This is (1) snow storm no one will ever forget , it was the biggest of all snow storms , it had a great impact on a lot of people , whether they were starving , stranded or died , it will never ever be forgotten , I was 16 years old back then 🤲🏾💕
When a snow storm of this impact hits, it cripples a community, a town, a city, even a state. People who weren't prepared could be stranded trying to go get some food, or worse they end up dying. These storms can be extremely dangerous. Especially when the TV's weather teams say that only a few inches are likely, but the storm stalls, or moves/changes direction and slams into your city. That recently happened here a few months back. We were only supposed to get 2"-6" and we ended up with 18"-21" and it stunk! Almost 2"-3" an hour most of the late evening and the early morning. 😴 Woke up to snow halfway up my patio windows. 30-50 MPH winds made it next to impossible to even attempt to drive in. Our storm ended after the initial drop, but some of them can keep going, and THAT'S SCARY!
1978 blizzard sent me to California At 69 yrs old and Glad I left but still have a soft spot in my heart for my home city. T town back then taught me the value of the Protestant work ethic which served me well all my life
Good move. The winter here still sucks. Most years are not like they were 30 or 40 years ago but every once in awhile we get socked with a really bad winter.
I delivered the Citizens Journal during this. This was the first time I saw Ball-Lighting. I was delivering papers and it blew the tree in half. I'm running, and watching it snow horizontally. I get home and tell my parents, who are asleep, something strange is happening. So my mom gets up to help me, while my dad tells her I just want help. Mom drives me to the front of the block. I get out. She can't see me as soon as I take 4-5 steps. I deliver the block and she drives me to the beginning of the next block. We do this through the whole route. When we get home my dad is sitting on the steps laughing, while saying, "Mary, you were right in helping him". The pants I wore were frozen. My pants stood up in the corner of my room for 45 minutes.
My dad just told me about this, and he said he remembered being stuck in his roomy trailer home for a very long time... He said "Thankfully we had food and water! But many didn't..." My dad also said he had absolutely no connection to the outside world... It was absolutely terrifying, he said.
I'll never forget driving my roomate to her work and seeing lightning and hearing thunder and snowing and me saying 'maybe we should go back' but she said she had to get to work at St. V's. So I dropped her off and continued to my work, only three of us showed up at work out of 70 some people, big mistake. Could only make it as far as a friend's house and was stuck there for five days.
Same here I was 9. I just remember drifts up to the roof of our house. I have a picture of me standing on one and I could walk right over to the roof of our house.
My buddy and I hitchhiked 5 miles to the only store we knew would be open. We got a couple of cases of beer and food. Got rides immediately both ways from citizens with 4-wheel drive trucks that were out plowing snow. Good times!
My power was out for just a few hours. A friend of mine, who lived only 1/4 mi away, was on a different circuit, & had no power for 5 days. Thank Heaven for gas stoves!
I had just walked several miles to work, only to have them tell me they where not going to open that day. So, I ended grabbing a snow shovel and went out and made as much money as possible, helping shovel people's drives out from that blizzard.
I was asked to join up with the airborne Engineers from a Sapper company. I didn't really even understand what they were. Now I know Equipment on demand.
I believe; a less nastier "Blizzard of 1977," none the less, created havoc & chaos... I live/lived along the I-75 corridor approximately 45 miles south of the "Mighty Mackinaw Bridge." All I can say, "Thank the Lord for snowmobiles/lg farming tractors-great neighbors & small town community(now a city,) because that's how we were able to navigate when anyone needed, especially in 1977 & 1978!"~
I'll never forget our first floor windows and doors were blocked with snow. Dark. The second floor was amazing. It looked like dairy queen vanilla on steroids. I'll never forget it
I was 20 and had just bought a new F250 4x4 with a snow plow. I didn’t sleep for a full 48 hours. Plowing parking lots and streets and pulling or pushing cars!
