Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Sat Aug 05 2017 12:10 am

TODAY  Version 3.7   06/24/94       Copyright 1986, 1994  By Patrick Kincaid

Today is Saturday  August 5, 2017.
This is the 217th day of the year, there are 148 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 1843 A spectacular cloudburst near Philadelphia turned the
           small creeks and streams entering the Delaware River into
           raging torrents.  As much as sixteen inches of rain fell
           in just three hours.  Flooding destroyed thirty-two
           county bridges, and caused nineteen deaths.  It is
           believed that several small tornadoes accompanied the
           torrential rains, one of which upset and sank more than
           thirty barges on the Schuylkill River.
   In 1924 The SS Frankenfels measured the sea surface of the Persian
           Gulf at 96 degrees, possibly the highest ever observed.
   In 1961 The temperature at Ice Harbor Dam WA soared to
           118 degrees to equal the state record established at
           Wahluke on the 24th of July in 1928.  The afternoon high
           of 111 degrees at Havre MT was an all-time record for
           that location.
   In 1987 Severe thunderstorms raked eastern South Dakota.
           Thunderstorms spawned half a dozen tornadoes, and
           produced softball size hail at Bowdle, and wind gusts to
           90 mph south of Watertown.  Hot weather continued in
           eastern Texas.  Afternoon highs of 100 at Houston and 106
           at Waco equalled records for the date.
   In 1988 Thunderstorms produced severe weather from Indiana and
           Lower Michigan to Pennsylvania and New York State during
           the day.  Thunderstorms in Michigan produced wind gusts
           to 80 mph at Ashley, Hastings and Lennon.
   In 1989 Thunderstorms produced severe weather in Oklahoma, and
           from Iowa to the Upper Ohio Valley, with 216 reports
           of large hail or damaging winds between early Saturday
           morning and early Sunday morning.  Thunderstorms moving
           across Iowa about sunrise produced extremely high winds
           which caused ten million dollars damage to crops in
           Carroll and Greene Counties.  Thunderstorm winds at
           Jefferson IA reached 102 mph.  Afternoon thunderstorms
           produced tennis ball size hail at Bay Mills WI.
   In 2009 (5th-9th) After storming through the Phillippines and
           Taiwan, Typhoon Morakot slammed into four coastal
           provinces in China, causing severe flooding and
           mudslides across a wide area. Floodwaters were as high
           as 7 feet in portions of Taiwan.
   In 2011 Massive flash flooding in Charlotte, North Carolina,
           killed one person, forced the rescuing of trapped
           motorists, and the evacuations of at least two
           neighborhoods. The area received greater than 3 inches
           of rain, with some areas measuring 6 inches of rain.
           The flooding shut down parts of highways 77, 485, and
           85 for a time. One hotel lobby interior was turned into
           a waterfall, as heavy rain accumulated on the roof, and
           poured through light fixtures, collapsing a desktop
           size section of the ceiling.
   In 2012 Lightning struck and killed a NASCAR fan, and injured
           nine others in a parking lot outside the Pocono Raceway
           in Pennsylvania. Fans were warned by the PA announcer
           to take cover, as the thunderstorms approached. In
           Arkansas, between 5pm and 6pm, 5000 lightning strikes
           were observed, in a wide swath from Hope and Prescott in
           southwest Arkansas to between Carthage and Fordyce in
           south central Arkansas. Over 13,500 people from the Hot
           Springs area southward, were without power. As a severe
           storm collapsed over downtown Hot Springs, an 80 mph
           downburst winds damaged close to 100 structures. The
           temperature plunged from 105 degrees to the upper 70s
           in just a few short minutes.
   In 2013 An intense amount of lightning strikes were observed
           from thunderstorms across north Arkansas. A total of
           5413 strikes occurred from 9pm to 12 midnight, and
           there were about 12,000 power outages in Baxter County,
           due to the lightning.


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