This week we look at photos from the Valentine’s Day Blizzard of 1940. The expected gallery would be photos from the Blizzard of 1978, a storm and photos that many remember well. You can see a gallery here. It was fascinating digging deeper through our archives to find another storm that brought life to a halt. The area was surprised by this storm in 1940 that dropped 14 inches of heavy snow in a very short time. This does not sound like a lot of snow, but the 60 mile per hour winds whipped the wet snow into huge drifts that stopped all transportation. Cars and people were stranded all night and 31 people in New England lost their lives. - Leanne Burden Seidel and Lisa Tuite
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Dan Goshtigian/Globe Staff
Feb. 14, 1940: Automobiles in Adams Square (Washington Street) in Boston were stalled out in the heavy snow. From the time the snow started at 3 p.m., it fell at at a rate of more than an inch an hour for the first nine hours. Winds reached gale force of 60 miles per hour, and it whipped the snow into impenetrable drifts.
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Boston Globe Archives
Feb. 14, 1940: Office women who had started home at 5 o’clock could be seen hours later staggering through snow drifts in high heels.
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Boston Globe Archives
Feb. 14, 1940: The largest single group of stranded travelers were 2,000 Sonja Henie fans who attended her ice show at the Boston Garden and were left without transportation by cessation of service on the Boston Elevated and Boston & Maine Railroad as well as snowbound automobiles. Undismayed, they thronged the North Station's Hotel Manger lobby and restaurants and waited throughout the night. It wasn't until 10 a.m. that the fans were cleared. Extra trains were pressed into service.
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Boston Globe Archives
Feb. 14, 1940: These two skiers made good use of the heavy snowfall as they skied on Washington Street in front of the Boston Globe building in downtown Boston. From left are Sven Cederstrom, a member of the Appalachian Mountain Club, and Bjarne Bremer, both of Beacon Hill.
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The Boston Daily Globe front page on Thursday morning, Feb. 15, 1940.
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Boston Globe Archives
Feb. 15, 1940: Crews were digging out on Newspaper Row. The leading story in the afternoon editions of the Valentine's Day Globe was about the New York blizzard in which winds reached 100 miles per hour on top of the Empire State Building. As far as Boston was concerned, the Weather Bureau said in the same edition, the worst part of the storm would go out to sea south of Boston. The official forecast reported: "Snow this afternoon, probably mixed with rain." ( For reasons now unknown, an airbrush artists highlighted the signs on the left side of the street. This was done in the past to aid in the quality of photos in the newsprint production.)
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John Sheahan/ Globe staff
Feb. 15, 1940: Snow was higher than the tops of cars in places along Route 27 in Medfield, and the road was none too wide either.
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Thomas O'Conner/Globe Staff
Feb. 15, 1940: Crowds of men ready to go to work shoveling snow waited at the City Yards on Albany Street. In all, approximately 17,000 men were hired to dig Boston out of its snowy mess as 9,000 WPA employees were authorized to join the force of over 7,500 regular workers and extras. Any man with a shovel could go to his local work yard and get a job. The city couldn't supply shovels though as it had run out of those.
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Charles McCormick/Globe Staff
Feb. 15, 1940: A parked car was completely covered in snow on Salem Street in Medford Square. (Notice that this print from our archive shows off the work of an airbrush artist in 1940. Every sign on this street was painted over, covering all business names.)
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Boston Globe Archive
Feb. 15, 1940: Trains were set behind by freezing and jammed switches, as well as the herculean task of digging and plowing through huge drifts on rights of way and in the yards of the main railroad lines into Boston. Emergency crews worked all day and night with flame throwers, oil lamps, and bonfires for the huge task of clearing the way for trains.