My Dad beat the tar out of some guy that parked in our parking spot he shoveled out back in 1978. That happened on Western Ave. Lol, one of my first, and fondest memories
Although, I don't condone violence... Back in the day, a few "good ole knuckle sandwiches 👊😵💫," regarding 'blatant disrespect' usually did the trick🤣!~
Let’s see what happens this weekend. There might be some ‘78 type Blizzard but it won’t be in Ohio. It’ll be a huge mess tho….. Every winter- it’ll be like the Blizzard of ‘78. 2022? In Michigan or Wisconsin?
But see you've gotta understand they didn't have Snow fences or traction to block the winds like they do now. Heck it would be bad bc when snow blows it just keeps going until it hits something to stop it. That was the case back then bc of that fact. Buildings would have such a tremendous amount on it bc of all that snow building up over it due to nothing blocking the winds.
I was born in Toledo and actually lived through the blizzards of both 1977 and 1978!!!
I was 9 years old and still remember the blizzard of ‘78
This is (1) snow storm no one will ever forget , it was the biggest of all snow storms , it had a great impact on a lot of people , whether they were starving , stranded or died , it will never ever be forgotten , I was 16 years old back then 🤲🏾💕
When a snow storm of this impact hits, it cripples a community, a town, a city, even a state. People who weren't prepared could be stranded trying to go get some food, or worse they end up dying. These storms can be extremely dangerous. Especially when the TV's weather teams say that only a few inches are likely, but the storm stalls, or moves/changes direction and slams into your city. That recently happened here a few months back. We were only supposed to get 2"-6" and we ended up with 18"-21" and it stunk! Almost 2"-3" an hour most of the late evening and the early morning. 😴 Woke up to snow halfway up my patio windows. 30-50 MPH winds made it next to impossible to even attempt to drive in. Our storm ended after the initial drop, but some of them can keep going, and THAT'S SCARY!
1978 blizzard sent me to California
At 69 yrs old and Glad I left but still have a soft spot in my heart for my home city.
T town back then taught me the value of the Protestant work ethic which served me well all my life
Good move. The winter here still sucks. Most years are not like they were 30 or 40 years ago but every once in awhile we get socked with a really bad winter.
I delivered the Citizens Journal during this. This was the first time I saw Ball-Lighting. I was delivering papers and it blew the tree in half. I'm running, and watching it snow horizontally. I get home and tell my parents, who are asleep, something strange is happening.
So my mom gets up to help me, while my dad tells her I just want help.
Mom drives me to the front of the block. I get out. She can't see me as soon as I take 4-5 steps. I deliver the block and she drives me to the beginning of the next block. We do this through the whole route.
When we get home my dad is sitting on the steps laughing, while saying, "Mary, you were right in helping him". The pants I wore were frozen. My pants stood up in the corner of my room for 45 minutes.
My dad just told me about this, and he said he remembered being stuck in his roomy trailer home for a very long time... He said "Thankfully we had food and water! But many didn't..."
My dad also said he had absolutely no connection to the outside world... It was absolutely terrifying, he said.
I was a ten year old in Port Clinton. We broke up old furniture to keep the fireplace lit.
I'll never forget driving my roomate to her work and seeing lightning and hearing thunder and snowing and me saying 'maybe we should go back' but she said she had to get to work at St. V's. So I dropped her off and continued to my work, only three of us showed up at work out of 70 some people, big mistake. Could only make it as far as a friend's house and was stuck there for five days.
I remember. I was 8 years old ! We lived on the west side and couldn't even open our front door
Same here I was 9. I just remember drifts up to the roof of our house. I have a picture of me standing on one and I could walk right over to the roof of our house.
My buddy and I hitchhiked 5 miles to the only store we knew would be open.
We got a couple of cases of beer and food.
Got rides immediately both ways from citizens with 4-wheel drive trucks that were out plowing snow.
Good times!
My power was out for just a few hours. A friend of mine, who lived only 1/4 mi away, was on a different circuit, & had no power for 5 days. Thank Heaven for gas stoves!
I was 8 yrs...My fam used the snow ❄️ to make 🍦....and melted/filtered some snow for water to drink..
I experienced it and was really something. Everything shutdown for days digging out. It was a winter to remember.
