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LUDINGTON, MI - The Armistice Day Storm of 1940 was a freak weather event that killed more than 150 people, including 64 sailors on Lake Michigan. Hurricane-force winds were whipping up 40-foot ...
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Looking back at the Armistice Day storm of 1940Storm Team 8's Scott Larson reports from the SS Milwaukee Clipper. (Oct. 3, 2024) Trump doubles down on tariffs in joint address to Congress Jeanie Buss Confirms Anthony Davis’ Repeated ...
1940 Armistice Day Blizzard ... hand account of surviving this deadly storm that led to Minnesota finally getting the power to forecast its own weather.
Read more about the Armistice Day Blizzard and local memories of the storm in Thursday’s Shakopee Valley News. Thumbnail photo, automobiles buried in the snow on Excelsior Boulevard in Minneapolis.
Valerie van Heest, director of the Michigan Shipwreck Research Association, looks back at the destruction and aftermath of the Armistice Day Storm of 1940. The storm sunk three freighters ...
Nov. 25-28, 1896: Eighteen inches of snow fell on an already deep snowpack. This storm contributed greatly to the flood of 1897. - Nov. 11-12, 1940: The Armistice Day blizzard is known for its ...
The National Weather Service is advising central Iowa ... Nov. 11, 1940. The Armistice Day Blizzard came on what had been a mild day, with many people out and about amid temperatures in the ...
Over three days, the storm claimed the lives of 72 ... “Following a long, hard winter that had begun with an Armistice Day blizzard, many had cabin fever and took advantage of the sunshiny ...
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