Weather History
For Saturday,July 15,2017
For Saturday,July 15,2017
1916
- A dying South Atlantic Coast storm produced torrential rains in the
southern Appalachian Mountains. Altapass, NC, was drenched with more
than 22 inches of rain, a 24 hour rainfall record for the state.
Flooding resulted in considerable damage, particularly to railroads.
(David Ludlum)
1954 - The temperature at Balcony Falls, VA, soared to 110 degrees to establish a state record. (The Weather Channel)
1983
- The Big Thompson Creek in Colorado flooded for the second time in
seven years, claiming three lives, and filling the town of Estes Park
with eight to ten feet of water. (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Unseasonably cool weather spread into the south central and eastern
U.S. Fifteen cities reported record low temperatures for the date,
including Houghton Lake, MI, with a reading of 37 degrees. The high
temperature for the date of 58 degrees at Flint, MI, was their coolest
of record for July. Thunderstorms spawned several tornadoes in Illinois
and Indiana, injuring a cow near Donovan, IL. (The National Weather
Summary) (Storm Data)
1988
- Twenty-six cities east of the Mississippi River reported record high
temperatures for the date. Charleston, WV, established an all-time
record high with a reading of 103 degrees, and Chicago, IL, reported a
record fifth day of 100 degree heat for the year. A severe thunderstorm
moving across Omaha, NE, and the Council Bluffs area of west central
Iowa spawned three tornadoes which injured 88 persons, and also produced
high winds which injured 18 others. Winds at the Omaha Eppley Airport
reached 92 mph. Damage from the storm was estimated at 43 million
dollars. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1989
- Thunderstorms drenched Kansas City, MO, with 4.16 inches of rain, a
record for the date. Two and a half inches of rain deluged the city
between Noon and 1 PM. Afternoon thunderstorms in South Carolina deluged
Williamstown with six inches of rain in ninety minutes, including four
inches in little more than half an hour. (The National Weather
Summary)(Storm Data)
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