Weather History
For Monday,September 4,2017
For Monday,September 4,2017
1939
- A thunderstorm deluged Washington D.C. with 4.4 inches of rain in two
hours. September of that year was very dry across much of the nation,
and Washington D.C. received more rain in that two hour period than most
other places in the country that entire month. (David Ludlum)
1970
- The greatest natural disaster of record for Arizona occurred.
Unprecedented rains caused rivers in central Arizona to rise five to ten
feet per hour, sweeping cars and buildings as far as 30 to 40 miles
downstream. Flooding claimed the lives of 23 persons, mainly campers,
and caused millions of dollars damage. Water crested 36 feet above
normal near Sunflower AZ. Workman's Creek was deluged with 11.40 inches
of rain in 24 hours to establish a state record. Moisture from Pacific
Tropical Storm Norma led to the severe flooding. (4th-6th) (The Weather
Channel)
1986
- An unusually strong dust devil moved across the Flagstaff Pulliam
Airport. The dust devil blew open the doors of the National Weather
Service office scattering papers and bringing down a ceiling-mounted
light fixture. (Storm Data)
1987
- Thunderstorms developing along a stationary front produced heavy rain
across the Southern Atlantic Coast States. Up to eight inches was
reported north of Charleston SC. Serious flooding was reported in Monks
Corner SC. Seven cities in the northeastern U.S. reported record low
temperatures for the date. Houlton ME dipped to 32 degrees. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1988
- The western U.S. experienced another day of record heat. The
afternoon high of 91 degrees at Stampede Pass WA established an all-time
record for that location, and Los Angeles CA equalled their all-time
record high with a reading of 110 degrees. A record high of 107 degrees
at San Diego CA was their hottest reading in 25 years. Red Bluff CA was
the hot spot in the nation with an afternoon reading of 118 degrees.
(National Weather Summary)
1989
- Overnight thunderstorm rains of four and a half to seven inches
drenched eastern Nebraska during the morning hours, pushing creeks out
of their banks, and flooding fields, country roads and city streets.
Totals ranged up to 6.97 inches south of Creston. It was also a soggy
Labor Day for northern Florida. Jacksonville reported 6.82 inches of
rain, and evening thunderstorms produced 2.75 inches of rain in one hour
at Sandlewood. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
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