Subj : Today's Weather History
To : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Fri Feb 17 2017 12:10 am
TODAY Version 3.7 06/24/94 Copyright 1986, 1994 By Patrick Kincaid
Today is Friday February 17, 2017.
This is the 48th day of the year, there are 317 days left.
On this day...
Weather data after 1990 is PARTIAL. For more current
weather history, go to the National Climate Data Center
website at www.ncdc.noaa.gov
In 1930 Eureka CA reported an all-time record high of 85 degrees,
a record which lasted until September of 1983.
In 1936 The temperature at McIntosh SD plunged to 58 degrees
below zero to establish a state record.
In 1958 The greatest snowstorm of the mid 20th century struck the
northeastern U.S. The storm produced 30 inches of snow
in interior New England, including more than 19 inches in
24 hours at the Boston Airport. The same storm produced
up to three feet of snow in the Middle Atlantic Coast
Region, with 14 inches at Washington D.C., and 15.5
inches at Baltimore MD. The storm resulted in 43 deaths
and 500 million dollars damage over the Middle Atlantic
Coast States.
In 1987 A couple of winter storms, one off the Atlantic coast and
one in the south central U.S., produced snow and ice from
the Mississippi Valley to the Mid Atlantic Coast Region.
Freezing rain produced a coat of ice three inches thick
in northern South Carolina, and 30,000 homes around
Pee Dee SC were left without electricity. Part of south
central Kentucky were without electricity for three days
following the storm, which is their worst in 35 years.
In 1988 Santa Ana winds in southern California gusted to 63 mph
at Ontario. Heavy snow blanketed parts of Colorado, with
11 inches reported at Strontia.
In 1989 Low pressure off the Washington coast produced more than
a foot of snow in the Cascade Mountains, and more than
three inches of rain along the Northern Pacific Coast.
Spokane WA was blanketed with 13 inches of snow. Cold
arctic air in the Upper Midwest produced all-time record
high barometric pressure readings of 31.10 inches at
Duluth MN, 31.09 inches at Minneapolis MN, and 31.21
inches at Bismarck ND.
In 1990 The biggest winter storm of the season hit the Pacific
Coast Region. In northern California, snow fell along
the coast, and two day totals in the mountains ranged up
to 67 inches at Echo Summit. Snowfall totals in the
mountains of southern California ranged up to 48 inches
at Green Valley, with 46 inches reported at Big Bear. Up
to two feet of snow blanketed the southern Cascade
Mountains of Oregon, and 20 to 35 inches were reported in
the northern Cascades of Oregon. Up to ten inches of
snow blanketed Seattle WA.
In 2003 (12th-17th) After hitting the west coast on the 12th, with
heavy rain, flooding, thunderstorms, and even a funnel
cloud near Fresno, CA, a winter storm affected much of the
eastern half of the country. Areas from Des Moines, IA east
to the east coast got heavy snow, including close to 2 feet
in parts of New England, and around the Baltimore and
Washington, DC area. Further south, heavy rain fell across
Arkansas and adjancent states, with totals over 2 inches
common. Tornadoes were also reported in Florida, with
flooding in Tennessee.