Michigan’s Summer That Never Was: The Chilling Story of 1816
Posted by Michael Perna on
Imagine a Michigan summer where June feels like winter and July brings frost instead of fireworks. It sounds like folklore, but in 1816 this bizarre scenario was all too real. That year has gone down in history as the “Year Without a Summer,” a time when even Detroit, then a small frontier town, reportedly saw ice in every single month. More than two decades before Michigan became a state, its early settlers endured a summer so cold and strange that “Eighteen Hundred and Froze to Death” became folks’ grim nickname for the year. This article explores how that missing summer unfolded, why it happened, and how it shaped Michigan’s story, all told in the voice of a seasoned Michigander who knows and loves the local lore.
A Michigan Summer Lost to the…
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