Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Tue Oct 03 2017 12:12 am

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

Today is Tuesday  October 3, 2017.
This is the 276th day of the year, there are 89 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 1841 An October gale, the worst of record for Nantucket MA,
           caught the Cap Cod fishing fleet at sea.  Forty ships
           were driven ashore on Cape Cod, and 57 men perished from
           the town of Truro alone.  Heavy snow fell inland, with 18
           inches near Middletown CT.
   In 1912 The longest dry spell of record in the U.S. commenced as
           Bagdad CA went 767 days without rain.
   In 1964 Hurricane Hilda struck Louisiana spawning many tornadoes,
           and claimed twenty-two lives.
   In 1979 The first killer tornado of record in October in
           Connecticut destroyed sixteen vintage aircraft at the
           Bradley Air Museum in Windsor Locks.  The tornado damaged
           more than 100 homes causing 200 million dollars damage.
           Three persons were killed, and 500 others were injured.
   In 1986 Remnants of Hurricane Paine deluged Oklahoma and
           southeastern Kansas with 6 to 10 inch overnight rains.
           Hardy OK was drenched with 21.79 inches.  Heavy rain
           between September 26th and October 4th caused 350 million
           dollars damage in Oklahoma.
   In 1987 Twenty-five cities in the Upper Midwest, ten in Iowa,
           reported record low temperatures for the date.  Duluth
           MN, Eau Claire WI and Spencer IA dipped to 24 degrees.
           Temperatures warmed into the 80s in the Northern and
           Central High Plains Region.  At Chadaron NE, the mercury
           soared from a morning low of 29 degrees to an afternoon
           high of 88 degrees.  Temperatures soared above 100
           degrees in southern California.  The high of 108 degrees
           at Downtown Los Angeles was a record for October.
           (2nd-3rd) 7.87" of rain fell on Nimes, France in 3 hours,
           causing floods and mudslides, & $634 million damage.
   In 1988 Cold Canadian air invaded the north central U.S. bringing
           an end to the growing season across those states.
           Unseasonably warm weather prevailed in the southwestern
           U.S.  Phoenix AZ reported a record high of 105 degrees.
   In 1989 Unseasonably cold weather prevailed from the Pacific
           Northwest to the Upper Mississippi Valley.  A dozen
           cities reported record low temperatures for the date,
           including Bismarck ND and Williston ND with readings
           of 16 degrees above zero.  An upper level weather
           disturbance brought snow to parts of Idaho, Wyoming
           and Montana, with five inches at West Yellowstone MT.
   In 2000 (3rd-4th) A non-tropical system developed rapidly over
           South Florida, spawning torrential rains, severe flash
           flooding, and several tornadoes. Miami International
           Airport measured 7 inches of rain in 2 hours, with a 33
           hour storm total of over 15 inches. Nearly 100,000 homes
           and businesses in Miami-Dade and Broward Counties
           received flood damage...and over 20,000 utility customers
           lost power. The communities of Hialeah and Sweetwater
           were especially hard hit. The weather system eventually
           became a "sub-tropical depression", and transformed into
           Tropical Storm Leslie on the 4th, moving away from
           Florida.
   In 2002 Hurricane Lili, which was at 145 mph just 24 hours before,
           weakened to a 100 mph hurricane before coming ashore near
           New Iberia, LA. Widespread heavy rain, damage, and several
           tornadoes resulted, with close to 500,000 people without
           power at the height of the storm.
   In 2015 (3rd-4th) A stalled frontal boundary, and moisture coming
           from Hurricane Joaquin brought widespread heavy rain and
           flooding to the Carolinas. Charleston, SC recorded 11.50
           inches of rain on the 3rd, with an additional 6.87 inches
           of rain on the 4th, for a 2 day total of 22.37 inches of
           rain. Numerous roads and railroads were also washed out.


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