"1947
Blizzard" Carroll County has been visited by
some record snow storms throughout its recorded history. A February 20, 1947 storm was one
of the worst of the century. This paper presented a description of the storm's impact in
the February 28th issue: |
"SNOW
STORM STOPS TRAFFIC All Roads
Leading To This City Were closed Until Monday; School
Sessions Interrupted One of the worst snow storms or blizzards that has visited Maryland, struck here last Thursday morning, after a spring like Wednesday, starting at 8 o'clock and continuing until Friday morning, covering the ground from 8 to 14 inches.
State snow plows
labored during the night cleaning the roads, also the county roads department also worked
until late Friday night to clear away the snow and had the traffic moving at a slow pace. But a heavy wind
appeared Saturday morning and closed tight all roads leading out of the city. In Westminster, the
roads are under the State Roads supervision, snow plows worked all night Thursday,
traveling through the city and piled the snow high along the streets but kept traffic
open. Many piles of deep snow were visible
along Main street with automobiles under them. Left stranded were
trucks and passenger cars in deep drifts to stick fast until Sunday afternoon when the
roads were partially opened to allow traffic to move through. There were one way passages at many points on
various state roads and up to yesterday some of the roads had single traffic lane with
high snow drifts on each side, resembling a deep cut. The county roads are
still closed at places and will remain so for awhile. All schools closed
Friday and Monday. All reopened on Tuesday
except Mt. Airy, Winfield, Mechanicsville, and Robert Moton, (colored school). Drifted road
prohibited bus transportation on many secondary roads.
Some of these are still closed. Condition
of main highways prevented opening of Mechanicsville, and Winfield schools until Thursday. County and state roads
people worked hard to get roads open. Many
teachers were prevented from reaching schools on Tuesday. No mail trucks from
Baltimore to this city have arrived here since last Thursday morning, causing a great deal
of inconvenience to our business places in this city.
Since the train mail service has been discontinued the delivery has been very
unsatisfactory. It is time to restore train
service. Western Maryland
Railroad ran an engine with a cab to Glyndon from Baltimore to take stranded persons to
Baltimore. Citizens living
between Westminster and Detour that were in this city Saturday afternoon left their cars
at garages and took the train to their town, returning Monday for them. Twenty-three cars were
stalled at one time on Red Hill, on Manchester road. On Sunday afternoon 65
citizens living along or those using the Bethel Road, worked from Bethel, Carrollton and
Patapsco and shoveled the road open. The New Windsor State
road was closed by snow drifts in five different places on Saturday from 11 a.m. until
Sunday afternoon. On Wakefield Hill, a truck
loaded with baled hay became wedged in the snow, and was unable to move until Sunday when
the road was partly opened. There were many
other cars on the road that were left until Sunday. A Blue Ridge Lines
bus, which stalled Saturday morning a mile north of Eldersburg, was released Sunday
afternoon. The Potomac Bus Lines from
Westminster to Hagerstown was unable to travel from Thursday until Tuesday. All roads leading to this city were closed to traffic on Saturday afternoon, leaving many stranded in this city. The State Roads
experienced great difficulty in trucking the snow. Several
plows were disabled Friday and had to be repaired. Western Maryland Railroad experienced little difficulty from the snow. A freight from Hanover to Baltimore, on the B. & H. Davison, failed to buck a drift at Boring and was held fast until two engines and a snow plow were sent to its rescue on Saturday afternoon. There were several rails broken where Engine No. 114 slipped which was the cause. A bulldozer was
brought into action and pushed snow banks away leaving the small plows to brush it away. Wolf Hill, near New
Windsor, was closed with snow 10 to 12 feet deep." |
| Perhaps the most striking piece of
information in the article is the description of the 65-member volunteer work crew who
shoveled out their own public road. There were almost certainly others who performed work
that few would undertake today.
|
| Photo caption: | Heavy snow filled Westminster's W.
Main St. after a February 20, 1947 blizzard. Thomas,
Hunter & Bennett Collection, Historical Society of Carroll County, gift of Lloyd
Thomas, 1985. |