Weather History
For Tuesday,October 15,2013
For Tuesday,October 15,2013
1880
- A violent early season blizzard raked Minnesota and the Dakotas.
Winds gusted to 70 mph at Yankton SD, and snow drifts 10 to 15 feet high
were reported in northwest Iowa and southeast South Dakota. Saint Paul
MN reported a barometric pressure of 28.65 inches on the 16th. Railroads
were blocked by drifts of snow which remained throughout the severe
winter to follow. Gales did extensive damage to ship on the Great Lakes.
(15th-16th) (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1954
- Hurricane Hazel struck the Carolina coastline. The hurricane
demolished every pier along a 170 mile stretch from Myrtle Beach SC to
Cedar Island NC, and obliterated entire lines of beach homes. Hurricane
Hazel also destroyed 1500 homes as it moved inland with seventeen foot
tides. Winds between Myrtle Beach SC and Cape Fear NC gusted to 150 mph.
Hurricane Hazel caused 163 million dollars damage, and claimed the
lives of 98 persons. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1966
- Iowa experienced its worst late season tornado of record. In just one
minute a twister tore through the town of Belmond leveling 75 percent
of the businesses, and 100 homes, causing more than eleven million
dollars damage. (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Unseasonably cold weather continued in the eastern U.S., with
thirteen cities reporting record low temperatures for the date. The low
of 34 degrees at Montgomery AL was their coldest reading of record for
so early in the season. Lows of 32 degrees at Harrisburg PA and 34
degrees at Parkersburg WV marked their third straight morning of record
cold. (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- The cold high pressure system responsible for the record low
temperatures in the eastern U.S. began to move out to sea, giving way to
a trend toward "Indian Summer". Thunderstorms developing ahead of a
cold front produced golf ball size hail at Altamont KS and hail two
inches in diameter at Yates City IL. (Storm Data) (The National Weather
Summary)
1989
- Hurricane Jerry made landfall at Galveston, TX, at 6 30 PM (CDT).
Winds at the Galveston Airport reached 75 mph, with gusts to 100 mph.
Tides along the island were six to eight feet, and rainfall totals
ranged up to slightly more than six inches north of Beaumont. Three
persons were killed when their vehicle was blown off the Galveston
seawall into the pounding surf. Total damage along the Upper Texas Coast
was estimated at fifteen million dollars. Thunderstorms produced severe
weather in Lower Michigan during the late morning. Two persons were
injured when a tree fell on their camper at the Traverse City State
park. While strong northerly winds ushered much colder air into the
central U.S., unseasonably warm weather continued in the south central
and eastern U.S. The afternoon high of 82 degrees at Bluefield WV was a
record for October. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
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