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With our partner, The Connecticut Historical Society, WNPR News presents unique and eclectic view of life in Connecticut throughout its history. The Connecticut Historical Society is a partner in Connecticut History Online (CHO) — a digital collection of over 18,000 digital primary sources, together with associated interpretive and educational material. The CHO partner and contributing organizations represent three major communities — libraries, museums, and historical societies — who preserve and make accessible historical collections within the state of Connecticut.

“The Great White Hurricane” of 1888

As Connecticut emerges from beneath the record amounts of snow left by a series of storms that started in December and continued into February, residents should temper their relief with caution. For it was in the middle of March that the most massive and destructive snowstorm in New England history struck: the Blizzard of 1888.

The monstrous nor’easter began on the evening of March 11, a Sunday that had been warm enough to hint at the coming of spring. Before it moved away three days later, it had dropped as much as 50 inches of snow on Connecticut, paralyzed the entire Northeast, and left death and destruction in its wake.

Unlike today, residents had no warning of the blizzard’s advance, since the science of meteorology was still in its infancy. Nor could they follow the storm’s progress via news reports. There were no radios or televisions, no Internet, not even any telephones by which to establish contact with the outside world. The only means of long-distance communication was the telegraph, and many lines were brought down by the storm.

Transportation was crippled. Roads were blocked by two or more feet of snow. Walkways and streets in some cities were cleared by shoveling, or by plows or rollers drawn by oxen, but most highways were untouched, making it impossible for horsecars and stagecoaches to move.

Many trains were unable to leave the stations. Others that tried soon were stopped dead in their tracks or even derailed by encounters with mountains of snow. Passengers by the hundreds were stranded in depots or on trains themselves. The stoppage had a ripple effect on train travel for weeks afterward, just as cancelled flights disrupted travelers’ schedules in 2011. “Dwellings and barns have broken down” reported the New York Times – a grim echo of the dozens of roofs and buildings that have collapsed under the weight of this past season’s accumulated snow.  

People desperate or foolish enough to go outside during the storm were gambling dangerously with their lives. Two female factory workers who decided to try to make it from their place of work in Bridgeport to home were found frozen to death. More than 400 people across the Northeast lost their lives in the Blizzard of 1888, the “Great White Hurricane.”

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