Weather History
For Wednesday,February 5,2014
For Wednesday,February 5,2014
1887
- San Francisco experienced its greatest snowstorm of record. Nearly
four inches was reported in downtown San Francisco, and the western
hills of the city received seven inches. Excited crowds went on a
snowball throwing rampage. (David Ludlum)
1987
- Thunderstorms in the Southern Plains Region caused flooding in parts
of south central Texas. Del Rio TX was soaked with two inches of rain in
two hours prior to sunrise. (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- Cold and snow invaded the southern U.S. Roswell NM was buried under
16.5 inches of snow in 24 hours, an all-time record for that location.
Parts of the Central Gulf Coast Region reported their first significant
snow in fifteen years. Strong winds in Minnesota and the Dakotas
produced wind chill readings as cold as 75 degrees below zero. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- Severe cold gripped much of the nation. Thirty cities reported new
record low temperatures for the date. Morning lows of 9 above at Astoria
OR and 27 below zero at Ely NV were records for February. In Alaska,
Point Barrow warmed to 24 degrees above zero, and Nome reached 30
degrees. (The National Weather Summary)
1990
- For the second time in two days, and the third time in a week, high
winds plagued the northwestern U.S. Winds in Oregon gusted to 60 mph at
Cape Disappointment, and wind gusts in Washington State reached 67 mph
at Bellingham. The first in a series of cold fronts began to produce
heavy snow in the mountains of Washington and Oregon. Ten inches of snow
fell at Timberline OR. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
2006
- Mount Washington Observatory in New Hampshire reaches a high of 41°F,
the warmest February 5th on record at the summit and two degrees off
the monthly mark, where records have been kept since 1932. The Weather Doctor
2008
- The deadliest round of tornadoes in nearly a quarter century kill 58
people in the south. The storms kill 32 people in Tennessee, 14 in
Arkansas, seven in Kentucky and five in Alabama. Damage is likely to be
in the hundreds of millions of dollars. The Weather Doctor
2010
- A mega-snowstorm, which President Obama dubbed Snowmageddon, buried
the Washington D.C. area with more than 30 inches of snow in some areas.
At American University in Washington the official snowfall was 27.5
inches. Snowfall totals in the Washington DC area range from a low of
17.9 inches at Ronald Reagan National Airport to 40 inches in the
northern suburb of Colesville, MD. Dulles Airport reported 32.4 inches,
which established a new two-day snowfall record. The
Baltimore-Washington International Airport, MD, measured 24.8 inches
from the storm breaking the record for the largest two day snowfall
there. It is one of the worst blizzards in the city's history.
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