This week in Wisconsin history, one of the hottest heat waves Wisconsin has ever endured happened on July 13, 1936. At multiple points during the week from the 7th to the 14th, temperatures exceeded 100 degrees every day in Northeast Wisconsin. Resulting in the deaths of approximately 5,000 nationally and over 400 in the state of Wisconsin alone. Some of the deaths that occurred in the state weren’t from heat exhaustion or stroke, but from drowning, in an effort to relieve themselves from the intense heat. While the air temperature was around 100 degrees, meteorologists speculate that the “feels-like” temperature could have reached 120 degrees across the state.



