In February 1816, the New York Evening Post printed an account of a massive volcanic eruption on the island of Sumbawa in the Dutch East Indies. Minor eruptions had begun on April 4, 1815. On April 10, Mount Tambora detonated in the largest volcanic event in recorded history. The newspaper published the story. Readers read it. And when, months later, snow fell in June and frost killed the August corn across New England, nobody connected the two events.
The answer was in the newspaper. Nobody had a framework to read it.
In Blue Hill, Maine, the Reverend Jonathan Fisher tried to build one. A Congregational minister and careful amateur scientist, Fisher had spent the summer of 1816 watching the killing frosts devastate farms around him. These were his parishioners. Their children were hungry. He wanted to understand why. So he looked at the sun through smoked glass and drew what he saw.
Dark spots on the sun's face, visible that year even to the naked eye. Fisher recorded their positions through the summer and into 1817, producing meticulous drawings that survive as beautiful records of a careful mind reaching for the wrong answer with perfect internal logic. The sun was visibly blemished. The weather was visibly broken. For a minister trying to explain suffering to a congregation living it, the two facts seemed to belong to each other.
Across New England, others reached similar conclusions. Some blamed sunspots. Some blamed divine displeasure. Thomas Jefferson, who kept meticulous weather records at Monticello, described to Albert Gallatin "the most extraordinary year of drought & cold ever known in the history of America." He noted frost in every month. He did not mention Tambora.
And thirty-two years before Fisher aimed his smoked glass at the sun, Benjamin Franklin had already proposed the right answer.
In 1784, Franklin published a short paper called "Meteorological Imaginations and Conjectures" in a pamphlet of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society. The previous summer had been bitterly cold, and a persistent dry fog had dimmed the sun for months. Franklin proposed that volcanic eruptions in Iceland might have injected enough material into the atmosphere to block solar radiation:
"The fog rendered the sun's rays so faint in passing through it, that when collected in the focus of a burning glass, they would scarce kindle brown paper."
Franklin hedged. But the core insight was sound: distant eruptions could alter climate across a hemisphere. The paper appeared in a small specialist publication. No scientific institution carried it forward. By 1816, it was effectively lost. Fisher, drawing his sunspots with extraordinary care, had no way to know that the explanation he needed already existed in a pamphlet gathering dust.
The Tambora link was first proposed around 1913. The definitive scholarly anthology, The Year Without a Summer?, wasn't published until 1992. Fisher's sunspot drawings were rediscovered and published in 2017.
The scientific connection would take roughly a century to establish. The 1883 eruption of Krakatoa finally demonstrated that volcanic eruptions could alter global climate. In 1920, W.J. Humphries of the U.S. Weather Bureau published Physics of the Air, concluding that atmospheric dust, not solar variation, drove the temperature shifts. Fisher's drawings were rediscovered and published in the American Geophysical Union's Space Weather journal in 2017, two centuries after he made them. A precise record of a careful mind working within the boundaries of what his instruments and his era made visible.
We now possess what 1816 lacked. We understand the mechanisms of anthropogenic warming with a precision that would have astonished Franklin. The science is published, debated, available. The parallel to 1816, though, is imprecise, and the imprecision matters. A volcanic winter is a pulse. It dissipates. The weather returned to normal in 1817. What we face does not resolve on that timeline. The two crises are fundamentally different in kind.
The distance between knowledge and response, though, persists. Franklin's insight existed in 1784 and couldn't travel thirty-two years to reach Fisher. The instruments Fisher had available pointed him toward the wrong answer with perfect internal logic. He was bounded by what his tools could show him, and he used those tools with extraordinary care.
Whether that distance between knowing and acting is particular to 1816's ignorance, or something more persistent about how institutions carry knowledge across time, is a question the historical record raises but doesn't settle. Fisher drew what he could see. The answer was in the newspaper the whole time.

