Blizzard of 1978

   / Blizzard of 1978 #1  

jmc

Elite Member
Joined
Jul 21, 2003
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3,193
Location
SW Indiana
Tractor
Ford 1920 4x4 (traded in on Kubota). Case 480F TLB w/4 in 1 bucket, 4x4. Gehl CTL60 tracked loader, Kubota L4330 GST
On the recent anniversary of Indiana's worst blizzard (and probably other Midwest states), our local paper just dredged up the big stories/pictures from back then, along with readers' more recent accounts of their predicaments at the time. In a state where 6" of snow is a big deal, when it's measured in feet, and winds over 50mph, we were flattened for days.

There were some interesting stories from those readers. Frozen fuel oil lines, coal strike, power lines down. Families huddled at home under quilts while their first responder family members were out helping others. Local Ford dealer loaning police brand new 4x4's. The few snowmobiles in the southern half of Indiana used for emergencies, like women going into labor. Local paper could only deliver 1000 copies out of 26,000 circulation so the editor read the news to everyone over the radio.

Thought it might be interesting to hear from TBN members' who have their own stories.
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #2  
I was living in the Chicago area at the time. My garage opened onto the alley and I was in the middle of the block, so I had a 1/2 block of 4 foot deep snow in each direction. I was snowbound for a full month before I was able to get out with chains. (I cleared my part of the alley but no one else seemed interested in shoveling and I didn't have time to do the whole alley.) I was able to get to work via public transportation, but the usual 45 minute commute often took 2 hours in the morning. I eventually just started working until about 9 at night after trying to leave at 5 and taking almost 4 hours to get home. Thinking back, it makes Covid seem like a vacation.
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #3  
I lived in St. Louis. This place shuts down if there is any snow on the road. We got over 24 inches.

I had just recently started a new job out of college. I didn’t want to miss work. I got up very early and got the driveway cleared. I was already exhausted and it was 6am!

Got dressed and left. I was driving a Ford Pinto - not exactly known as a snow machine.
Drove 1/2 block and got stuck. Walked home, got shovel, dug out and returned home.

Turned out no one went to the office that day —- or the next day!

Just youthful stupidity.

MoKelly
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #4  
Yes I remember very clearly that massive storm. I was in Buffalo, NY and driving home from a ski trip on the I-90 at 4pm when the Blizzard of 1978 hit. OMG. Temperatures dropped from 26F to -18F in just a half hour, with lake effect winds up to 50 mph and lake effect snow falling at 10inchs per hour. By 5:00pm it was severe whiteout conditions and no vehicles were moving anywhere. You could not even see the front of your car. I parked under an overpass and crawled to the nearest hotel about 7pm, and it was already sold out, and so i camped out in their lobby for 3 days. By 12pm midnight, word came that many cars on the Interstate I-90 had people trapped in them, and these were mostly rush hour workers coming home from the office and not dressed warm enough for the frigid cold. A NY StateTrooper asked for volunteers to go check cars and bring anybody in them to the hotel. Well the 3 feet of snow accumulated had drifted in some areas up to 8 feet and buried many vehicles. We dug some out, and found nobody inside. We dug some out and helped the people to the hotel. We dug some out and found dead people. The State Trooper said to leave them.

Later the National Guard was activated by President Jimmy Carter, and they towed over three thousand vehicles stuck along the Interstate to clear for the plows. The National Guard managed to loose 500+ cars by parking them in a makeshift parking area and forgetting to tell anyone where the location was. About a year later the 500+ cars were finally found.
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #5  
We missed that storm. We just graduated from college and moved out to Long Beach CA for a new job. We left northern Michigan with a van full of stuff. We found a house to rent and asked for our furniture sent out from my parent's home. The movers got our furniture and it got as far as southern Michigan and there it was stuck in the storm. It finally arrived. Jon
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #6  
Ours was earlier in the 70s. I don't remember exactly what year. Imagine 2 to 3 feet of snow in SC. We were out of school for 2 or 3 weeks. Dad had a 48 Willys Jeep. We had a blast.
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #7  
I had just taken a new job at the Cleveland Clinic and was living east of there in Euclid. I think it was called Georgetown of the Highlands. That was my first winter up there and I lived high on a hill. If I could make it down the hill to Euclid Ave. I could take that into Cleveland and work. That was also my first exposure to what they called "The Snow Belt". A few years later I moved out to Mentor--Further east. That was even deeper into the snow belt. But wait, it gets worse. :laughing: About six years later, I moved out to Concord Township further east. Average snowfall out there was 120" a year. :eek:

