Weather History
For Friday,July 21,2017
For Friday,July 21,2017
1911
- The temperature at Painter, WY, dipped to 10 degrees to equal the
record low for July for the continental U.S. (The Weather Channel)
1934
- The temperature reached 109 degrees at Cincinnati, OH, to cap their
hottest summer of record. The state record for Ohio was established that
day with a reading of 113 degrees near the town of Gallipolis. (David
Ludlum)
1975
- Six inches of rain fell across Mercer County, NJ, in just ten hours
causing the worst flooding in twenty years. Assunpink Creek crested
eleven feet above flood stage at Hamilton and Trenton, the highest level
of record. Traffic was brought to a standstill, and railway service
between New York City and Washington D.C. was cut off for two days.
Flooding left 1000 persons homeless, and caused an estimated 25 million
dollars damage. (David Ludlum)
1987
- Thunderstorms produced severe weather from Utah to North Dakota,
spawning a dozen tornadoes in North Dakota. Thunderstorms in North
Dakota also produced baseball size hail at Clifford which caused four
million dollars damage, and high winds which toppled a couple of eighty
foot towers cutting off power to the town of Blanchard. (The National
Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1988
- While cool air invaded the central U.S., unseasonably hot weather
continued over the western states. The temperature at Spring Valley, NV,
soared from a morning low of 35 degrees to an afternoon high of 95
degrees. Fallon, NV, reported an all-time record high of 108 degrees,
and Death Valley, CA, reported their sixth straight day of 120 degree
heat. (The Weather Channel) (The National Weather Summary)
1989
- Afternoon thunderstorms over Florida produced wind gusts to 92 mph at
Jacksonville, damaging thirteen light planes at Herlong Field. Five
cities in Texas reported record low temperatures for the date. Corpus
Christi, TX, equalled their record low for the date with a reading of 71
degrees, and then tied their record high for the date that afternoon
with a reading of 97 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm
Data)
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