EARLY FEBRUARY SNOW STORM
1895
Lewes, Delaware
Wednesday, February 13, 1895:
A cold snap which has held
Sussex county in an arctic embrace for a week past
has been worse ever
experienced around here. There is more ice in the capes and the
Breakwater than past
years and for a spell of so long.
The storm began last early
last week with a severe snow and a strong north wind
that brought the
temperature to 2 degree below zero Tuesday night. Thursday evening
a blizzard with a
northwest gale hit. Our train was an hour late getting through the
snow
banks to the station.
The Friday morning
northbound train left Lewes on time at 7:35, reached Nassau,
it's first stop, and there
it remained until Sunday morning, snow bound. Fifty men could not
dig the snow away as the
snow drifted back as fast as it was shoveled out. Passengers came
back to Lewes by a mule
drawn hack and stayed until Monday.
Delaware River pilot
boats, Tunnell, Howard, Bayard and Kerr were assisted
by the tug boat North
America, Captain Givens, and towed to the government pier
Thursday.
The Tunnell was towed out
of the capes on Friday to sea off Rehoboth to board incoming
vessels. The vessel , Cape,
was frozen in the roadstead and drifted about with the ice, ran out
of water and George Lubaker
, a pilots apprentice and boat keeper and his crew rigged a sled
and carried 12 casks of
water from Brown's fish house pier, making several half mile trips
sliding over the ice.
The Cape May pilot boats
, Knight and Edmunds, were at sea during the storm.
From the Breakwater to the
Point of Capes the bay was frozen solid. The piers of F. C.
Maull, Luce Brothers &
Brown, were badly damaged by the ice flow.
Captain Salmons of
Henlopen Life Saving Station reported his men suffered the worst
experience since the
station opened. Last week life saving surfmen had bitter
experience
walking their duty stations
but every man did is duty. There was some frostbite reported.
The colored settlement of
Bell Town near Nassau Station became short of fuel and
food and local farmer in
the neighborhood furnished their immediate necessities.
In Lewes extreme needs
were few and were temporarily supplied. Fuel was getting scarce
but the roads near town
were broken open so teams can get through hauling supplies.
Almost everyone had water
pumps frozen solid.
Abstract 06/26/18 by
Harrison H from Wednesday, February 13, 1895 Wilmington News
Journal, Wilmington,
Delaware
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