the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum says. Reagan was sworn in on Sunday, Jan. 20, 1985, but the public inaugural ceremony was scheduled for the next day. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), the high temperature that day was only ...
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.
Trump's Inauguration Day is expected to be the coldest swearing-in of a president since former President Ronald ... according to the National Weather Service (NWS). It rained during Trump's ...
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 ...
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 ...
Bitter cold gripping much of the country led to a record cold Presidential Inauguration, which was held indoors.
Today President-elect Donald Trump will deliver his second inaugural address. The second inaugural address is normally less dramatic than the first for a two-term president, but it is no less important in outlining a vision of what the next four years might look like.
Jan. 21, 1985, 40 years ago today, was the coldest inauguration on record. Ronald Reagan was sworn in for his second term on a day in which the morning low was 4 degrees below zero and the midday reading was only 7 degrees. It did eventually reach 17 degrees by the afternoon, but wind chills in the afternoon were in the teens and 20s below zero.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - In 1985, the Ronald Reagan inauguration was also dictated by the weather. KY3′s Steve Grant went along with people from the Ozarks who were invited to Washington then. At that time, the Harrison High School Marching band from Arkansas was invited to play, but it too wouldn’t perform.
The presidential inauguration ceremony will take place on what could be the coldest inauguration day since 1985.