Maria Mitchell In Her Own Words
1881. Sept. 6, 2:30 p.m. The air is so smoky and it is so dark that I cannot see to write. We suppose there are fires and it is the smoke from the burning bushes. (This was a yellow day) I could not see well enough to read the newspaper, 4 feet from the window, at noon day with my glasses on. The saffron hue which was very depressing diminished about 5 p.m. This peculiar hue, gave the grass a blue-green appearance; and the flowers lost their clear colors and were mixed.
This fire could have been something local to Poughkeepsie, but with a little investigating there was a fire in Michigan – referred to as the Thumb Fire because it was in the “thumb” of the Michigan “mitten” – at this time in 1881. It began September 5 and burned over a million acres. It killed 282 people. It effected the New England area, and New York as well. You have to remember the time too, the day after such a conflagration even, the information had likely not spread and so Maria and others were unaware of what was happening – only that there must be a fire somewhere.
JNLF
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