Real Work in Deep Snow (December 1998 | Volume: 49, Issue: 8)

Real Work in Deep Snow

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Authors: Tom Brokaw

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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December 1998 | Volume 49, Issue 8

In his book The Greatest Generation, NBC’s anchorman pays tribute to the men and women who came of age during the Great Depression, fought and won the Second World War, and returned home to build the most prosperous, best-educated society in the history of the planet. Here, Tom Brokaw speaks of the passing of one of them.
 

Every year about this time, we go through the same exercise. An approaching cold front bringing snow sets off a certain calamitous tone on radio and television and in the newspapers, especially in the great urban areas. There are so many of us, and we are so dependent on public transportation, food delivery, and the services of others, that it’s only natural that the idea of a snowstorm, however slight the inconvenience, is something to be dreaded, never mind the serenity it brings to the city.

As for me, a decent snowstorm, preferably one with about a 30-knot wind, is a reaffirming act of nature. Although I’ve been gone from my prairie birthplace for more than half my adult life, snow was such a fixture of my formative years that it is now almost a genetic need.

I’m not talking boutique snow here, the kind I welcome in the mountains on ski trips, pillow-soft flakes falling straight down into the best runs. No, I mean a hard storm that roars in from the west and immobilizes nearly everything in its path, clogging the arteries of urban and rural life alike.

My earliest memories involve snow. My mother and father would dress me in an all-wool snowsuit and turn me out into the yard. I would promptly topple over and spend the better part of an afternoon rising and falling. It was a rite of passage for children of the Great Plains, learning mobility in a foot of snow while wearing twenty-five pounds of wet wool. Later we went to other extremes; as teenagers we refused to wear caps, gloves, or overshoes even in the most severe blizzards. Overshoes, especially four-buckle overshoes, were dorkier than plastic pen-protectors for shirts.

Long before four-wheel-drive vehicles became a fixture on American roads I learned how to get through the winter in an old-fashioned two-wheel-drive car, resorting to chains only in the most extreme conditions. Another rite of passage: how to be at the wheel when the car went into a sideways slide and not be tempted to hit the brakes or oversteer.

Snow was central to my father’s whole working life. He operated heavy machinery, including snowplows. He helped build airports, highways, dams, and parks, but nothing gave him as much pleasure as being called out after a great blizzard to clear the roads. He actually delayed his retirement by a year just so he could have one more season seeing the sun catch the snow as it peeled off the big blade on the front of his giant plow. One winter, conditions were so fierce in a rural area he as