Presidential inaugurations have been moved indoors several times due to winter weather. It happened most recently in 1985 as Reagan began his second term.
The Inauguration Day forecast calls for bitter cold and high winds. It is expected to be D.C.’s coldest inauguration in 40 years.
Dangerously cold temperatures are expected on Inauguration Day, sending millions of spectators to find other ways to watch the historic swearing in.
The last time cold weather scuttled the outdoor inauguration ceremony was in 1985 when Ronald Reagan was ... because of a snowstorm. The National Weather Service is projecting sunny weather ...
President-elect Donald Trump's Inauguration Day is expected to be the coldest swearing-in of a president since former President Ronald Reagan's second ... according to the National Weather Service (NWS). It rained during Trump's first swearing-in, although ...
Ronald and Nancy Reagan were disappointed. That’s what White House press secretary Larry Speakes told reporters on Jan. 18, 1985, after the Republican president and first lady decided to hold his second inauguration indoors because of an unusually cold weather forecast.
The temperature in D.C. is forecast to be around 22 degrees at noon on Monday during the swearing-in, the coldest since Ronald Reagan's second inauguration.
Chilly temperatures pushed President-elect Donald Trump's second inauguration indoors, a rare but not unprecedented move.
It happened most recently in 1985 when former President Ronald Reagan began his second ... According to the National Weather Service (NWS), the high temperature that day was only 17 degrees ...
Ronald and Nancy Reagan were disappointed. That's what White House press secretary Larry Speakes told reporters on Jan. 18, 1985, after the Republican president and first lady decided to hold his ...
Bitter cold gripping much of the country led to a record cold Presidential Inauguration, which was held indoors.
The cold temperatures of late bring back memories of one particularly cold winter when I was in the eighth grade at Booth Junior High during the 1984-85 school year. I […]