THE GREAT SNOWSTORM
OF 1967
Winters in Chicago are always an
adventure. Especially when you’re 10 years old and there is 24 inches of snow
on the ground.
In 1967 the
second largest snowstorm ferociously blew into Chicago. We raptly watched
blankets of white fall on the ground for hours. The water fountain in the park
across the street from my house stood three feet high. I remember sitting in
the living room window watching it slowly disappear as the snow continued to
creep up its sides. After a while, only the spout at the top was visible
reminding me of a mouse peeping out of its hole.
All the
kids were glued either to their windows or their televisions hoping and praying
for the news broadcasters to say “all CPS are closed.” I remember it took very
little snow or bad weather to cause the suburban schools to close, but it took
a catastrophic act of God to close our schools. When the word finally came you
could almost hear the cheers from every household as youngsters sang Hosannas
while the parents scrambled to either find sitters or miss work to take care of
their children. Not that they would be able to get very far anyway since
driving was impossible. Any attempts to do so resulted in cars becoming stuck
in oddly contorted positions making driving even more hellish.
My Dad got
particularly irritable because he was looking at the snow with a grown up,
responsible “Oh Hell, I’ve got to shovel my way out of all of this shit” eyes.
We saw it with “Wooh, Hooh! No school. We can make snowmen, have snowball
fights, make snow angels and go sledding!” eyes.
At 50 years
old, no matter how healthy you think you are or hard you may have worked at
keeping your body in shape, you are not prepared to shovel 3 feet of snow
without feeling the affects. Especially if the air is also cold and thin making
it doubly difficult to breathe. Daddy discovered this and got even madder with
every heave of his snow shovel. Although when we went out to help him we could
occasionally get him to good naturedly return the fire of a barrage of snow
balls.
Once people
were successful at clearing a path from the door to the sidewalk, their next
feat was to shovel out their cars and driveways or parking spots. That is,
provided they hadn’t already succumbed to cardiac arrest or injured their
backs, knees or any other vital muscles or body parts.
Once the
driveway or parking spot was cleared, it was wildly important to retain
possession of that spot since it probably took several hours to clean.
Occasionally this was accomplished by placing household furniture such as old
chairs or tables or anything large enough in the space to mark it as being
already taken. Unfortunately, what sometimes happened was that not only could
you lose your space but your furniture as well. Needless to say this lead to
many altercations and sometimes they became serious enough for police
intervention. Whoever said snow made people feel peaceful and calm obviously
drove snowplows, employed plenty of domestic help or lived in Las Vegas.
While the
adults were fighting their battles with shovels and salt as their weapons, we
kids were loving every minute of it, not understanding why our parents were
becoming increasingly grumpy, agitated and sometimes downright mean. We saw
every inch of this fluffy, white wonderland as an opportunity to engage in a
new, fun activity for ourselves and even our pets.
One of the
most humorous memories I have of this time was watching my dog, Lady try to
walk in the doggie boots we bought her. Not that she was even able to walk in
that much snow with or without them since the minute she walked out of the door
and off of the path we had shoveled she disappeared into a snow drift. Once we
dug her out and she realized the only way she was going to make any progress
was to remain on the shoveled areas, she then had to figure out a way to walk
with four little rubber booties on her feet. Whoever, designed these things
evidently wasn’t familiar with dog feet or for that matter not much of an
animal lover.
These
things resembled four little gray hard rubber balloons. There was no possible
way the poor little creature could gain its footing. The idea of having boots
for your dog was so cute however, that you simply had to give them a try. I
must admit, I’ve never seen an animal walk with each leg going in different
directions at once. At least not in real life. Perhaps in cartoons.
Once we
finally finished laughing and realized these boots were of no use except for
our entertainment, we did the humane thing and removed them. Lady then promptly
tried to bite us as we attempted to make her go inside. I don’t think she
wanted to remain outside as much as she just wanted revenge.
Another
source of recreation we discovered was diving off of the tops of people’s
garages in to the snow drifts below. That is provided you could find a way to
get to the top without killing yourself. The only problem was once you dove in,
you had to climb back out. Several of us were buried so deep we almost drowned
or suffocated or whatever you do in really deep snow when you can’t extricate
yourself.
The other
significant risk was the possibility of there being a hard or sharp object
invisibly buried in the snow in which you were landing. We were to dumb and to
intent on having a good time to even consider that possibility. Fortunately, we
all survived without skewering ourselves.
In the dark
ages when I was 10, a sled was a necessary piece of equipment for winter sports.
