Contents
Great Blizzard of 1899
The Great Blizzard of 1899, also known as the Great Arctic Outbreak of 1899 and the St. Valentine's Day Blizzard, was an exceptionally severe winter weather event that affected most of the United States, particularly east of the Rocky Mountains. On February 11, Swift Current in present-day Saskatchewan reported a record-high barometric pressure of 31.42 inHg. While there was heavy snow during this event, the 1899 storm was most noted for the record cold it brought to several areas of the USA, including the first (and only) below 0 F temperature ever recorded in Florida, when the state capital Tallahassee in the extreme northern Panhandle recorded −2 F.
Temperatures and records
Based on the 1895 to 2024 period of record:
Winter weather
On February 12, snow flurries were observed in the air (briefly) in a few areas from New Orleans eastward to Tampa. The storm crossed the Florida peninsula with rain and wind, then intensified as it moved rapidly up the east coast. High Point, North Carolina, recorded 10 - 12 in of snow. Washington, D. C. recorded a single-day snowfall of 20.5 in, which was a record for the time. (On January 28, 1772, 36 in of snow fell in the Washington area during the "Washington and Jefferson Snowstorm"; however that was before official record-keeping began. ) On February 19, ice floes were reported to be moving out of the Mississippi River into the Gulf of Mexico. On February 14, New Orleans dropped to 6 °F, an all-time record. The previous day, the city experienced its coldest-ever Mardi Gras with a minimum of 7 °F. The low temperature in Miami, Florida, on February 14 dropped to 29 °F with a high of only 48 F. The city has only recorded a lower temperature twice since record-keeping commenced on September 6, 1895. The low temperature in Tallahassee, Florida dropped to -2 F on February 13, 1899 with a record low maximum of 22 F on the 14th. This is the only time to this day that sub-0 F temperatures have ever been recorded in Florida.
Casualties, damages and inconveniences
The Great Arctic Outbreak of 1899 had disastrous impact across many areas of the continental U.S. and Cuba as people, livestock, and wildlife succumbed to the frigid cold. Bird populations were decimated across the nation. Henderson County, Tennessee saw nearly the complete extinction of its bluebird population and Culpeper County, as well as most northern and central Virginia counties lost nearly all of its quail, having to import new birds in the late teens and 1920s to repopulate the areas. Some of the bird species affected: Bluebird, Blue-headed vireo, Catbirds, Chipping sparrow, Dark-eyed junco (also known as snowbird), Fox sparrow, Grass finch, Hermit thrush, Killdeer, Meadowlark, Mourning dove, Pine warbler, Quail, Savannah sparrow, Song sparrow, Swamp sparrow, and Woodcock. It has been estimated that over 100 people died. In Brooklyn, 31 year-old Mary Goodwin was frozen to death and a thinly clad, unidentified woman in The Dalles, Oregon, was found frozen to death in a hallway in an attempt to find warmth. Mail carriers Palmer and Hawkins of New York were thought to have drowned attempting to deliver the mail. It is believed that their boat, overturned by the high winds, was crushed by the floating ice. Crops were ruined, and orchards utterly destroyed in Georgia. Walla Walla, Washington's majority of wheat was destroyed by the frost with Eureka Flat seeing the most damage. Traffic was brought to a complete standstill in all parts of the country. Barges on the Mississippi River — which was in some parts entirely frozen through — and the Great Lakes, were brought to a complete standstill. Traffic across all railroads were delayed or paralyzed indefinitely while steamers and liners were likewise delayed.
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.