Weather History
For Wednesday,December 14,2016
For Wednesday,December 14,2016
1924
- The temperature at Helena, MT, plunged 79 degrees in 24 hours, and 88
degrees in 34 hours. The mercury plummeted from 63 above to 25 below
zero. At Fairfield MT the temperature plunged 84 degrees in just 12
hours, from 63 at Noon to 21 below zero at midnight. (David Ludlum)
1987
- A powerful storm spread heavy snow from the Southern High Plains to
the Middle Mississippi Valley, and produced severe thunderstorms in the
Lower Mississippi Valley. During the evening a tornado hit West Memphis
TN killing six persons and injuring two hundred others. The tornado left
1500 persons homeless, and left all of the residents of Crittendon
County without electricity. Kansas City MO was blanketed with 10.8
inches of snow, a 24 hour record for December, and snowfall totals in
the Oklahoma panhandle ranged up to 14 inches. Strong winds, gusting to
63 mph at Austin TX, ushered arctic cold into the Great Plains, and
caused considerable blowing and drifting of snow. (Storm Data) (The
National Weather Summary)
1988
- Blowing snow was reported in western Kansas, as snow and gusty winds
plagued the Central Rockies and Central High Plains. Colorado Springs CO
reported thirteen inches of snow. Low pressure in Wisconsin brought
heavy snow to the Lake Superior snowbelt area, with 22 inches reported
at Marquette MI. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1989
- High winds and heavy snow prevailed from Montana to Colorado.
Snowfall totals in Wyoming ranged up to 20 inches at Burgess Junction,
leaving up to 48 inches on the ground in the northeast sections of the
state. Wind gusts in Colorado reached 87 mph south of the town of
Rollinsville. Strong northwesterly winds continued to produce heavy snow
squalls in the Great Lakes Region. Totals in northeastern Lower
Michigan ranged up to 29 inches at Hubbard Lake, with 28 inches reported
at Posen. Two day totals in northeastern Wisconsin ranged up to thirty
inches. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
2006
- The Hanukkah Eve Wind Storm of 2006 caused storm to hurricane-force
wind gusts and heavy rainfall hit the Pacific Northwest and southern
British Columbia. Damage estimates in Washington and Oregon totaled
$220 million. Over 1.8 million residences and businesses without power.
18 people were killed, most of whom died of carbon monoxide poisoning
in the days following the storm because of improper use of barbecue
cookers and generators indoors.
2010
- A rare tornado struck the small town of Aumsville, Oregon, tearing
roofs off buildings, hurling objects into vehicles and homes and
uprooting trees. No one was injured but the destruction left behind was
severe. The National Weather Service classified the tornado as an EF2
with wind speeds of 110-120 mph and they said the tornado's damage trail
was five miles long and 150 yards wide. 50 houses in Aumsville and the
surrounding county area were affected, with 10 of them being unsuitable
for occupancy. (KATU)
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