Weather History
For Tuesday,January 21,2014
For Tuesday,January 21,2014
1863
- A severe coastal storm dropped heavy rain on the Fredericksburg area
of Virginia. It disrupted a Union Army offensive in an ill famed "mud
march." (David Ludlum)
1982
- The second of two major snowstorms to hit southern Minnesota came to
an end. Minneapolis received 20 inches of snow in 24 hours to break the
previous record of 17 inches in 24 hours established just a few days
earlier. A record 38 inches of snow covered the ground following the two
storms, with drifts ten feet high. (David Ludlum)
1985
- Three days of snow squalls at Buffalo NY finally came to an end. The
squalls, induced by relatively warm water in Lake Erie, produced 34
inches of snow at the International Airport, with up to 47 inches
reported in the suburbs of Buffalo. The New York "blizzard of '85" left
many counties disaster areas. (19th-21st) (Weather Channel) (Storm Data)
President Reagan was sworn in for a second term in the coldest
Inauguration Ceremony of record. Cold and wind resulted in wind chill
readings as much as 30 degrees below zero. (Sandra and TI Richard
Sanders - 1987)
1987
- Low pressure over Minnesota produced high winds in the Northern
Plains Region. Winds gusted to 66 mph at Rapid City SD, and reached 70
mph at Belle Fourche SD. (National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1988
- High pressure over northern Nevada and low pressure off the coast of
southern California combined to produce high winds in the southwestern
U.S. Wind gusts in the San Francisco area reached 70 mph at Fremont.
(National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- Cold and snow prevailed in the northeastern U.S. Up to 13 inches of
snow was reported between Woodford and Searsburg in Vermont. Montpelier
VT reported a wind chill reading of 42 degrees below zero. (National
Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1990
- Unseasonably warm weather prevailed across the state of Florida.
Eight cities reported record high temperatures for the date, including
West Palm Beach with a reading of 86 degrees. Rain in southern New
England changed to freezing rain, then to sleet, and then to heavy snow
during the late morning. Most of Massachusetts was blanketed with 6 to
10 inches of snow. (National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
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