Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : ALL USERS
From : DARYL STOUT
Date : Mon Dec 28 2015 09:28 am

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

Today is Monday  December 28, 2015.
This is the 362nd day of the year, there are 3 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 1839 The third storm in two weeks hit the northeastern U.S.
           It brought two more feet of snow to Hartford CT and
           Worcester MA.  Whole gales swept the coast causing many
           wrecks.
   In 1897 The temperature at Dayville OR hit 81 degrees to
           establish a state record for December.
   In 1924 Iowa experienced its coldest December morning of record.
           Morning lows averaged 25 degrees below zero for the
           104 weather stations across the state.
   In 1955 Anchorage AK was buried under 17.7 inches of snow in
           24 hours, a record for that location.  (28th-29th)
   In 1958 Albuquerque NM received 14.2 inches of snow to establish
           a 24 hour record.  (28th-29th)
   In 1987 A winter storm produced heavy snow in the Upper
           Mississippi Valley and the Upper Great Lakes Region.  Up
           to twenty inches of snow buried southern Minnesota, and
           20 to 40 mph northwesterly winds produced snow drifts six
           feet high, and reduced visibilities to near zero at times
           in blowing snow.  There were a thousand traffic accidents
           in Michigan during the storm, resulting in thirty-five
           injuries.
   In 1988 Strong winds behind a cold front claimed three lives
           in eastern Pennsylvania, and injured a dozen others in
           eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Maryland.
           Winds gusted to 87 mph at Hammonton NJ and in the
           Washington D.C. area.
   In 1989 Squalls continued to bring snow to the Great Lakes
           Region, with heavy snow reported near Lake Superior and
           Lake Ontario.  Syracuse NY received 8.5 inches of snow to
           push the total for the month past their previous December
           record of 57 inches.
   In 2001 (28th-31st) Montague, NY got just under 10 feet of snow
           (119 inches), from the Lake Effect Snow Machine.
   In 2002 Another in a series of storms battered the west coast
           from Washington south to California. Heavy rains at the
           lower elevations, heavy snow at the higher elevations,
           and strong winds were the rule. Some places in the higher
           elevations had gusts well over 100 mph, the equivalent of
           a category 2 hurricane (28th). The storm would produce
           heavy rain and severe weather across the central and
           southern plains into the southeast U.S. (29th-30th).
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