It’s that time of year again (at least here in the northeast!) when kids hope to wake up to a blanket of snow – and the phone call saying that school is closed! Some kids follow a superstition that says if you turn your pjs inside out it will make it snow (the nubs on the inside of flannel or fleecy pjs look a bit like snow). Even adults feel that electricity in the air when the first flurries fall. And so in that spirit, we’ve scoured the archives for photos of kids of all ages having fun in the snow.
Finally, it’s not often we get to see history come alive – in color! Our fabulous Kurt K. Field Film Collection P-805 is a treasure trove of home videos, many as early as the 1940s, from time when few families had the capability to capture their everyday lives. In this video, Field records the blizzard of 1941 in New York City. In one of the worst March snowstorms ever to hit the Big Apple, on March 7 and 8, 1941, about 18 inches of snow fell on Central Park. We see the 1940s automobiles hidden behind piles of the white stuff, unprepared pedestrians gingerly making their way through the drifts, spontaneous snowball fights, and adults and kids alike sledding in Central Park. We may only be at the beginning of snow season this year, but if we’re lucky (depending on your feelings toward snow!) we may have a long season of wintery fun ahead of us!