Hot, you call this hot, well back in the old days . . .

On this day in 1936, the Dust Bowl heat wave was so intense that Kansas and Nebraska experienced their all-time hottest temperatures, unbroken to this day. In Alton, Kansas, the temperature was 121 degrees, and in Minden, Nebraska, it was 118.

During the summer of 1936, a total of 15 states recorded all-time hottest temperatures that still have not been broken. And not all of the states were in the Dust Bowl region. Earlier in the month, Runyon, New Jersey, was 110, Moorhead, Minnesota, hit 114, and Martinsburg, West Virginia, 112. By early August, Ozark, Arkansas, and Seymour, Texas, had hit 120 degrees.

The term “Dust Bowl” had first been used on April 15, 1935, the day after “Black Sunday,” when dust storms were so bad on the Great Plains that the sky was totally black during the day and there were winds up to 60 miles per hour.

The Writer’s Almanac with Garrison Keillor

Here’s a list of the 50 state records. I count 13 all-time highs from 1936.