1961 - Hurricane Esther was seeded by Navy planes in the inaugural experiment of what was to formally become Project STORMFURY next year. Esther was the first hurricane to be initially detected by satellite. On Sept. 10th, TIROS III imaged an area of disturbed weather a hundred miles southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands.
More on this and other weather history
Night: Patchy fog between 1am and 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 56. Northeast wind around 3 mph.
Day: Partly sunny, with a high near 69. East wind 3 to 8 mph.
Night: A chance of rain showers between 8pm and 9pm, then a chance of rain showers and patchy fog. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 60. East wind 2 to 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rainfall amounts less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Day: A chance of rain showers before noon. Partly sunny, with a high near 73. Southwest wind around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New rainfall amounts less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 62. Southwest wind around 7 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 75. Northwest wind around 10 mph.
Night: Clear, with a low around 52. North wind around 9 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 64. Northeast wind around 9 mph.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 50. South wind around 7 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 69. South wind 5 to 10 mph.
Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 54. South wind 6 to 10 mph.
Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph.
Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 60. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph.
Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77. Southwest wind 6 to 10 mph.
Lynn, Lynn Harbor
(1.6 miles away)
Salem, Salem Harbor
(4.2 miles away)
Chelsea St. Bridge, Chelsea River
(7.9 miles away)
Tue's High Temperature
111 at Death Valley, CA
Tue's Low Temperature
21 at 14 Miles West-southwest Of Mackay, ID and Peter Sinks, UT
Swampscott () is a town in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States, located 15 miles (24 km) up the coast from Boston in an area known as the North Shore. The population was 15,111 as of the 2020 United States census. A former summer resort on Massachusetts Bay, Swampscott is today a fairly affluent residential community and includes the village of Beach Bluff, as well as part of the neighborhood of Clifton.
Prior to European colonization, the town was inhabited by members of the Naumkeag, Pennacook, and Pawtucket groups and Massachusett tribe. They spoke an Eastern Algonquin language, and the Pawtucket migrated seasonally throughout the eastern coasts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island. It's estimated that 50-100 indigenous individuals resided in the Swampscott area at the time of European colonization. A series of epidemics following European settlement, including smallpox, killed many of the indigenous people living in the area, and it's estimated that fewer than 50 individuals remained by the late 17th century.
Wood's New England Prospect lists "Swampscott" as a noted habitation in 1633 before extensive European settlement. According to an early twentieth century source, the name "Swampscott" is variously said to mean "at the red rock", "broken waters", or "pleasant water place".
Indigenous people in the Swampscott area subsisted on seasonally determined activities, including hunting, fishing, collecting wild plants and shellfish, and horticulture. They hunted deer, marine mammals, upland game birds, and ducks, and cultivated crops like corn, beans, pumpkin, squash, and tobacco.
Swampscott was first colonized by Europeans in 1629 when Francis Ingalls settled there and built the first Massachusetts Bay Colony tannery. Ingalls observed that the town's indigenous population lived in wigwams extending from Black Will's Cliff along the entire north shore. Swampscott has an important Revolutionary War site: the final home of General John Glover in Vinnin Square. During the War, the property was seized from Loyalist William Browne; Glover bought the land in 1781. The 1750s era Glover farmhouse, embedded in a former restaurant, is threatened with demolition for new development.
The town was first settled as the eastern part (Ward One) of Lynn, and was set off and officially incorporated in 1852.
In 1867, a piece of the far western end of Salem, then known as the "Salem Finger", became part of Swampscott. A beach town north of Boston, measuring 3 square miles (7.8 km2) and abutting Salem, Marblehead and Lynn, Swampscott was an important destination for the wealthy at the beginning of the 20th century. While Revere Beach, which lies just several miles down the road, has the honor of technically being America's first public beach, Swampscott was the de facto first resort town. Lynn was the divider between the poor beach and the rich resort town.
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