Weather History
For Thursday,November 12,2015
For Thursday,November 12,2015
1906 - The mercury soared to 106 degrees at Craftonville, CA, a November record for the U.S. (The Weather Channel)
1959
- Between Noon on the 11th and Noon on the 12th, a winter storm buried
Helena, MT, under 21.5 inches of snow, which surpassed their previous 24
hour record by seven inches. (The Weather Channel)
1968
- A severe coastal storm produced high winds and record early snows
from Georgia to Maine. Winds reached 90 mph in Massachusetts, and ten
inches of snow blanketed interior Maine. (David Ludlum)
1974
- A great Alaska storm in the Bering Sea caused the worst coastal
flooding of memory at Nome AK with a tide of 13.2 feet. The flooding
caused 12 million dollars damage, however no lives are lost. (David
Ludlum)
1987
- Heavy snow spread across much of New England. Totals in Massachusetts
ranged up to 14 inches in Plymouth County. The seven inch total at the
Logan Airport in Boston was their highest of record for so early in the
season, and the 9.7 inch total at Providence RI was a record for
November. Roads were clogged with traffic and made impassable as
snowplow operators were caught unprepared for the early season
snowstorm. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- Thunderstorms developing ahead of a cold front produced severe
weather in the Lower Mississippi Valley during the afternoon and early
evening hours. Thunderstorms produced wind gusts to 80 mph at Bovina MS.
Morning thunderstorms drenched Atlanta TX with more than four inches of
rain. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- Thirty-three cities reported record high temperatures for the date as
readings soared into the 70s and 80s from the Southern and Central
Plains to the Southern and Middle Atlantic Coast Region. The afternoon
high of 80 degrees at Scottsbluff NE was a record for November, and
highs of 76 degrees at Rapid City SD and 81 degrees at Chattanooga TN
were the warmest of record for so late in the season. (The National
Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
2003
- Thunderstorms developed in southern California and produced
torrential downpours across parts of the Los Angeles area. More than 5
inches of rain fell in just 2 hours in southern Los Angeles, producing
severe urban flooding. Small hail also accompanied the storms,
accumulating several inches deep in some areas of the city. Nearly
115,000 electrical customers lost power as the storms affected the area
(Associated Press).
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