Weather History
For Wednesday,March 1,2017
For Wednesday,March 1,2017
1910
- The deadliest avalanche of record in the U.S. thundered down the
mountains near Wellington Station WA sweeping three huge locomotive
train engines and some passenger cars, snowbound on the grade leading to
Stevens Pass, over the side and into a canyon, and burying them under
tons of snow. The avalanche claimed the lives of more than 100 people.
The station house at Wellington was also swept away. (The Weather
Channel)
1914
- High winds and heavy snow crippled New Jersey and New York State. Two
feet of snow were reported at Ashbury Park, and at New York City the
barometric pressure dropped to a record 28.38 inches. The storm caused
complete disruption of electric power in New Jersey. (David Ludlum)
1980
- Norfolk, VA, received 13.7 inches of snow to push their season total
to a record 41.9 inches exceeding their previous record by more than
four inches. (David Ludlum)
1980
- An unusually large Florida tornado, 500 yards in width at times,
killed one person and caused six million dollars damage near Fort
Lauderdale. (The Weather Channel)
1983
- A ferocious storm battered the Pacific coast. The storm produced
heavy rain and gale force winds resulting in flooding and beach erosion,
and in the mountains produced up to seven feet of snow in five days.
(The Weather Channel)
1987
- A storm crossing the Great Lakes Region produced heavy snow and gale
force winds from Wisconsin to northern New England, with eight inches of
snow reported at Ironwood MI. (The National Weather Summary)
1988
- Thunderstorms produced large hail and damaging winds in north central
Texas. Baseball size hail was reported at Lake Kickapoo. Hail fell
continuously for thirty minutes in the Iowa Park area of Wichita Falls.
(The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
- March came in like a lion, with snow and high winds, in the
northwestern U.S. Winds gusted to 86 mph in the Rosario Strait of
western Washington State. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1990
- A series of low pressure systems moving out of the Gulf of Alaska
spread high winds and heavy snow across western Alaska. Winds in the
Anchorage area gusted to 69 mph at Glen Alps, and Talkeetna was buried
under three feet of snow in two days. Valdez received 21.4 inches of
snow, raising their total for the winter season to 482.4 inches. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
2006
- Dallas/Forth Worth Airport breaks a 107-year-old North Texas
temperature record after reaching 93 degrees. Mineral Wells reached 97,
Wichita Falls 96 and Fort Worth Meacham Airport 90.
2011
- Snowfall across Idaho broke numerous accumulation records. Pierce
received 15 inches, Powell 14.5 inches, Potlatch 12 inches and Kellogg
and Plummer 7 inches. The same storm created high winds across the
Pacific Northwest. A weather station at 10,000 feet on Mount Ranier
measures a wind gust of 137 MPH with a sustained 1-minute wind reading
of 112 MPH.
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