I am in Michigan and did not .
Bethesda, MD. Rattled my building pretty good.
Herndon, VA, did feel it.
Reported for forum change.
Burlington, VT. Felt a definite sustained rocking.
Huntington NY one story office building shook for about 10 seconds, shook hard enough to make me feel a little queasy.
Also Huntington, NY - on 2nd floor - shook enough to send me running.
Sullivan County, New York, didn’t notice anything.
NYC - definitely a little shaking. Hard to believe the epicenter is Mineral, Virginia.
Albany, NY - definitely.
On a subway platform in Queens NY. The whole damned thing shook for quite a few seconds.
Central NJ - Yes, I felt it. My building lightly shook for approximately 10 seconds.
My mom’s in Maryland, and freaking out. :rolleyes: Some of her glass jars fell off of shelves and broke. She said her apartment building was shaking for at least 30 seconds.
My sister, who works for the VA in DC, had to evacuate the office building.
Suburban Charlotte, NC. Thought it was the train. It wasn’t.
I would hate to be on an elevated platform in a real quake. I’m in Astoria and I’m pretty sure the N line is held up with spit and toilet paper.
Same here - across from the clocktower on centerville road.
My building shook. We could see the lights moving and feel the floor moving.
Didn’t feel it.
Rockingham County, southern New Hampshire.
Very noticeable in Columbus, Ohio.
I’m closer to the epicenter than many who felt it, but it was quite minor here. There must be some geological isolation or insulation in these mountains that didn’t transmit as much as it did up and down the Piedmont.
Now that’s weird. You’re on the other side of the mountains.
Felt pretty strongly in Sterling, VA. Not far from Herndon.
Moved to IMHO from General Questions. I know this question can be answered with simple facts (I was in NYC and I felt it), but this is more about personal experiences. So IMHO it is.