Weather History
For Friday,May 29,2015
For Friday,May 29,2015
1951 - A massive hailstorm, from Wallace to Kearney County in Kansas, caused six million dollars damage to crops. (David Ludlum)
1953
- A tornado, 600 yards wide at times, killed two persons on its 20 mile
path from southwest of Fort Rice ND into Emmons County. Nearly every
building in Fort Rice was damaged. The Catholic church was leveled, with
some pews jammed four feet into the ground. (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Thunderstorms in West Texas produced softball size hail at Lamesa,
and hail up to twelve inches deep east of Dimmitt. Thunderstorms also
spawned seven tornadoes in West Texas, including one which injured three
persons at Wolfforth. Thunderstorms deluged the Texas Hill Country with
up to eleven inches of rain. Severe flooding along the Medino, Hondo,
Seco, Sabinal and Frio rivers caused more than fifty million dollars
damage. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- A powerful cold front brought snow and high winds to parts of the
western U.S. Austin, NV, was blanketed with ten inches of snow, and
winds gusted to 75 mph at the Mojave Airport in California. Strong
southerly winds and unseasonably warm weather prevailed in the north
central U.S. Glasgow, MT, equalled their record for the month of May
with a high of 102 degrees. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1989
- Wintry weather gripped parts of the northwestern U.S. for the second
day in a row. Great Falls, MT, was blanketed with 12 inches of snow,
which pushed their total for the winter season to a record 117.4 inches.
Six inches of snow whitened the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1990
- Afternoon and evening thunderstorms produced severe weather from
north central Colorado to the northern half of Texas. Severe
thunderstorms spawned four tornadoes, and there were seventy reports of
large hail or damaging winds. Midday thunderstorms produced wind gusts
to 90 mph at Hobart, OK, and produced up to three and a half inches of
rain in eastern Colorado in four hours. (The National Weather Summary)
(Storm Data)
No comments:
Post a Comment