New England's Darkest Day - May, 19, 1780

Dark Day - May 19, 1780 - A paper with an old account of New England's Darkest Day, which took place on May 19, 1780...
Australia
May 19, 2008 8:04pm CST
"It took more than 200 years to figure out why darkness fell at noon on May 19, 1780 May 19, 1780: Darkness at Noon Enshrouds New England By Randy Alfred 05.19.08 | 12:00 AM 1780: In the midst of the Revolutionary War, darkness descends on New England at midday. Many people think Judgment Day is at hand. It will be remembered as New England's Dark Day. Diaries of the preceding days mention smoky air and a red sun at morning and evening. Around noon this day, an early darkness fell: Birds sang their evening songs, farm animals returned to their roosts and barns, and humans were bewildered. Some went to church, many sought the solace of the tavern, and more than a few nearer the edges of the darkened area commented on the strange beauty of the preternatural half-light. One person noted that clean silver had the color of brass. It was darkest in northeastern Massachusetts, southern New Hampshire and southwestern Maine, but it got dusky through most of New England and as far away as New York. At Morristown, New Jersey, Gen. George Washington noted it in his diary. In the darkest area, people had to take their midday meals by candlelight. A Massachusetts resident noted, "In some places, the darkness was so great that persons could not see to read common print in the open air." In New Hampshire, wrote one person, "A sheet of white paper held within a few inches of the eyes was equally invisible with the blackest velvet." At Hartford, Col. Abraham Davenport opposed adjourning the Connecticut legislature, thus: "The day of judgment is either approaching, or it is not. If it is not, there is no cause of an adjournment; if it is, I choose to be found doing my duty." When it was time for night to fall, the full moon failed to bring light. Even areas that had seen a pale sun in the day could see no moon at all. No moon, no stars: It was the darkest night anyone had seen. Some people could not sleep and waited through the long hours to see if the sun would ever rise again. They witnessed its return the morning of May 20. Many observed the anniversary a year later as a day of fasting and prayer. Professor Samuel Williams of Harvard gathered reports from throughout the affected areas to seek an explanation. A town farther north had reported "a black scum like ashes" on rainwater collected in tubs. A Boston observer noted the air smelled like a "malt-house or coal-kiln." Williams noted that rain in Cambridge fell "thick and dark and sooty" and tasted and smelled like the "black ash of burnt leaves." As if from a forest fire to the north? Without railroad or telegraph, people would not know: No news could come sooner than delivered on horseback, assuming the wildfire was even near any European settlements in the vast wilderness. But we know today that the darkness had moved southwest at about 25 mph. And we know that forest fires in Canada in 1881, 1950 and 2002 each cast a pall of smoke over the northeastern United States. A definitive answer came in 2007. In the International Journal of Wildland Fire, Erin R. McMurry of the University of Missouri forestry department and co-authors combined written accounts with fire-scar evidence from Algonquin Provincial Park in eastern Ontario to document a massive wildfire in the spring of 1780 as the "likely source of the infamous Dark Day of 1780." I FIND THIS SO AMAZING AND I JUST HAD TO SHARE IT WITH YOU ALL. I LOVE HISTORY AND FIND IT SO AMAZING THAT TODAY WE TAKE SO MANY THINGS FOR GRANTED. FOR INSTANCE, WHEN THIS HAPPENS IN OUR DAY, WE HAVE THE NEWS, WHICH GIVES US CLUES AS TO WHAT MAY BE HAPPENING. I CAN'T IMAGINED HOW FRIGHTENED THESE PEOPLE MUST HAVE BEEN AND OF COURSE, THE FIRST THING THAT WOULD HAVE CAME TO THEIR MINDS IS THAT THE WORLD WAS COMING TO AN END. I THINK THINGS LIKE THIS WERE AMONG THE REASONS WHY SO MANY BACK THEN WERE SO SUPERSTITIOUS. WHAT ARE YOUR VIEWS ON THIS HISTORICAL ACCOUNT?
1 person likes this
4 responses
@ElicBxn (63638)
• United States
20 May 08
That's really cool. Like the "year with out a summer" when Mt Tambora erupted in 1816. Nobody knew why it happened. side note, that's the year Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstine.
1 person likes this
• Australia
20 May 08
You're welcome. I'm glad everyone liked it!
@Adelida2233 (1005)
• United States
20 May 08
That's really cool. I've never heard anything about this, even after minoring in Environmental studies. Thanks for posting such an interesting article. I can't imagine how they must have felt. I would have stayed awake all night as well.
• India
20 May 08
Thats interesting! Sure they might have thought about all sorts of ideas and yeah sure about the judgement day. But yeah, if it was in our days, ew would have every possible explaination possible, live on our tv screens. Well, people back then were just too superstious, just like they did not want to come out of their shell, they woven for themselves.
@julyteen (13252)
• Davao, Philippines
24 May 08
it is misconception of what's happening. many fortune teller's tell something about what's happening for the next days, months or year. many will observe and follow what the fortune teller's said but in the Bible it is clearly stated that the sign for the conclusion of old system must be observe by human kind but what happen? they don't mind what it is all about instead they tend to make things that can make them happy. the end of things is near as what foretold by the Bible, we are only the organization who mind in it and shared our knowledge to all so that they will know about this things but most of all are blind and deaf. there is no other time to study why it was happen like the wild fire because at the onclusion of things they are all gone.