Henry Raymond
Fairfax News => Current News & Events => Topic started by: Henry on December 22, 2010, 08:22:44 AM
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I have heard stories about this and somewhere I have more information, but according to some old newspapers, on December 22, 1933, temperatures were recorded to be 48 degrees below zero at Fairfax Falls.
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Henry When I first came to town in 1962 , we were friends with Frank & Melba Perry. He used to relate this story quite a bit , and I think, since his family lived at the Falls in 1933 , it was a accurate description of the weather at that time. Chilly isn't the word for it , and since the depression was prominent in everyone's life, it seemed to make it worse. Tough weather and tough times.
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I do not rember the exact yr 51,52 it was so stupid cold only one school bus started- yep, the one we rode on
the four would not even start, and after we were in school for a whille we were taken home
If I recall Fairfax was supposed to be the coldest in the nation that day
because after arriving home my dad the entertainment director put a snoww shovel in my hand and directed me to shovel where the horses could not plow out, one more reason I left the area
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This got me to thinking,
so I did some searching,
and this site gave me a few chuckles:
http://www.citytowninfo.com/places/vermont/fairfax (http://www.citytowninfo.com/places/vermont/fairfax)
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My Bad, It was December 29, 1933 that this happened:
The Dec. 29, 1933 St. Albans Messenger (under a banner headline 'Mercury Shrivels") reported weather that "was something for the books."
It was 48 below zero at 6 a.m. that morning at the Fairfax Falls Public Electric Light plant. Newspaper correspondents of that time reported these temperatures:
-35 on St. Albans Hill; -38 in West Berkshire; -40 in Bakersfield; -38 in Richford; -32 in St. Albans City; -34 at St. Albans Bay; and -36 in Franklin.