Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Mon Aug 14 2017 07:24 am

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

Today is Monday  August 14, 2017.
This is the 226th day of the year, there are 139 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 1936 Temperatures across much of eastern Kansas soared above
           110 degrees.  Kansas City MO hit an all-time record high
           of 113 degrees.  It was one of sixteen consecutive days
           of 100 degree heat for Kansas City.  During that summer
           there were a record 53 days of 100 degree heat, and
           during the three summer months Kansas City received just
           1.12 inches of rain.
   In 1987 Slow moving thunderstorms deluged northern and western
           suburbs of Chicago IL with torrential rains.  O'Hare
           Airport reported 9.35 inches in 18 hours, easily
           exceeding the previous 24 hour record of 6.24 inches.
           Flooding over a five day period resulted in 221 million
           dollars damage.  It was Chicago's worst flash flood
           event, particularly for northern and western sections of
           the city.  Kennedy Expressway became a footpath for
           thousands of travelers to O'Hare Airport as roads were
           closed.  The heavy rains swelled the Des Plaines River
           above flood stage, and many persons had to be rescued
           from stalled vehicles on flooded roads.  (13th-14th)
   In 1988 Eighteen cities in the northeastern U.S. reported record
           high temperatures for the date, and the water temperature
           at Lake Erie reached a record 80 degrees.  Portland ME
           reported a record fourteen straight days of 80 degree
           weather.  Milwaukee WI reported a record 34 days of 90
           degree heat for the year.  Afternoon and evening
           thunderstorms resulted in about fifty reports of severe
           weather in the northeastern U.S.  One person was killed
           at Stockbridge MI when a tornado knocked a tree onto
           their camper.
   In 1989 Afternoon thunderstorms in Illinois soaked the town of
           Battendorf with 2.10 inches of rain in thirty minutes.
           Evening thunderstorms in Montana produced wind gusts to
           66 mph at Hobson.


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