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Category: Storms

The “Great White Hurricane,” March 11, 1888

December 14, 2025 Gordon Harris2 Comments
The Great White hurricane, train surrounded by snow

The Great White Hurricane of 1888 struck on the night of March 11 and continued furiously for two days, dumping 60 inches of snow on parts of the Northeast.

Posted in Storms, VideoTagged 1888, storm

Wreck of the Falconer, December 17, 1847

December 12, 2025 Gordon Harris1 Comment
Tombstone at the Old North Burying Ground in Ipswich from the wreck of the Falconer in Ipswich Bay

On December 17, 1847 the brig Falconer, loaded with bituminous coal, wrecked at Crane Beach during a fierce winter storm. A dozen of the crew and passengers are buried in a common grave at the Old North Burying Ground.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Storms, winterTagged 1847, December, storm

The Shipwrecks at Ipswich Bar

November 20, 2025November 20, 2025 Gordon Harris1 Comment

The Ipswich Bar has a long history of tragic shipwrecks. Its swift currents and shallow waters are especially dangerous during storms, and many ships have gone aground. The hull of the Ada K. Damon sits on Steep Hill Beach.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Stories, StormsTagged Crane Beach, Ipswich, Plum Island, schooners

Wreck of the Hesperus, Dec. 15, 1839

November 15, 2025 Gordon Harris18 Comments

"It was the schooner Hesperus, That sailed the wintry sea; And the skipper had taken his little daughtèr, To bear him company."

Posted in Legends, Shipwrecks, StormsTagged 1839, Gloucester, Hesperus, January, Norman's Woe

The Great Colonial Hurricane and the Wreck of the Angel Gabriel, August, 1635

October 24, 2025November 14, 2025 Gordon Harris16 Comments

In August 1635, the 240-ton Angel Gabriel sank in Pemaquid Bay after sailing into the most intense hurricane in New England history. Among the survivors were members of the Cogswell, Burnham and Andrews families, who settled in an area of Ipswich known as Chebacco.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Stories, StormsTagged 1635, Essex, Ipswich, storm

Hurricanes and Winter Storms

December 8, 2024December 8, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Hurricane Carol Union Street Ipswich MA

Massachusetts has the highest probability of all of the states to be hit by an ocean storm, which includes hurricanes and nor'easters.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Storms, winterTagged hurricane

Adrift on a Haystack, December 1786

December 19, 2023December 31, 2024 Gordon Harris2 Comments
Adrift on a Haystack legend Rowley

In a northeasterly storm in December, 1786 Samuel Pulsifer and Samuel Elwell of Rowley were digging clams on Plum Island, got caught in the storm, and took refuge in a stack of salt hay for the night. In the morning they found they had been set afloat.

Posted in Legends, Stories, Storms, winterTagged 1786, Clams, December, hay, Plum Island, Rowley, storm

How Will Sea Level Rise Affect Ipswich?

November 18, 2023January 7, 2025 Gordon Harris2 Comments
Projected sea level rise in Ipswich MA

Sea levels rose about 8 inches globally and about 1 foot on the Eastern Seaboard in the past century. What will happen to Ipswich if  catastrophic predictions for the 21st Century are realized?

Posted in Commentary, StormsTagged Environment

A romantic tale from the Great Snow of Feb. 21-24, 1717

January 29, 2022December 1, 2024 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment

Snowstorms on the 20th and 24th of February 1717 covered the earth up to 20 ft. deep. In some places houses were completely buried, and paths were dug from house to house under the snow. A widow in Medford burned her furniture to keep the children warm.

Posted in Stories, Storms, winterTagged 1717, Newbury, snow, storm

Awful Calamities: the Shipwrecks of December, 1839

November 30, 2021December 1, 2024 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Ships off Liverpool in the Great Storm of 1839

Three gales of unequaled fury and destructiveness swept along our coast carrying desolation and death in their stormy pathway, and overwhelming many families in the deepest mourning.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Stories, Storms, winterTagged 1839, December, disaster, Gloucester, Marblehead, Rockport, storm

The Spectre Ship of Salem

October 24, 2021March 24, 2023 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
The spectre ship of salem

On the fourth day after the ship left port, the sun came out and in the distance could be seen the same ship sailing effortlessly back into port directly into the wind. As the Noah’s Dove approached, its passengers including the young couple were visible but ghost-like.

Posted in Legends, Shipwrecks, StormsTagged 1680, fear, insanity, Salem, storm

Ipswich Village (Upper High St.)

October 7, 2021January 7, 2025 Gordon Harris2 Comments
Jewett Hill, Ipswich Village map

This Ipswich neighborhood has historically had a close social connection with neighboring Rowley. Jewett's mill was created in the 17th Century, and historic houses still line the street.

Posted in Roads, StormsTagged 1700, Commons, Jewett, neighborhood, pengry, Rowley

Deluge! An Eyewitness Account of the Mother’s Day Storm of 2006

July 9, 2021January 2, 2025 Gavin KeenanLeave a comment

Essex County was subjected to days of relentless, pouring rain that caused millions of dollars in property damage, deaths and left Ipswich nearly isolated from neighboring communities.

Posted in History, StormsTagged Gavin Keenan, Mother's Day

Mothers Day Flood, May 14-16, 2006

May 6, 2021April 5, 2024 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment

Fourteen inches of rain fell between May 14 and May 16, 2006, creating the historic 2006 Mothers Day Flood. Water flow levels in the Ipswich River were 27% higher than recorded in previous epic floods.

Posted in Environment, StormsTagged 2006, flood, Ipswich River, storm

Wreck of the Ada K. Damon

February 28, 2021November 16, 2024 Gordon Harris
The Ada K. Damon, April 2020

Christmas, 1909 witnessed the heaviest storm in many years. The ship was wrecked during the captain's first trip for a load of sand from the plentiful supply on Plum Island.

Posted in Shipwrecks, Stories, Storms, winterTagged 1909, Ada K. Damon, Crane Beach, December, Ipswich, Sand schooner, storm

The Blizzard of ’78, February 5, 1978

February 6, 2021December 1, 2024 Gordon Harris4 Comments

The "Blizzard of '78" raged from Sunday evening February 5 through Tuesday evening February 7. Over a billion dollars of damage occurred, including the loss of 11,000 homes and the lives of 29 Massachusetts residents. The highest total snowfall was 43.7 inches in Ipswich.

Posted in History, Storms, winterTagged 1978, February, storm

© Gordon Harris 2025

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