Morning Thanks

Garrison Keillor once said we'd all be better off if we all started the day by giving thanks for just one thing. I'll try.

Thursday, January 11, 2024

1888 Blizzard--what they remembered


For many years after the Great Blizzard of 1888, a group of survivors held annual reunions calling themselves The Blizzard Club. For years, the stories were told again and again.

>>>A teacher by the name of McKinley taught in a tiny country school, where he told the children, that January afternoon, that they simply could not risk the danger the massive storm presented. They had to stay overnight. No one came by to free them or bring them bread. To keep the schoolhouse warm, he burned their desks.

>>>An older boy, no longer in school, went out to the barn to check on the cattle. When he tried to return, he lost his way, then stumbled over a plow. Because he knew exactly where that plow had been left, he found his way back to the house. Needless to say, he might have perished had not that plow got in his way.

>>>The Shenck family didn't leave their house for four days because the entire house was drifted in, totally covered in snow.

>>>The moderate temperatures that morning promted many ranchers to turn the cattle out off their barns and send them into the what was left in the cornfields. Many of those cattle died in the blizzard, but others, finding some kind of shelter somewhere, showed up later, sometimes weeks or even month later.

>>>A man named Ben Freeman had created a makeshift telephone by stringing a wire between his place and that of his brother. They called it a "thump box," eight inches square with a hole cut in the end and fascined to the wall in both places. Family members would "thump" the copper plates of the box and actually speak to each other, handy, her niece claimed, in the middle of the storm.

>>>A handful of young guys got separated when the wagon they were using to haul lumber back from the woods along the Niobrara got hung up in a massive drift. One of the boys, the youngest, stumbled on alone until he just happened to reach the farm place of a family he certainly didn't know. His trip there had thoroughly depleted whatever strength he had, so he told his blessed hosts that surely the others must have froze to death somewhere in the storm. Just so happened that the host worked for the railroad. The next day, at work, he mentioned that several boys had died. The agent told the Omaha newspaper, as well as the boys' parents. Not long after that, the boys sure enough showed up at home.

>>>A teacher in Schuyler determined that her students' best chance for survival would be to get them all home. Thus, they started out, all of them tied together by a rope they found somewhere in a closet. On they went, the troops from some Custer County school. But the going got tough, very tough. Every few minutes they would turn their backs on the storm's incessant wind just to shake the ice from their faces and once again gather breath enough to go on. But their teacher kept them going by making a game out of the danger: "About face," she'd say, and the whole gang would salute and turn again. They made it.

>>>A man named Frank Burwell felt the agonizing desire to just fall asleep in all that cold and snow. He'd crossed the river to get to his place, stepped in a pool of water from an artesian well--his feet were frozen. He'd thought he could find a little sod shack but couldn't, missed it completely, just as he'd earlier missed his brother's place. He started following a fence, then came to the very last post. That's when he began to think it might be easier to just allow himself to sleep, to welcome death, but he knew he wasn't gone, so he struggled on. When finally he crawled, hands and knees, up to the back door, he was, his brother remembered, more dead than alive. "We cut off his shoes and clothing and worked over him all night," his brother said.  "He lost some of his toes, but otherwise he made it all right."

>>>A woman named Mrs. Calkins became alarmed when her husband did not return from the barn, so alarmed, in fact, that he left her baby inside the house, pulled on her own coat and hat and mittens, and went out to try to find him. Not long after she left to look for him, he returned to the house and found her missing. He spent the entire night looking for her, returning now and then to the house to put in fuel and look after their baby. The storm broke in the night, but not until he looked once again for her did he find her body, only a few rods from the house."

>>>Teachers got nervous when it became clear that the light and fluffy snow was but a prelude to a real horror show outside. The day had been exceptionally warm, so warm, in fact, that in some of those country schools, windows were opened because the fire in the stove was more than sufficient. Besides, the breeze felt good.

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