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The Children’s Blizzard struck on January 12, 1888. This sudden and severe blizzard left many residents unprepared, especially children who were in school at the time. As temperatures dropped and winds intensified, snow fell rapidly, reducing visibility to almost zero. Many schools across the region were dismissed early due to the worsening conditions, but some teachers failed to understand the danger and kept their students until it was too late. The rickety one-room schoolhouses offered little shelter, so teachers and students alike had to venture outside and navigate through the blinding storm to reach safety.
The blizzard’s immediacy and ferocity proved deadly, claiming the lives of over 200 people, many of whom were children. Some were stranded on their way home from school, while others sought shelter in the open countryside, only to succumb to hypothermia and exposure. In the aftermath of the blizzard, stories of heroism emerged as people across the country learned of brave individuals who risked their own lives to rescue those stranded in the snow. The tragedy also underlined the vulnerability of immigrant communities who traveled directly from their home countries to the Great Plains to
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