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The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) #6662841
11/11/19 04:03 PM
11/11/19 04:03 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 9,667
se SD
rags57078 Offline OP
Humorist
rags57078  Offline OP
Humorist

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 9,667
se SD
https://www.iowadnr.gov/About-DNR/D...or5k2mwCQTgA4tWCR8fnFY5_olZiigpxqVHrGWyI


Call it a Weather Bomb, Perfect Storm, whatever. By any name, it was the recipe for disaster. Picture this: a powerful weather system swept over the Rocky Mountains, charging eastward. Meanwhile, a Canadian cold air mass was sliding down from the north, while warm moist air pulled up from the south. Any way you looked at it, the developing atmospheric brew spelled trouble.

But no one was looking. The year was 1940. Primitive by contemporary standards, weather forecasting was something many folks put little stock in. According to National Weather Service data, no one was even in the building at Chicago’s Midwest Weather Headquarters during the late night hours of Nov. 10.

As the massive system organized during the wee hours of the following morning, its combined energy triggered a storm of fury. Barometric pressures plunged to among the lowest recorded in Iowa, reaching a then record low for November. By then, the storm began to cut its thousand- mile-wide path of death and destruction. Within 24 hours, the system would rank among the most infamous and disastrous blizzards in U.S. history.

These are the tales of those who were there . . .

For Midwestern duck hunters, the fall of 1940 was warm and uneventful. As the waterfowl doldrums continued into the second week of November, hunters grew increasingly impatient. But the unseasonable weather could not hold out forever, they reasoned.

Cocking an eye to the north, waterfowlers watched, waited and hoped. Sooner or later, the inevitable cold fronts would arrive. Ducks would move south. For those willing to stick to their marshes, the annual Big Push would be a sweet dream.

On Nov. 11, 1940, sportsmen got their wish. The weather changed dramatically; and with that change came the most infamous duck hunt in American history.

But the day was not what gunners had anticipated. Instead of realizing their sweet dream, hundreds of waterfowlers were suddenly plunged into a horrific, Stephen King-grade nightmare. Although nearly 70 years have passed, the storm stories are still too terrible for some survivors to recount.

Known now as the Armistice Day Snowstorm, the event remains among the deadliest of blizzards to cut
its way through the Heartland. By the time it concluded, the storm dropped more than 2 feet of snow, buried vehicles and roadways beneath 20-foot drifts, killed thousands of Iowa cattle, and destroyed incalculable amounts of poultry—including more than a million Thanksgiving turkeys. It gave a yet unrecovered blow to Iowa’s apple industry.

All told, the storm claimed 160 lives across the Midwest. Hundreds more suffered severe frostbite
or frozen limbs. On Lake Michigan, three commercial freighters and more than 60 sailors were lost. Along the Mississippi River in Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, hundreds of duck hunters lost boats, guns and gear as 15-foot swells near Dubuque and 70 to 80 mile per hour winds swept down channels and across marshy backwaters.

Due to abnormally warm weather and fair skies, most hunters took to the field carrying little more than a light jacket. But as the fronts arrived, the scene changed. Temperatures plummeted from near 60 degrees to below freezing, and then into the single digits—all within hours.

What began as a holiday duck hunt quickly became the storm of the century. Panic reigned on the Mississippi that day as boats, equipment and human lives were lost. Stranded atop mud bars and islands, scores of hunters were forced to endure the most horribly excruciating night of their lives. Huddled beneath overturned boats or beside makeshift piles of driftwood, survivors used cigarette papers to ignite meager fires that would save their lives.

Wet and afraid, dozens more perished during the black night. At Winona, Minn., the city bus barn became a temporary morgue as, one by one, the bodies of frozen hunters were retrieved. Since many duck hunters were from out of town, identification was delayed until bodies thawed and pockets could be searched.

On an island near Harpers Ferry, 16-year-old Jack Meggers was one hunter who fought for his life. A retired Iowa game warden currently living in Mason City, Meggers has spent a lifetime in the out-of-doors. At 84, Jack remains a gifted storyteller with a knack for detail. His best loved tales recount outdoor adventure in strong winds, rough water and portray the vanished spectacle of storm-tossed wildfowl in a bygone era.

But mention the words Armistice Day Snowstorm, and Megger’s demeanor immediately takes a quieter, reverent, tone. You can see it in his face as the mind’s eye turns back to one of the most incredible events in American weather history.

“It was Armistice Day, now called Veterans Day, and we were out of school,” Meggers begins.

