Weather History
For Monday,May 30 (Memorial Day),2016
For Monday,May 30 (Memorial Day),2016
1879
- A major outbreak of severe weather occurred in Kansas and western
Missouri. In Kansas, tornadoes killed eighteen persons at Delphos, and
thirty persons at Irving. Two tornadoes struck the town of Irving within
a few minutes time virtually wiping the small Kansas community off the
map. The second tornado was perhaps two miles wide, and exhibited
multiple vortices. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1948
- A railroad bed acting as a dam gave way during a flood along the
Columbia River destroying the town of Vanport, OR. The nearly 19,000
residents escaped with little more than the clothes on their backs.
(David Ludlum)
1948 - Twenty carloads of glass were needed in Denver, CO, to replace that destroyed by a severe hailstorm. (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Unseasonably warm weather prevailed across the eastern U.S. Eighteen
cities, from Virginia to Ohio and Michigan, reported record high
temperatures for the date. Afternoon highs of 97 degrees at Baltimore,
MD, and Washington, DC, and 98 degrees at Newark, NJ, were records for
the date. (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- Memorial Day heralded heavy snow in some of the mountains and higher
passes of Wyoming, closing roads in Yellowstone Park. McDonald Pass, MT,
was blanketed with eight inches of snow, while the temperature at Miles
City, MT, soared to 94 degrees. A "supercell" thunderstorm in west
Texas produced baseball size hail in Bailey and Lamb counties, and up to
five inches of rain in less than an hour. (The National Weather
Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- Thunderstorms produced severe weather from the Upper Mississippi
Valley to the Upper Ohio Valley during the day. A powerful (F-4) tornado
injured three persons and caused a million dollars damage at New
Providence, IA. Baseball size hail was reported at Blue Earth, MN. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1990
- Thunderstorms developing along a warm front spawned fourteen
tornadoes in northeastern Texas during the late afternoon and evening
hours. The thunderstorms also produced baseball size hail near Marshall,
wind gusts to 77 mph at Commerce, and up to five inches of rain.
Thunderstorms over southwestern Kansas produced up to six inches of
rain. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
No comments:
Post a Comment