Two Blizzards Forty-Years
Apart
As Recalled by Walter
Wolfe
Let me take you back over 40-years to another blizzard even worse than described above.
The 1966 blizzard, which Washington, D.C. didn’t record as such, slammed into Frederick County to include Mother and Dad’s farm, some 50 miles north of D.C., Myersville, Frederick County. We were in the storm’s epicenter on winding Churchill Road, Myersville, Maryland was our country address then. My Aunt Bobby and Uncle Ed came up to the farm for the weekend, but the blizzard kept them there for three more days. Did I say that that was my 21st birthday weekend - January 30th – and that my Aunt Bobby and Uncle bought me a bottle of Cutty Sark (I didn't have the heart to tell her that didn't like scotch) to celebrate my coming of Maryland’s drinking-age.
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1966 Blizzard at Hay & Rose Wolfe Farm |
The 1966 blizzard, which Washington, D.C. didn’t record as such, slammed into Frederick County to include Mother and Dad’s farm, some 50 miles north of D.C., Myersville, Frederick County. We were in the storm’s epicenter on winding Churchill Road, Myersville, Maryland was our country address then. My Aunt Bobby and Uncle Ed came up to the farm for the weekend, but the blizzard kept them there for three more days. Did I say that that was my 21st birthday weekend - January 30th – and that my Aunt Bobby and Uncle bought me a bottle of Cutty Sark (I didn't have the heart to tell her that didn't like scotch) to celebrate my coming of Maryland’s drinking-age.
Anyway, Dad insisted that I keep the driveway clear even as conditions worsened to whiteout. On the evening of the storm’s first day, I got our large, 1954 Case tractor stuck in a 10 foot drift. I thought this failed effort would impress my father as to the extreme blizzard conditions- you know, “the Borg” principal. I was dead wrong! Dad told me to hop on the smaller, but higher torque diesel Case and keep on the job. An hour later I ditched the second machine off the driveway culvert because I just couldn’t see where I was going. That failed effort finally convinced Dad to give up his plan of beating Mother Nature and just let it be.
On Wednesday, February 3, 1966, I opened our driveway (how we got the tractor "un-ditched" is another story), while the State removed the high drifts on Route 40 – some topped at nearly 20 feet – the highway finally opened. Of course, our trapped guest soon departed. I have added a second farm photo in contrast with the above snow scene.
Below is a photo of the Wolfe farm five months after the great 1966 blizzard -.ironically, we had one of the worse droughts that summer in decades. Any way you can view quite a difference between the above and this picture.
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Wolfe Farm Summer, 1966 Summer Drought |