Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Tue Oct 31 2017 12:17 am

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

Today is Tuesday  October 31, 2017.
This is the 304th day of the year, there are 61 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 1846 Eighty-seven pioneers were trapped by early snows in the
           Sierra Nevada Mountains that piled five feet deep, with
           30 to 40 foot drifts.  Just 47 persons survived the
           "Donner Pass Tradgedy".
   In 1950 Unseasonably warm weather prevailed in the central U.S.
           for Halloween.  The temperature soared to 83 degrees at
           Minneapolis MN, their warmest reading of record for so
           late in the season.
   In 1965 Fort Lauderdale FL was deluged with 13.81 inches of rain,
           which brought their rainfall total for the month of
           October to an all-time record of 42.43 inches.  (30th-
           31st)
   In 1987 Halloween was a wet one in the southwestern U.S.
           Heavy rain in southern California resulted in numerous
           mudslides.  Weather-related auto accidents resulted in
           three deaths and twenty-five injuries.  Mount Wilson CA
           received 3.14 inches of rain in 24 hours.  Yakima WA
           reported measurable rainfall for the first time since the
           18th of July.  The 103 day long dry spell was their
           longest of record.
   In 1988 Twenty-two cities in the northeastern U.S. reported
           record low temperatures for the date.  The low of 19 at
           Cleveland OH was a record for October, and morning lows
           of 21 at Allentown PA and Bridgeport CT tied October
           records.  Nine cities in the southwestern U.S. reported
           record high temperatures for the date, including Phoenix
           AZ with a reading of 96 degrees.  Showers made Halloween
           a soggy one in the southeastern U.S.
   In 1989 Halloween night was a soggy one in New England.  Showers
           in the northeastern U.S. produced more than an inch and
           a half of rain in six hours at some locations.
           An invasion of cold arctic air brought an abrupt end to a
           week of "Indian Summer" type weather in the Great Lakes
           Region, and brought snow and subzero wind chill readings
           to the Northern Plains.  In Colorado, Alamosa was the
           cold spot in the nation with a record low of two degrees
           above zero, and a Halloween night storm brought 3 to 6
           inches of snow to the Front Range, and 5 to 10 inches to
           the nearby foothills.  Icy streets around Denver the next
           morning made for a rather spooky commute.
   In 1999 Little Rock, AR experienced its wettest Halloween ever,
           with over 3 inches of rain in some parts of the state,
           more than double the previous rainfall record for the
           date.
   In 2013 A large area of rain and thunderstorms...some severe...
           extended from Texas east into the Lower Mississippi Valley
           region. Many areas from Texas into Louisiana got over 6
           inches of rain, with a flood emergency being declared in
           Austin, Texas. Several tornadoes were also noted across
           southeast Texas, Louisiana, and into Mississippi.


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