Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Mon Sep 18 2017 12:13 am

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

Today is Monday  September 18, 2017.
This is the 261st day of the year, there are 104 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 1926 The great "Miami Hurricane" produced winds reaching
           138 mph which drove ocean waters into the Biscayne Bay
           drowning 135 persons.  The eye of the hurricane passed
           over Miami, at which time the barometric pressure reached
           27.61 inches.  Tides up to twelve feet high accompanied
           the hurricane, which claimed a total of 372 lives.
   In 1987 Early morning thunderstorms in northern Texas produced
           wind gusts to 65 mph at Sulphur Springs, and 2.50 inches
           of rain in one hour to Commerce, which caused widespread
           street flooding.  Bonham TX received 4.50 inches of rain
           which also resulted in widespread street flooding as Pig
           Branch overflowed its banks.
   In 1988 A strong cold front produced severe thunderstorms in the
           north central U.S.  High winds behind the cold front
           gusted to 92 mph at Fort Collins CO, and up to a foot of
           snow blanketed the mountains of Montana, with seven
           inches reported at Great Falls.  High winds in Colorado
           caused three million dollars damage.
   In 1989 Hurricane Hugo hit Puerto Rico, producing wind gusts
           to 92 mph at San Juan, and wind gusts to 120 mph at
           Roosevelt Roads.  Hugo produced a storm surge of four to
           six feet, and northeastern sections of the island were
           deluged with more than ten inches of rain.  Hugo claimed
           the lives of a dozen persons in Puerto Rico, and caused
           a bilion dollars damage, incuding 100 million dollars
           damage to crops. Thunderstorms representing what remained
           of Hurricane Octave continued to bring heavy rain to the
           valleys of northern California.  Heavier 24 hour rainfall
           totals included 3.15 inches at Redding, and 2.66 inches at
           Red Bluff.
   In 2003 Hurricane Isabel, which at one time, was a category 5
           hurricane, the first in the Atlantic basin since Mitch in
           1998, weakened to a category 2 hurricane before coming
           ashore at Drum Inlet, North Carolina. Isabel was a rather
           large storm, with tropical storm and hurricane force winds,
           as well as heavy rains, spreading over a large area.


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