Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

More than half a century ago, New York City suffered from a drought that lasted through 1949 and into 1950. By February, the desperate city had to try something different. Mayor William O’Dwyer hired a municipal rainmaker.
Dr. Wallace E. Howell was an inspired choice. The handsome, thirty-five-year-old Harvard-educated meteorologist was the ideal scientist—soft spoken, modest, and articulate. No fast-talking prairie huckster, he took credit for nothing he couldn’t prove with sound empirical data. Howell’s meticulous nature often baffled jaded New Yorkers.
Over the next year, his leadership of a small ground and air armada, and his unprecedented scientific campaign to replenish the city’s upstate reservoirs in the Catskills, captured the imagination of the world. New York’s cloud seeding and rainmaking efforts would remain the stuff of legend—and controversy—for decades.
Howell’s Storm is the first in-depth look at New York City’s only official rainmaker—an unintentional celebrity, dedicated scientist, and climate entrepreneur, whose activities stirred controversy among government officials, meteorologists, theologians, farmers, and resort owners alike.
 

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Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

More than half a century ago, New York City suffered from a drought that lasted through 1949 and into 1950. By February, the desperate city had to try something different. Mayor William O’Dwyer hired a municipal rainmaker.
Dr. Wallace E. Howell was an inspired choice. The handsome, thirty-five-year-old Harvard-educated meteorologist was the ideal scientist—soft spoken, modest, and articulate. No fast-talking prairie huckster, he took credit for nothing he couldn’t prove with sound empirical data. Howell’s meticulous nature often baffled jaded New Yorkers.
Over the next year, his leadership of a small ground and air armada, and his unprecedented scientific campaign to replenish the city’s upstate reservoirs in the Catskills, captured the imagination of the world. New York’s cloud seeding and rainmaking efforts would remain the stuff of legend—and controversy—for decades.
Howell’s Storm is the first in-depth look at New York City’s only official rainmaker—an unintentional celebrity, dedicated scientist, and climate entrepreneur, whose activities stirred controversy among government officials, meteorologists, theologians, farmers, and resort owners alike.
 

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Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

by Jim Leeke
Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

Howell's Storm: New York City's Official Rainmaker and the 1950 Drought

by Jim Leeke

Hardcover

$27.99 
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Overview

More than half a century ago, New York City suffered from a drought that lasted through 1949 and into 1950. By February, the desperate city had to try something different. Mayor William O’Dwyer hired a municipal rainmaker.
Dr. Wallace E. Howell was an inspired choice. The handsome, thirty-five-year-old Harvard-educated meteorologist was the ideal scientist—soft spoken, modest, and articulate. No fast-talking prairie huckster, he took credit for nothing he couldn’t prove with sound empirical data. Howell’s meticulous nature often baffled jaded New Yorkers.
Over the next year, his leadership of a small ground and air armada, and his unprecedented scientific campaign to replenish the city’s upstate reservoirs in the Catskills, captured the imagination of the world. New York’s cloud seeding and rainmaking efforts would remain the stuff of legend—and controversy—for decades.
Howell’s Storm is the first in-depth look at New York City’s only official rainmaker—an unintentional celebrity, dedicated scientist, and climate entrepreneur, whose activities stirred controversy among government officials, meteorologists, theologians, farmers, and resort owners alike.
 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780912777955
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 04/02/2019
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Jim Leeke is the author of From the Dugouts to the Trenches, Nine Innings for the King, and Ballplayers in the Great War. A former print journalist, he has written extensively about computing, technology, and American military history.
 

Table of Contents

Introduction ix

1 Drought 1

2 Snow 15

3 Mount Greylock 23

4 Possibilities 31

5 Crackerjack 39

6 Headquarters 49

7 Hurricane King 57

8 The Goose 63

9 Who Owns the Clouds? 75

10 Achilles' Heel 83

11 Mystified City 93

12 Jupiter Pluvius 103

13 Combined Operations 115

14 Marksman's Nightmare 123

15 Cloud Pirates 131

16 Weather Headaches 137

17 Summertime 145

18 Senor O'Dwyer 153

19 Autumn 161

20 Thanksgiving 169

21 Winter 181

Epilogue 191

Acknowledgments 203

Notes 205

Bibliography 243

Index 251

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