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Hard Winter of 1880–81
A season of blizzards and other severe weather in the United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The winter of 1880-81 in the United States, referred to as the Hard Winter, the Long Winter or the Snow Winter, was a period of extreme cold and large snowfalls across the central Great Plains region. The winter is depicted in the 1940 novel The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder and other fictional works.
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Duration and effects on train transport
The Hard Winter began on October 15, 1880, with a blizzard in eastern South Dakota and lasted until April 1881.[1] Some railroads in the region were covered with so much snow that it could not be cleared and trains could not pass, cutting off towns from critical supplies.
Clogging of the Missouri River and permanent changes in its course
An abrupt spring thaw followed the Hard Winter, and flooding along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers caused more hardship. Many towns were damaged, and some were abandoned after the flooding. A flood in Omaha permanently changed the course of the Missouri River.[2] Massive ice jams clogged the Missouri River, and when they broke the downstream areas were inundated. Most of the town of Yankton, in what is now South Dakota, was washed away when the river overflowed its banks after the thaw.[3]
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Autobiographical narrative on rationing by Laura Ingalls Wilder
The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder was once believed to be a fictionalized account of the Hard Winter, which Wilder lived through when she was a teenager. She describes how the winter affected her family and fellow settlers, forcing them to ration food and fuel. The weather details in the book have since been corroborated by meteorological records and other historical accounts of the winter and her accounts are now considered to be mostly factual.[1]
References
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