“Me, my dad, and two brothers headed out to an island at Harpers Ferry. It was warm for that late in the fall and we were dressed light. One of the things I remember most is that, just before the storm hit, the sky turned all orange. It’s hard to explain, but I remember thinking that it was really strange.”

The winds came suddenly, recalls Meggers. Fierce and chilling, the initial blast was a spearhead for the advancing storm.

And then the ducks arrived. Not just a flock here or a flock there, but rather hundreds, then thousands, then tens of thousands. It was a scene seldom witnessed, and in sheer magnitude, never to repeat.

“We’d never seen anything like it,” says Meggers. “When the ducks arrived, they came in unending waves and they came in all species.

“Those ducks were all flying about this high off the water,” he says, motioning to his waist. “And they were all doing about 90 miles an hour with that wind.”

The crew lost no time taking advantage of the astonishing flight. Although waterfowl continued to pour down in unending supply, connecting with the wind-driven birds presented a major challenge, recalls Meggers. The boys concentrated so hard on the task, that none seemed to notice as the winds increased.

“All of a sudden, Dad said, ‘Grab the decoys—we’re getting out of here.’ But we were throwing an awful lot of ammunition into the air, and none of us wanted to quit. The sky was just full of ducks,” says Meggers. “Finally Dad said, ‘Grab the decoys now or we’re leaving without them.’ That‘s when we began to see how bad it was getting.”

Meggers’ dad made a good call. In addition to raging winds and unfathomable legions of ducks, the storm began to deliver pelting rain, which quickly turned to sleet, then heavy snow. Visibility dropped to near zero as hunters all up and down the Great River struggled—many unsuccessfully—to return to shore.

“It was really rough. By the time we finally made it to the shoreline, you couldn’t even see the shoreline,” Meggers recalls. “By then, the combination of snow and wind was just incredible. Our group made it back. But not everyone did.”

An island away from where the Meggers party hunted, a father and two sons were equally mesmerized by the arriving swarms of waterfowl. Lured into staying beyond the point of no return, their shallow draft duck boat proved no match for the wind and waves. As visibility and daylight faded, the hunters found themselves stranded.

“The oldest son was a college athlete,” Meggers says. “When things started getting tough he told his younger brother to jump to stay warm,” as a rain soaking and hours of exposure to wind and snow led to hypothermia. “Every time the younger kid quit jumping, his brother would punch him. The dad and older brother died on that island. The younger brother just kept on jumping through the night. They rescued him the next day. His legs were frozen hard as wood below both knees and he lost them. He was the sole survivor of his group and he credited his brother with saving his life. The kid said,
‘I knew my brother and dad were dead—but I just kept on jumping. My older brother told me to keep jumping so I knew it must be important.’

“That kid was 16, same as me,” says Meggers. “I’ll never forget what happened that day on the river.”

A short distance downstream, four more hunters died during the night on an island near Marquette. In a duck blind at Guttenburg, Earl Butler and Wayne Reynolds narrowly escaped death as they spent the night huddled around a small fire. At Burlington, at least three more hunters perished from exposure or drowning. Unable to stand against wind and waves, several permanent duck blinds were uprooted and blown downstream.

The wrath of the Armistice Day Snowstorm was not limited to the Mississippi River. The early morning hours of November 11, 1940, found Orville Kinsel heading out to hunt ducks on Wright County’s Elm Lake, near Clarion, where he owned a duck shack. His story, recounted in the Hampton Chronicle by Ray Baltes, is no less intriguing than of those who hunted larger waters.

“I got up in the morning and it wasn’t too bad,” recalled Kinsel. “I looked to the west and the sky was green. I started out and that lake was just full of ducks—just swarming with them.”

As the winds increased, things began to get wild. With rush beds already flattened by rising winds, lead anchor weights were no longer able to hold his decoys in place. A final clue that it was time to quit occurred as muskrat houses blew off the marsh. Kinsel returned to his shack carrying a coat load of mallards.

“By then it was snowing,” he noted. “The ducks couldn’t see anything. They were blind. It came so fast. By that time the wind was so strong I could barely walk in it.”

For as long as he can remember, Cerro Gordo County’s Max Christensen has been an avid waterfowler. Today, it seems somewhat ironic that Christensen nearly missed out on history’s greatest duck hunt.

“I still remember nearly every detail from that day,” Christensen begins. “I was a high school senior when the November 11 snowstorm arrived in Ventura. I lived on a farm and we hadn’t even had a frost yet. The livestock was still in the fields and all the poultry was still outside.

