Cold summer of 1816
From Salem Links and Lore
- The year of 1816 was one of the coldest ever known in New England. It was referred to as the "poverty year" as many crops were affected. In Salem on June 8th, there was a slight fall of snow, but it was not deep enough to go sleighing.
- In the "Annals of Salem" by Felt, he writes that in 1816 there was frost and ice until June 10th and there was only three warm days in the whole month.
- Scientist would later conclude that the cold weather that summer was the result of a large volcanic eruption of Mt. Tambora in the Dutch West Indies.
See Also
- Vertical File in Salem Collection - Cold Summer of 1816
- Annals of Salem by Joseph B. Felt, vol.2, p.106
- Historic Storms of New England by Sidney Perley, p.204
- Disasters that made history by Webb Garrison, p.16-20.