Weather History
For Wednesday,November 27,2013
For Wednesday,November 27,2013
1883
- Fire engines were called out in New York City and New Haven, CT, as a
result of the afterglow of the sunset due to vivid red ash from the
Krakatoa Volcano explosion in August. (The Weather Channel)
1898
- The Portland storm raged across New England producing gale force
winds along the coast and heavy snow inland. A foot of snow blanketed
Boston MA, and 27 inches fell at New London CT. Winds at Boston gusted
to 72 mph, and wind gusts to 98 mph were estimated at Block Island RI. A
passenger ship, the S. S. Portland, sank off Cape Cod with the loss of
all 191 persons aboard, and Boston Harbor was filled with wrecked ships.
The storm wrecked 56 vessels resulting in a total of 456 casualties.
(26th- 28th) (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Wet weather prevailed across much of the nation east of the Rockies.
Sunny and cool weather prevailed in the western U.S. Snow fell in the
central U.S., with totals in Kansas ranging up to six inches at Burr
Oak. Much of the area from central Oklahoma to southwestern Minnesota
experienced its first snow of the winter season. (The National Weather
Summary)
1988
- Snow and high winds created blizzard conditions in Minnesota. Winds
gusted to 63 mph at Windom, and snowfall totals ranged up to 14 inches
at Aitkin. Snow drifts seven feet high closed many roads. Fargo ND
reported a wind chill reading of 34 degrees below zero. (The National
Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- A storm system crossing the north central U.S. spread snow across the
Dakotas and Minnesota. Heavy snow fell in western South Dakota, with 18
inches reported at Galena. Strong winds associated with the storm
gusted to 50 mph in the Great Lakes Region and the Great Plains, with
blowing dust reported in Kansas. Thunderstorms associated with the same
storm system produced damaging winds in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana
during the evening, with gusts to 73 mph reported east of Ypsilante MI.
Unseasonably warm weather prevailed ahead of the cold front.
Twenty-three cities from the Gulf coast to the Ohio Valley and the Mid
Mississippi Valley reported record high temperatures for the date,
including Saint Louis MO with a reading of 76 degrees. (The National
Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
2005
- A major winter storm affected parts of Nebraska and the Dakotas
during the 27th-28th. Snowfall accumulations of 16-20 inches were
observed in parts of eastern South Dakota, while wind gusts exceeding 60
mph also accompanied the snow, creating blizzard conditions. Thousands
of power outages were caused by the combination of strong winds and
heavy snow. In South Dakota, about 8,000 utility poles and 10,000 miles
of transmission line were brought down by the storm (Associated Press).
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