The Big Snow of 1916

The Big Snow of 1916

W. Main Street
W. Main Street

The heaviest snowfall on record for the Northwest fell in late January and early February 1916. Sixteen to eighteen inches of snow would fall during one night and then continue through the next day. Before the weather finally broke after four weeks of freezing weather, accumulations in lowland Puget Sound ranged between four and six feet of snow.

S. Lewis Street, 1916
S. Lewis Street, 1916

Business came to a virtual standstill although businessmen still need to shovel the walks in front of their stores and more importantly, their roofs, which created huge piles of snow in the middle of the street.

Rotary Plow, Monroe 1916
Rotary Plow, Monroe 1916

The Great Northern Railway worked to keep the mainline open with their rotary snowplows but there were several days running at times when no trains got through.

Fortunately, the weather was not really that cold and with few exceptions, most families simply suffered the inconvenience and stayed home until the thaw.

–from information compiled by Nellie Robertson

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