Caption
THE BLIZZARD OF ’78 PILED UP CARS ON ROUTE 128 IN NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS, OUTSIDE BOSTON.
Photo Credit
JIM MCDEVITT, U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
Subhead
Looking Back at Memorable February Storms
20 inches of snow? 60 mile an hour winds? 5 hour duration?
That's so cute, you think those are blizzards. Where I live that's called Tuesday.
Now hear what a REAL blizzard is like.
30 mph SUSTAINED wind with 70 mph gusts for 5 days.
136 inches of snow blown off of frozen Lake Erie and onto the only thing in it's way, Buffalo, NY.
Not realizing you are walking on top of cars as you try to make your way home.
Being able to touch traffic lights. Not the poles, the actual lights.
Thousands of abandoned cars.
Tragically, 9 people frozen to death, trapped in their vehicles.
The National Guard spending two weeks helping to clear roads.
That was January 27 to February 1, 1977. I was 12 years old and have seen many blizzards since, but the Blizzard of '77 remains the Grandaddy of them all.
When you folks live through that, then you can say you've been in a blizzard.
It would be nice to know exactly where this huge blizzard took place.
Did you read it?
If you read the article without a predisposition, they stated Buffalo, NY, as the blizzards destination.
Yes, the Blizzard of 1977, is legend here in South Niagara...along the shore of Lake Erie...Long Beach, Port Colborne, Ridgeway, Ontario Canada, and across the border here to Buffalo, and Western NY.
It is documented in a well known book called “White Death, The Blizzard of 77”, by a local teacher and naturalist, Erno Rossi.
It was beyond a blizzard, it was deadly and tragic, everyone born here or living here has harrowing stories to tell.
The actual situation was caused by frozen solid Lake Erie, covered in thousands of square miles of deep snow, which was blown into shore by sustained gale force winds for days. (aside from regular snowfall).
Today authorities on both sides of the border monitor snow cover on Lake Erie in deep cold winters, I have heard the Army Corps of Engineers in Buffalo monitors for the U.S., (such as in 2015...deepest freezes on record for underground, long sustained polar vortex, and snow far up houses to second floor windows), however, we were fortunate, we did not experience a wind blizzard, from the lake. Just the regular one! at that time.
Sadly people lost their lives in 1977, and were hurt, lost homes etc, but the stories I have heard over the years...are all about extraordinary kindness, courageous rescue and life-sustaining efforts that ordinary people did, really the story is about people helping each other to survive the blizzard, and save lives.
you should check recent history for SD for terrible snow and blizzards, sometimes vehicles are completely buried for days here, and its not a surprise for us, were used to it.


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