Jersey, Washington explained, "The distress we feel is chiefly owing to the early commencement and uncommon rigor of the Winter, which have greatly obstructed the transportation of our supplies."
Near the end of the winter, in his March 18, 1780 letter to Lafayette, Washington recounted, "The oldest people now living in this Country do not remember so hard a Winter as the one we are now emerging from In a word, the severity of the frost exceeded anything of the kind that had ever been experienced in this climate before."
Anyway, back to the present. Look for the artillery of raindrops to pound away at the slowly retreating snowcover beginning under the cover of darkness and thick fog tonight. However, winter looks prepared to counterattack following this temporary setback. The next storm continues to look far more wintry for many of us in the region, especially in interior sections of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. And in the long-range, there is genuine prospect of more snow and possibly an outbreak of Arctic cold.
0 likes