Weather History
For Wednesday,November 11,2015
For Wednesday,November 11,2015
1911
- The central U.S. experienced perhaps its most dramatic cold wave of
record. During the early morning temperatures across the Central Plains
ranged from 68 degrees at Kansas City to 4 above North Platte NE. In
Kansas City, the temperature warmed to a record 76 degrees by late
morning before the arctic front moved in from the northwest. Skies
become overcast, winds shifted to the northwest, and the mercury began
to plummet. By early afternoon it was cold enough to snow, and by
midnight the temperature had dipped to a record cold reading of 11
degrees above zero. Oklahoma City also established a record high of 83
degrees and record low of 17 degrees that same day. In southeastern
Kansas, the temperature at Independence plunged from 83 degrees to 33
degrees in just one hour. The arctic cold front produced severe
thunderstorms and tornadoes in the Mississippi Valley, and a blizzard in the
Ohio Valley
1940
- An Armistice Day storm raged across the Great Lakes Region and the
Upper Midwest. A blizzard left 49 dead in Minnesota, and gales on Lake
Michigan caused ship wrecks resulting in another 59 deaths. Up to
seventeen inches of snow fell in Iowa, and at Duluth MN the barometric
pressure reached 28.66 inches. The blizzard claimed a total of 154
lives, and killed thousands of cattle in Iowa. Whole towns were isolated
by huge snowdrifts. (David Ludlum)
1955
- An early arctic outbreak set many November temperature records across
Oregon and Washington. The severe cold damaged shrubs and fruit trees.
Readings plunged to near zero in western Washington, and dipped to 19
degrees below zero in the eastern part of the state. (David Ludlum)
1987
- A deepening low pressure system brought heavy snow to the east
central U.S. The Veteran's Day storm produced up to 17 inches of snow in
the Washington D.C. area snarling traffic and closing schools and
airports. Afternoon thunderstorms produced five inches of snow in three
hours. Gale force winds lashed the Middle and Northern Atlantic Coast.
Norfolk VA reported their earliest measurable snow in 99 years of
records. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- Low pressure brought snow to parts of the Rocky Mountain Region.
Totals in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado ranged up to
10 inches at Summitville. Evening thunderstorms produced large hail in
central Oklahoma and north central Texas. (The National Weather Summary)
(Storm Data)
1989
- Veteran's Day was an unseasonably warm one across much of the nation
east of the Rockies. Temperatures warmed into the 70s and 80s from the
Southern and Central Plains to the southern half of the Atlantic coast.
Thirty-four cities reported record high temperatures for the date,
including Saint Louis MO with a reading of 85 degrees. Calico AR and
Gilbert AR reported record highs of 87 degrees. (Storm Data) (The
National Weather Summary)
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