I had just walked several miles to work, only to have them tell me they where not going to open that day. So, I ended grabbing a snow shovel and went out and made as much money as possible, helping shovel people's drives out from that blizzard.
I was seven! No school was awesome! Plenty of snow to play in! Stressed out grown ups!🤣🤣🤣🤣
I was ten when that storm hit good memories
Seen a few of the guard and army walking around the neighborhoods the crazy time
I was born 21 years later.
I was born 28yrs later after this !!
I was 5 years old and I remember this
Those army guys were my boys from the 27th engineers , ft.bragg NC .
I was wondering if they were regular or airborne Engineers
@@horstebreedow8608 27th engineers are airborne from ft.Bragg.
I was asked to join up with the airborne Engineers from a Sapper company. I didn't really even understand what they were. Now I know Equipment on demand.
@@horstebreedow8608 sappers play with C-4 💥😀
I was fourteen years old, lots of fun trying to walk the dog in thirteen inches of snow
You couldn't call for help back then . If you got stuck in the snow you had a long walk to someone's house
Mike Navarre might have declared a level 2 for this.
I was in Minnesota and loved it. That was a good winter for a kid to play inq
I was not born yet but soon 80. There was another one I thought to. My dad was stuck at the Jeep plant and the helicopter took them food.
I believe; a less nastier
"Blizzard of 1977," none the less, created havoc & chaos... I live/lived along the I-75 corridor approximately 45 miles south of the "Mighty Mackinaw Bridge." All I can say, "Thank the Lord for snowmobiles/lg farming tractors-great neighbors & small town community(now a city,) because that's how we were able to navigate when anyone needed, especially in 1977 & 1978!"~
I'll never forget our first floor windows and doors were blocked with snow. Dark. The second floor was amazing. It looked like dairy queen vanilla on steroids. I'll never forget it
I was 20 and had just bought a new F250 4x4 with a snow plow. I didn’t sleep for a full 48 hours. Plowing parking lots and streets and pulling or pushing cars!
I was only 2 years old when this Storm hit...
My birthday November 9th 1976.
My Dad beat the tar out of some guy that parked in our parking spot he shoveled out back in 1978. That happened on Western Ave. Lol, one of my first, and fondest memories
Although, I don't condone violence... Back in the day, a few "good ole knuckle sandwiches 👊😵💫," regarding 'blatant disrespect' usually did the trick🤣!~
I was 17 and living on poplar St East Toledo
Let’s see what happens this weekend. There might be some ‘78 type Blizzard but it won’t be in Ohio. It’ll be a huge mess tho…..
Every winter- it’ll be like the Blizzard of ‘78. 2022? In Michigan or Wisconsin?
My HS days !
I wasn’t born yet and never been to Ohio so I’m not sure why I’m watching this
I’m not sure either
Carter just entered hospice.
Was that the Anthony Wayne Bridge @ 0:35?
Also, @ 3:49, what was the Toledo mayor's name and how long was he in office at that time?
@@jarrelljimerson3346 That would be Mayor Doug DeGood. He took office in 1977 at the age of 30 and would be mayor until 1983.
@@maherite1977 three two year terms?
@@jarrelljimerson3346 Correct - elected in 1977 and re-elected in 1979 and 1981.
@@maherite1977 when was the mayorial term extended from two to four years?
I was 13 years old then . And it was really bad . Actually thought we would die
Could not open the door
But see you've gotta understand they didn't have Snow fences or traction to block the winds like they do now. Heck it would be bad bc when snow blows it just keeps going until it hits something to stop it. That was the case back then bc of that fact. Buildings would have such a tremendous amount on it bc of all that snow building up over it due to nothing blocking the winds.
She was dead on correct about everything, especially the crime
I walked from My house to the Northend
I was born in February of 78
Yeah we got married and I don’t even remember it
Fun times for a kid
man wtf is going on in ohio
I was 17
42 tsunami lierally
Take a look at the short future of mankind that's no longer on the horizon, but has arrived.
Chemical weapons
I was born in Toledo but in 81 so I missed this
OHSOPRO is inda Building! I survived the Blizzard of '78. I was 10.