Weather History
For Thursday,August 17,2017
For Thursday,August 17,2017
1915
- A hurricane hit Galveston, TX, with wind gusts to 120 mph and a
twelve foot storm surge. The storm claimed 275 lives, including
forty-two on Galveston Island, with most deaths due to drowning. Of 250
homes built outside the seawall (which was constructed after the
catastrophic hurricane of 1900), just ten percent were left standing.
(The Weather Channel)
1969
- Camille, the second worst hurricane in U.S. history, smashed into the
Mississippi coast. Winds gusted to 172 mph at Main Pass Block LA, and
to 190 mph near Bay Saint Louis MS. The hurricane claimed 256 lives, and
caused 1.3 billion dollars damage. Several ocean going ships were
carried over seven miles inland by the hurricane. The hurricane produced
winds to 200 mph, and a storm surge of 24.6 feet. Complete destruction
occurred in some coastal areas near the eye of the hurricane. (David
Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1987
- Evening thunderstorms produced severe weather in the Northern and
Central Plains Region. One thunderstorm spawned a tornado near Fairbury
NE, along with baseball size hail and wind gusts to 100 mph, causing
severe crop damage west of town. Ten cities in the eastern U.S. reported
record high temperatures for the date. Syracuse NY hit 97 degrees for
the first time in twenty-two years. (The National Weather Summary)
(Storm Data)
1988
- Fifty-five cities, from the Middle Mississippi Valley to the Middle
Atlantic Coast Region, reported record high temperatures for the date.
Beckley WV reported an all-time record high of 96 degrees, and Baltimore
MD hit 104 degrees, marking their thirteenth day of the year with 100
degree heat. Chicago IL equalled a record with 46 days of 90 degree
weather for the year. Thunderstorms produced severe weather from
Wisconsin to New Jersey. Thunderstorms in New Jersey produced high winds
which gusted to 92 mph at Wrightstown, and blew down a circus tent at
Lavallette injuring fourteen persons. (The National Weather Summary)
(Storm Data)
1989
- Morning thunderstorms produced three to six inch rains in Oklahoma,
and the Arkalatex area of Arkansas, Texas and Louisiana. Tom OK was
soaked with 5.98 inches of rain, and Foreman AR received 5.55 inches.
Evening thunderstorms produced high winds in the Wasatch Front of
northern Utah. Thunderstorm winds gusted to 66 mph at Salt Lake City,
and flash flooding caused up to two million dollars damage to a marina
on Lake Powell. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
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