This image was copied from wikipedia:en. The original description was:
Weather map drawn by the Weather Bureau's Toledo observer and published in the Toledo Blade in Nov. 1913. Depicts the formation of the w:en:Great Lakes Storm of 1913. Unlike modern weather maps, these showed no warm/cold fronts, since frontal mechanisms were not yet understood, and isobars were located in part by eye and guess. (Courtesy: White Hurricane, via Toledo-Lucas County Public Library).
Monday, November 10th: There was no Sunday edition of the Toledo Blade, but a map created Sunday at the Weather Bureau headquarters in Washington, D.C., showed the southerly low centered over that city, very deep and well formed. By Monday morning, the devastation on Lake Huron is mostly complete, and the low, having crossed Lake Erie Sunday evening, is moving off to the northeast. (excerpt from White Hurricane)
Weather map drawn by the Weather Bureau's Toledo observer and published in the Toledo Blaze in Nov. 1913. Depicts the formation of the <a href="/wiki/Great_Lakes_Storm_of_1913" title="Great Lakes Storm of 1913">Great Lakes Storm of 1913</a>. Unlike modern weather maps, these showed no warm/cold fronts, since frontal mechanisms w
(Weather map drawn by the Weather Bureau's Toledo observer and published in the Toledo Blaze in Nov. 1913. Depicts the formation of the <a href="/wiki/Great_Lakes_Storm_of_1913" title="Great Lakes Storm of 1913">Great Lakes Storm of 1913</a>. Unlike modern weather maps, these showed no warm/cold fronts, since frontal mechanisms w)
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Transwiki approved by: w:en:User:Dmcdevit This image was copied from wikipedia:en. The original description was: Weather map drawn by the Weather Bureau's Toledo observer and published in the Toledo Blade in Nov. 1913. Depicts the formation of the