Presidential inaugurations have been moved indoors several times due to winter weather. It happened most recently in 1985 as Reagan began his second term.
Dangerously cold temperatures are expected on Inauguration Day, sending millions of spectators to find other ways to watch the historic swearing in.
Ronald and Nancy Reagan were disappointed, but felt they had no choice. That's what White House Press Secretary Larry Speakes told reporters on Jan. 18, 1985, after the Republican president and first
The Washington region should brace for dangerously cold weather on Monday when Donald Trump is inaugurated as the 47th president. Temperatures will not get much above 20 degrees, and, factoring in howling winds,
Bitter cold – along with a chance of snow – is in the latest forecast for President-elect Donald J. Trump's Inauguration Day.
Washington, D.C., will experience a high of 21 degrees and a low of 11 degrees around noon when the inauguration is set to begin.
The weather forecast in Washington, D.C., calls for a high of 24. That's much colder than the predicted high of 70 at Trump's Florida estate.
A "combination of strong winds and very cold temperatures will result in dangerously cold wind chills," the National Weather Service said.
Expected high today in Palm Beach County is 64, 40 degrees warmer than what Donald Trump faces in Washington, D.C., for his inauguration.
The presidential inauguration of Donald J Trump has been moved indoors due to frigid cold temps forecast for the nation's capital on Monday.
On July 21, 1985, the temperature at Piedmont Triad International Airport plunged to a frigid 8 degrees below zero, setting a local record that still stands today.
Marc Chenard, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service (NWS ... US media reported it will be the coldest inauguration since Ronald Reagan's in 1985. During Reagan's inauguration, the ...