![]()
July 11, 1888
Heavy snow reached almost to the base of Mt. Washington, NH, and the peaks of the Green Mountains were whitened. (David Ludlum) July 11, 1936 Official NOAA temperatures were 112 degrees in West Virginia, 111 degrees in Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota, 110 in Wisconsin, 109 in Iowa, 104 in Pennsylvania and New York, 105 in New Jersey, 107 in Ohio, 104 in Michigan, 101 in Maryland, 108 in Montana. (https://twitter.com/SteveSGoddard) July 11, 1954 This was the hottest day on record in Colorado at 114 degrees. It was 116 in Nebraska that day, 115 in Kansas, 112 in Oklahoma, and 110 in Missouri. Most of the US was in severe or extreme drought. (Report) (https://twitter.com/SteveSGoddard) July 11, 1987 Early morning thunderstorms produced wind gusts to 90 mph at Parkston, SD, and wind gusts to 87 mph at Buffalo, MN. Later in the day strong thunderstorm winds at Howard WI collapsed a circus tent injuring 44 persons. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) July 11, 1988 Thunderstorms produced heavy rain in southern Texas, with totals ranging up to 13 inches near Medina. Two men drowned when their pick-up truck was swept into the Guadalupe River, west of the town of Hunt. Ten cities in the eastern U.S. reported record high temperatures for the date. Baltimore, MD, reported a record high reading of 102 degrees for the second day in a row. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) July 11, 1989 Afternoon and evening thunderstorms produced severe weather from North Dakota to Indiana. Thunderstorms in North Dakota produced tennis ball size hail at Carson. Thunderstorms in Indiana produced wind gusts to 75 mph at Fort Wayne. Five cities in the Southern Atlantic Coast Region reported record high temperatures for the date, including Lakeland, FL, with a reading of 100 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) July 11, 2000 Severe thunderstorms produced up to 1 inch hail and damaging winds across much of central Georgia during the afternoon and early evening hours. Nearly a half million dollars in property damage occurred due to the storms. In Americus, two buildings at the Powell Farms Dairy were demolished by straight-line winds. (NWS Atlanta) Data courtesy of WeatherForYou
Today's ForecastTemperatures
Temperature Anomalies
WindPrecipitation
1 Comment
9/15/2018 03:12:04 am
I will never forget what happened on this day. It's funny how I try to recall such tragic occurrence as if it's a birthday or an anniversary that we all needed to celebrate. I guess it took a while for me to get used to the numb feeling each time this time of the year passes by. I know it maybe just nothing for some, but for me it's the only thing that mattered and everything else is lost when it ceased to exist. It's as if it sank and it brought everything with it. No one will ever have an idea what I am talking about.
Reply
Leave a Reply. |