Remember last Halloween? It was the second-warmest on record. Highs reached 77 degrees, with some 80-degree temperatures to the south. People were trick-or-treating in onesies and even shorts.

How about the Halloween before that? It was the second-snowiest on record. Cleveland saw nearly two inches of snow, and even more snow was seen in areas like Ashtabula County. People had to shovel their front porches for the kids.

Despite the crazy weather each of the last two Halloweens, there have been even bigger weather extremes on Halloween. That is because the end of October, which is in the middle of the fall season, is a transition time for the weather. Mother Nature could serve major warmth or chills, rain or even snow.

The warmest Halloween occurred nearly 75 years ago, in 1950, when hig

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