Ken Anderson writes:
I was fascinated by this book:
After reading a recommendation for this book on Facebook from Cindy Cunningham of the National Pork Board, I went to our local library and picked up The Children’s Blizzard.
I read it on the plane while traveling to and from Nashville for the Cattle Industry Convention.
Warning—once you start reading, it’s hard to put down.
It’s the story of the ferocious blizzard of January 12, 1888 that killed hundreds of newly arrived settlers, including more than a hundred children in the Dakotas and Nebraska as they tried to make their way home from school.
If you live on a farm or ranch—or if you grew up on one—I think you will find this to be a dramatic, heartbreaking, and haunting story. It’s also offers an interesting description of the very early days of weather forecasting in the U.S.
Can you imagine what life was like in the Midwest and Great Plains without radio, TV, newspaper or Internet to keep us informed on the weather?
After reading The Children’s BIizzard, I now have even greater respect for the brave, hardy souls that settled the American frontier.


