Now a snowboard or a toboggan is required and that’s only if it is identified
or endorsed by the most recent X games gold medalist. However, in 1967 a sled
was all that was needed. Sometimes just a large, sturdy piece of cardboard was
acceptable.
Now in
order for a sled to provide the truly exhilarating, adrenaline pumping,
somewhat terrifying experience for which we so yearned, a hill of some kind
with a significant incline was required. The bigger the hill, the greater the
thrill. The monster storm had provided a veritable cornucopia of those due to
all of the plowing and pushing the snow into gigantic white miniature Mount
Everests just waiting for us to ascend and take the plunge.
Of course
my sister, Pat and I, being the bold souls that we were, realized we were in
snow mound Nirvana living across the street from a park where two of the most
beautiful man made peaks had been formed on each end of the park’s baseball
diamonds. After tiring of the mound in the diamond directly across the street
from our house, we decided to explore and conquer the mound clear on the other
side of the park on Parnell Street.
A day or
two after the storm when the streets were a bit more passable thanks to the
plows, the mound we chose was at least ten feet high. One side, the side facing
the interior of the park was smooth and perfect for whooshing your sled
straight into the snow covered baseball field. The back side of the hill was
uneven and perfect for getting a foothold, provided you were very careful climbing
to the top. Once there, you proceeded to perfectly position yourself so that
your descent was almost orgasmic.
Off we
trudged in waist deep snow across the park pursuing our quest to conquer our
ideal mountain. Pat ascended first. From the rear of the mound she seemed to
have no problem reaching the peak, positioning herself on the sled in the
traditional manner, lying flat on her stomach, and racing down the mound at
break neck speed, screaming at the top of her lungs the entire time.
Encouraged
by her success and wild eyed shouts of encouragement and enthusiasm, it became
my turn. From the back of the mound I began my ascent. Choosing my footholds
with extreme care I slowly made my way up. When I reached the peak, I made a
bold decision. I decided to sit on the sled and go down instead of the safer
method of lying on my stomach. This was an extremely risky decision because it
provided very little room in which to place your center of gravity. Shifting
your weight too much in one direction would cause you and the sled to go
uncontrollably careening down the hill backwards, which is exactly what happened.
As soon as
I sat on the sled and felt it begin its descent in the opposite direction of
where I had intended for it to go, I realized my faux pas. I noticed as I went
down the back side of the hill, the look on my sister’s face was a cross
between surprise and panic because she knew the bottom of the hill on that side
emptied out into the street. She also noticed the way I had situated myself on
the sled, made it impossible to control or stop.
As I went
out onto Parnell Street, I noticed a large beige station wagon approaching,
fortunately very slowly since the snow still hadn’t been completely cleaned.
This vehicle looked vaguely familiar to me. The closer it got, the more
familiar it and the driver became. My first thought after making it to the
bottom of the hill uninjured was “Whew, thank goodness! Upon seeing this
particular car and driver veering down on me, my next thought was “OH SHIT, I’M
SO DEAD! If Daddy doesn’t hit me with the car and kill me, he’s going to kill
me once he gets out of the car for being in the street.”
Fortunately,
he was so shocked to a) see a kid sliding backwards out in front of his car and
b) seeing that it was one of his children and narrowly missing killing her, that
once he stopped the car and jumped out all he could muster was a string of
profanities such as “What the !@$#%& are you doing in the middle of the
street?”
I had
suspected years earlier that Daddy’s bark was worse than his bite. However one
could never be sure when exactly you could inspire him to bite. Hence my
intense panic at seeing the furious look on his face.
Never
having been one to think or speak very rapidly, all I could think to do was try
to stop his tirade and possible physical chastisement by doing something that
might make him think I was already injured. I decided to burst into hysterical
tears and babble incoherently.
Since Pat
was two years older than me, I felt it was only right that I implicate her
somehow in this mishap, only I couldn’t find a way to spin it since she was on
the other side of the hill screaming, laughing and waving goodbye as I took the
plunge.
That didn’t
matter however because Daddy found a way to punish both of us. He promptly
herded us and our sleds into the car, drove home and told Momma what happened.
GOD HELP US!
Thus endeth
the snowball fights, snowmen, snow angels and garage leaps. We spent the
remainder of the storm’s snow days listening to the radio play the top hits of
the day. The Beatles, The Association, Frankie Vallie and the Four Seasons,
Lesley Gore and, oh yeah, this new guy from Wales who had a really good voice
and a cool song called “It’s Not Unusual” that Pat seemed to really enjoy.
Now that I
think about it, she enjoyed it so much I believe that’s the reason he became
her first true love.
But that’s
a story for another time.