“I got on the bus at eight o’clock, wearing just a light jacket. The bus driver was Max Millhouse, and I always sat right behind him because he liked to talk about hunting. As we got closer to Ventura, every cornfield had little cyclones of feeding ducks. The closer we got to the lake, the more we saw. There were so many ducks that it was almost eerie.

“By the time we arrived at Ventura, I already decided to head back home. There were just too many ducks in the air to be in school. Max decided to go with me.

“When I got back home, the storm was coming up fast and my folks were trying to get the chickens inside. We helped, and so instead of being in trouble for skipping school, I was a hero.

“With that finished, we went to a place I called ‘My Slough.’ It was a 30-acre marsh that might have up to 500 muskrat houses on it—a perfect place for ducks,” says Christensen. “It was already snowing when we got there, and at first we didn’t see anything on the slough. I thought, ‘Oh no, the ducks left.’ Then we saw something move, and suddenly realized what was happening. That slough was completely covered in ducks—so many that you couldn’t see any water or make out individual birds. We started shooting then, and it was something. Every duck on that slough was a mallard. We didn’t see anything else. You can’t even imagine what it was like.”

The storm picked up and Max announced he would head back while he still could. “I went to a different marsh closer to home and kept hunting. I don’t think it would have mattered where you went that day, every place was full of ducks. They were everywhere.

“The snow finally got so bad that I had to take my ducks and leave. The walk home was a little over a mile,” says Christensen. “The wind was around 40 miles per hour and the snow was blowing straight sideways. A school bus came down the road, but it couldn’t make it in the snow and had to turn back. Before leaving, it dropped off 17 school kids at our house. They had to stay the night.”

When Christensen entered the farmstead, he learned that a Garner dentist, Doc Hayes had parked in the yard and walked to a nearby marsh. Since he hadn’t returned, the hunter was feared lost.

“I knew I had to try and find him,” relates Christensen. “I was young and didn’t think of the danger. I had a good idea of where he would have been hunting and started up a fenceline that led from the buildings. I don’t think I could see more than 15 feet in front of me, that’s how bad it was.

“I found Doc Hayes on that fenceline. He was just standing there, stuck in a drift. He couldn’t move. When I got up to him, he just started crying. ‘I thought I was dead,’ he said to me. I took his gun and a big bunch of ducks and we started back. I told him to step in my tracks. I broke the trail, and our tracks would disappear almost instantly.

“When we got home, my dad and all those school kids were already in the basement picking my ducks. I don’t know how many mallards were down there, but it was a lot. It was really something. We still had fresh tomatoes from the garden, all those ducks, and snow drifts piling up outside,” says Christensen.

The next day they shoveled out Doc’s Cadillac, which was buried in the yard. “When we reached the road, something moved in the snow. I had shoveled out a live coot. That bird had lit on the road and become buried in a drift. The coot was just fine and flew away.”

Although Armistice Day, 1940 remains best known for its memorable, often tragic, duck hunts—not all wildlife accounts focus on waterfowl.

Wayne Miller, a 16-year-old at the time, rode out the storm’s fury on the family farm located in northwest Iowa’s Emmet County, near Ringsted. What he remembers most are the pheasants.

“The day started out warm, then suddenly turned cold and began to snow. Our farm had a good thick grove. Pheasants were soon piling into that cover and they even sought shelter in the straw piles—anything to get out of that weather.

“When the storm was over there were big drifts and lots of dead pheasants. People gathered up a lot of those birds and brought them over to our farm,” says Miller. “We stacked them in the hay mow above the barn. It was warmer up there and the pheasants began to thaw out. Anyway, a bunch of them came back to life. When we went back up there, they were flying all over the place. We opened the big [hay loft] door and released around 50 of them. It was quite a sight when all those pheasants flew out of the barn.

“It was an incredible storm and everyone thought the pheasants would be wiped out. But there was lots and lots of habitat back then and the pheasants came back in a hurry.”

While hardships are etched in the survivor’s minds forever, severe storms—many stronger than the Armistice Day Blizzard—continue to pummel the land. But modern weather forecasting and rapid communication now prevent much of the human catastrophes. And for that, survivors and all outdoor lovers are thankful.


Off in my own world

Fish on !!!!!!!



47 years in this game of trapping
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6662859
11/11/19 04:25 PM
11/11/19 04:25 PM
Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 645
Southern Indiana
H
Hoosier71 Offline
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Hoosier71  Offline
trapper
H

Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 645
Southern Indiana
Thanks for sharing.

Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6662905
11/11/19 05:22 PM
11/11/19 05:22 PM
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,042
SE Iowa USA
A
AKAjust Offline
trapper
AKAjust  Offline
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Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,042
SE Iowa USA
Interesting reading. I remember mom talking about the storm.
just

Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6662924
11/11/19 05:40 PM
11/11/19 05:40 PM
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 2,494
Garden,Michigan
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Buck (Zandra) Offline
trapper
Buck (Zandra)  Offline
trapper
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 2,494
Garden,Michigan
Thanks for sharing this.I remember this being talked and written about when I was a kid.You don't hear anything about it anymore.


Buck(formely known as Zandra)
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663097
11/11/19 09:01 PM
11/11/19 09:01 PM
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 305
Wisconsin
D
Dirk Offline
trapper
Dirk  Offline
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 305
Wisconsin
Great read and thanks for sharing

Dad would tell me about the Armistice day blizzard every year when I was a kid and since then I love reading anything I can find about it

For those who didn't know, Liberace played a concert in Winona MN the same night as the blizzard, read that in an article years ago

Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663104
11/11/19 09:07 PM
11/11/19 09:07 PM
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 14,867
Greene County,Virginia
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run Offline
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run  Offline
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Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 14,867
Greene County,Virginia
I do appreciate the weather forecast people.


wanna be goat farmer.
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663150
11/11/19 09:59 PM
11/11/19 09:59 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 7,183
Wisconsin
M
Moosetrot Offline
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Moosetrot  Offline
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 7,183
Wisconsin
I have heard many stories from some of the old duck hunters around here on the Mississippi River that survived the storm. Getting to be fewer and fewer of them these days.

Moosetrot

Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663225
11/11/19 11:39 PM
11/11/19 11:39 PM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 7,240
West Michigan
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Getting There Offline
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Getting There  Offline
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Posts: 7,240
West Michigan
Two ships went a ground just South of our pier about 1 mile and another about 9 miles. A fishing tug from our Village remove several people off the closes ship. The owner of one of the fishing tug had to report to the Coast Guard in Chicago. They were going to press charges for something or another. I knew him very well. His name was Corkie Fisher. When the water is calm and the water is clear you can still see the deck of the ship near Silver Lake I am told.


To Old
U.S. Army 60-63 SGT.
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663241
11/12/19 12:04 AM
11/12/19 12:04 AM
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 3,883
Mn
N
nightlife Offline
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nightlife  Offline
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Joined: May 2008
Posts: 3,883
Mn
My dad lived through it because he had blankets and some food in the back of his truck some of his friends he was hunting with didn’t make it, I believe it was the last time dad went duck hunting he just couldn’t bring himself to go out anymore



�Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks.�
― Robert A. Heinlein
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: rags57078] #6663477
11/12/19 10:00 AM
11/12/19 10:00 AM
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 6,696
Newark, Ohio 83 years
Actor Offline
trapper
Actor  Offline
trapper

Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 6,696
Newark, Ohio 83 years
There are dozens of photos online.... I thought this about right with hunters losing lives.


[Linked Image]


Garry-


“Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.”

Have been trapping 77 years…
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: nightlife] #6663485
11/12/19 10:10 AM
11/12/19 10:10 AM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 7,240
West Michigan
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Getting There Offline
trapper
Getting There  Offline
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Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 7,240
West Michigan
Just a part of history that most do not know about, thanks for posting.
Originally Posted by nightlife
My dad lived through it because he had blankets and some food in the back of his truck some of his friends he was hunting with didn’t make it, I believe it was the last time dad went duck hunting he just couldn’t bring himself to go out anymore


I put my cold weather gear in my car last night. You never know how long you can be held up on the express way. It is not life threating in most cases but it is nice to stay warm and have a bit to eat.


To Old
U.S. Army 60-63 SGT.
Re: The Armistice Day Blizzard of 1940 (long but Good) [Re: Getting There] #6663657
11/12/19 01:08 PM
11/12/19 01:08 PM
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 3,883
Mn
N
nightlife Offline
trapper
nightlife  Offline
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Joined: May 2008
Posts: 3,883
Mn
Originally Posted by Getting There
Just a part of history that most do not know about, thanks for posting.
Originally Posted by nightlife
My dad lived through it because he had blankets and some food in the back of his truck some of his friends he was hunting with didn’t make it, I believe it was the last time dad went duck hunting he just couldn’t bring himself to go out anymore


I put my cold weather gear in my car last night. You never know how long you can be held up on the express way. It is not life threating in most cases but it is nice to stay warm and have a bit to eat.


I do the same thing something dad always did and around here there are still places where there is no cell service so you could be stuck for a good while till someone comes by or starts looking for you



�Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks.�
― Robert A. Heinlein
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