SE Michigan, sitting on my roof taking photos of the guys taking down my huge dead ash tree.
Felt nothing.
Local news is reporting a few 911 calls about it though.
Don’t much care for the sound of that.
Not a thing. Houston, Texas
New York City. Felt it. My building was briefly evacuated.
Calgary, AB - I don’t think anyone will be surprised that we didn’t feel it. We never get any earthquakes here.
(I’m actually okay with that.)
New London, CT. Did not feel it.
Morgantown, WV. Inside the building nobody felt anything. As I walked out, shocked pedestrians were asking me if I felt an earthquake. I thought that they were insane. Turned on car radio for a special report about the earthquake. Amazing.
Toronto. I didn’t feel it but my buds who work in tall buildings did.
Boston MA. Definitely felt it. Hanging lights were swaying. Pretty mild though.
I don’t know how we missed it. My husband was in Central Jersey at home, didn’t feel a thing. I was in South Jersey, just over the bridge from Philly where I understand it was very much felt. But I never felt a thing either.
Dayton, OH. Didn’t feel anything.
My coworker was in her car and didn’t feel it.
Similar experience in Raleigh, NC. My wife called from work to tell me the earthquake shook her building but she was OK. I said, “What earthquake?”
It kind of felt like one of those vibrating chairs in nail salons, but without the sound. By the time my brain connected what I was feeling to the word ‘earthquake’ it was over.
College Park, MD. Yes, we felt it. The walls were shaking like crazy and the floor started shifting. We were briefly evacuated, went back inside, then were evacuated again when they discovered structural damage.
Yeah, I felt the floor bouncing a bit on the 10th floor of our building.
Columbia, Maryland, about thirty minutes from Baltimore. Our house shook hard for several seconds at least.
Midtown Manhattan. Didn’t notice a damn thing.
Northeastern Mass, felt nothing