From the May 7, 2022, SOFREP.com "Did a tornado save Washington, D.C. from being razed to the ground?"
On the night of August 24, 1814, British troops entered the nation's capital with the intent of destruction. They set fire to the U.S. Capitol and what is now known as the White House.
The U.S. Capitol survived, though the Senate wing was badly damaged since it was the oldest part of the structure with wooden floors and the books and manuscripts of the Library of Congress.
Washingtonians were used to scorching summer heat and damaging storms. The day of the invasion, the temperature was at 100 degrees, excellent conditions for the burning of the city. Much of the city was aflame as the British continued their destruction.
But, the skies began to darken and there was sharp lightning accompanied with loud claps of thunder. The people of D.C. knew what was coming and that was a big storm. They took shelter but the British didn't. England gets plenty of rain, but usually without the storm. And, a big one, as it turns out, was on the way.
--Brock-Perry
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