Weather History
For Friday,August 29,2014
For Friday,August 29,2014
1962 - Hackberry, LA, was deluged with twenty-two inches of rain in 24 hours, establishing a state record. (The Weather Channel)
1965
- A national record for the month of August was established when 2.5
inches of snow fell atop Mount Washington NH. Temperatures in New
England dipped to 39 degrees at Nantucket MA, and to 25 degrees in
Vermont. For many location it was the earliest freeze of record. (David
Ludlum)
1987
- Some of the most powerful thunderstorms in several years developed
over the piedmont of North Carolina, and marched across central sections
of the state during the late afternoon and evening hours. Baseball size
hail was reported around Albemarle, while thunderstorm winds downed
giant trees around High Falls. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm
Data)
1988
- Cool air invaded the north central U.S. Ten cities reported record
low temperatures for the date, including Bismarck ND with a reading of
33 degrees. Deerfield, a small town in the Black Hills of South Dakota,
reported a low of 23 degrees. The remnants of Tropical Storm Chris
drenched eastern Pennsylvania with up to five and a half inches of rain,
and produced high winds which gusted to 90 mph, severely damaging a
hundred boats in Anne Arundel County MD. (The National Weather Summary)
(Storm Data)
1989
- Evening thunderstorms produced destructive lightning in West
Virginia. The lightning caused widepsread damage, particularily in
Doddridge County. Numerous trees were downed closing many roads. Fire
companies had a difficult time tending to the many homes and trailers on
fire. Anchorage AK reported a record 9.60 inches of rain for the month
of August. The average annual precipitation for Anchorage is just
slighty more than fifteen inches. Three day rainfall totals in northwest
Missouri ranged up to 8.20 inches at Maryville. (The National Weather
Summary)
2005
- Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Plaquemines Parish in southeastern
Louisiana early on the 29th with maximum sustained winds near 125 mph, a
strong category-three, and the third most-intense landfalling hurricane
in U.S. history. The center of the hurricane passed just east of New
Orleans, where winds gusted over 100 mph. Widespread devastation and
unprecedented flooding occurred, submerging at least 80 percent of the
city as levees failed. Farther east, powerful winds and a devastating
storm surge of 20-30 feet raked the Mississippi coastline, including
Gulfport and Biloxi, where Gulf of Mexico floodwaters spread several
miles inland. Rainfall amounts of 8-10 inches were common along and to
the east of the storm's path. Katrina weakened to a tropical storm as it
tracked northward through Mississippi and gradually lost its identity
as it moved into the Tennessee Valley on the 30th, dum
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