I am blessed to be back in Texas. :dance1:
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #8  
We had 36" in South Bend. Drifts covered houses. My friends and I went out after it ended to walk around. I remember all of us taking turns sitting down on a street sign that was 12' up in the air!

We lived back in the woods, my dad knew the storm was coming, so we moved our cars up to my grandma's house next door, as she had a short driveway. We shoveled a path from our house to her house(she was in Florida for the winter), then a path out to the street 1 shovel wide. All of the neighbors did the same and we soon had a rat maze in the neighborhood to get to all the houses. It took my dad and I about 3 days to shovel my grandma's driveway working a few hours at a time. It was 8 days before the city finally got a front end loader down our street.

My dad shoveled off the roof, fearing a collapse. After he finished shoveling the roof, he just stepped off onto the pile of snow, as it was as tall as the overhangs.

My friends and I took a sled out to the main road that had been cleared, and hitched it to the back of a city smudge pot truck. The driver pulled us down to the grocery store a couple miles away. We bought some milk and snacks and a few things for our moms, and headed home. A city bus had stopped, so I grabbed the bumper and it pulled me most of the way home, using my shoes for skis. We used to call that "hopping cars".

It was the first time I saw wild deer. They came up the river from Michigan and about 20 of them spent a few weeks in the park across the lake from us scratching down to the grass and nibbling all the branches.

I recall a worker at the airport was killed when while he was probing for buried cars in the airport entrance, a front end loader backed over him.

For the most part, it was just a lot of fun for us kids. We were all 16-18 years old and it was a big adventure when we weren't shoveling snow.

I frequently drive through that area of town where I grew up and look at the houses, and remember the drifts going from roof peak to roof peak of tri-level houses, and I just shake my head. There's never been anything close to that storm here in my almost 60 years.

Living in lake effect snow country, we get large snows like that every so often, but you drive 20 miles and its gone. This stuff was everywhere. And it wasn't a local event. It was states wide. That was what made it so amazing.
 
   / Blizzard of 1978 #9  
We had just gotten out of the dairy business but still had beef cattle in the barnyard. Had to shovel the bunk feeders out and when the cattle heard the silo unloader going, they waded out and ate. Drifts were as high as the eaves on the house and garage and you could almost walk up the drifts to eave height, it was packed so hard. I had an International Scout (GOD'S first SUV) and tried to get down the road and could drive up the windward side of the drifts but sank on the leeward side. Lots of digging later and put it back in the shed.

We had a D-4 Cat dozer at a shed 3/4 of a mile away, so I walked there hoping but guessing it would not start. Walking was not bad because the snow was packed enough it was easier than walking on sand. Amazingly, after overdosing with ether, the cat started and I headed for the main road. Usually you just drop the blade and the snow would flow off to each side. NOT this stuff. You had to move it like moving clay. Take 6" and move it to the side and then another 6" the other way. Slow going and cold. Dad took over when I got near the house. There was a 10 ft deep drift west of the house and ended up using the TLB to dig it out and move the snow. For the most part front end loaders were used to clear the roads in our county. Snow plows were useless and usually stuck.
 
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   / Blizzard of 1978 #10  
Ours was earlier in the 70s. I don't remember exactly what year. Imagine 2 to 3 feet of snow in SC. We were out of school for 2 or 3 weeks. Dad had a 48 Willys Jeep. We had a blast.


We had some good ones, for SC in the early 70's. Northern states wouldn't even have noticed.
 
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