A new weekly feature for ThorntonWeather.com – This Week in Denver Weather History. The National Weather Service maintains a historical archives of weather history across the nation and makes it available to the public. ThorntonWeather.com will start publishing that information weekly.
So, let’s stroll down memory lane with This Week in Denver Weather History.
26-28 IN 1936…THE HEAVIEST SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN SEPTEMBER
AND THE HEAVIEST SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED SO EARLY IN THE
SEASON DUMPED A TOTAL OF 16.5 INCHES OF SNOW ON DOWNTOWN
DENVER AND 21.3 INCHES AT DENVER MUNICIPAL AIRPORT. THE
15.0 INCHES OF SNOW MEASURED FROM 6:00 PM ON THE 27TH TO
6:00 PM ON THE 28TH IS THE GREATEST 24 HOUR SNOWFALL EVER
RECORDED IN SEPTEMBER. THIS WAS THE FIRST SNOW OF THE
SEASON. THE SNOW WAS INTERMITTENT THROUGH THE 26TH…BUT
CONTINUOUS FROM EARLY AFTERNOON ON THE 27TH TO AROUND
MIDNIGHT ON THE 28TH…EXCEPT FOR A PERIOD OF RAIN DURING
THE AFTERNOON OF THE 28TH WHICH CONTRIBUTED TO A LOSS OF
DEPTH ON THE GROUND. THE GREATEST SNOW DEPTH ON THE GROUND
DOWNTOWN WAS 13 INCHES WITH 8 INCHES AT DENVER MUNICIPAL
AIRPORT. THERE WERE NO HIGH WINDS WITH THE STORM AND
TRAFFIC WAS INTERRUPTED FOR ONLY A SHORT PERIOD. THE
STORM PRODUCED PROPERTY DAMAGE ESTIMATED AT 7 MILLION
DOLLARS. WITH TREES AND SHRUBS IN FULL FOLIAGE…THE LEAVES
CAUGHT AND HELD THE HEAVY WATER-LADEN SNOW…UNTIL THE
BRANCHES SNAPPED FROM THE WEIGHT. MORE THAN 3000 WORKMEN
WERE CALLED TO REMOVE THE DEBRIS AND SNOW FROM THE CITY. THE
CITY FIREMEN WHO WERE OFF DUTY…AS WELL AS ALL THE RESERVES…
WERE ASKED TO REPORT TO THEIR STATIONS. ALL SCHOOLS IN THE
CITY REMAINED OPEN…BUT ATTENDANCE WAS ONLY 50 PERCENT OF
NORMAL. GRADE SCHOOL STUDENTS WERE SENT HOME AT NOON ON THE
28TH. THE EARLY STORM CAUGHT STOCKMEN WITH MANY CATTLE STILL
IN HIGHER RANGES. WARM WEATHER FOLLOWED THE SNOW…WHICH HAD
ALL MELTED BY THE END OF THE MONTH…EXCEPT FOR A FEW INCHES
IN SHELTERED PLACES.
27-28 IN 1984…HEAVY SNOW FELL OVER THE PLAINS AND FOOTHILLS.
SNOWFALL AMOUNTS RANGED FROM 2 TO 5 INCHES ON THE PLAINS
WITH UP TO A FOOT AT HIGHER ELEVATIONS IN THE FOOTHILLS.
THE MAIN PROBLEM CAUSED BY THE STORM WAS THOUSANDS OF
POWER OUTAGES CAUSED BY SNOW-LADEN TREE LIMBS SNAPPING AND
FALLING ONTO POWER LINES. OVER 15 THOUSAND HOMES LOST
POWER IN METRO DENVER. SOME CARS WERE DAMAGED BY FALLING
TREES AND LIMBS. THE SNOW ALSO CAUSED SOME FLIGHT DELAYS
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE 5.1 INCHES OF
SNOW FELL AND NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO 29 MPH. MAXIMUM
SNOW DEPTH ON THE GROUND WAS 3 INCHES DUE TO MELTING. THE
HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 34 DEGREES ON THE 28TH WAS A
RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE AND EQUALED THE ALL-TIME
RECORD FOR THE MONTH AT THAT TIME.
28 IN 1877…HEAVY DENSE SMOKE FROM MOUNTAIN FOREST FIRES SPREAD
OVER THE CITY. THE SMOKE WAS SO DENSE THAT IT OBSCURED THE
SUN AT TIMES.
IN 1921…POST-FRONTAL NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 44
MPH.
IN 1953…A PACIFIC COLD FRONT PRODUCED A WEST WIND GUST TO 59
MPH AT STAPLETON AIRPORT WHERE THE VISIBILITY WAS BRIEFLY
REDUCED TO 3/4 MILES IN BLOWING DUST. STRONG WINDS WERE
ALSO WIDESPREAD OVER BOULDER DURING THE AFTERNOON.
IN 1960…STRONG…GUSTY WINDS TORE THE ROOF FROM 6 UNITS OF A
MOTEL ON WEST COLFAX AVENUE IN DENVER. THE ROOFING SAILED
OVER THE BUILDING AND CRASHED DOWN ON A TRUCK…WRECKING IT.
THE STRONG WINDS WERE THE RESULT OF AN APPARENT MICROBURST.
IN 1999…SNOW FELL IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF METRO DENVER AND
OVER THE PLAINS. SNOWFALL TOTALS INCLUDED 7 INCHES AT
CONIFER. AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL
AIRPORT…3.1 INCHES OF SNOW WERE MEASURED. THIS WAS THE
FIRST SNOW OF THE SEASON. THE HEAVY WET SNOW SNAPPED
BRANCHES FROM FULLY LEAFED TREES…DOWNING POWER LINES AND
CAUSING SCATTERED OUTAGES.
IN 2004…SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN
DIAMETER IN LITTLETON AND IN DOUGLAS COUNTY 14 MILES
NORTHWEST OF CASTLE ROCK.
28-29 IN 1959…ONE OF THE HEAVIEST SEPTEMBER SNOW STORMS OF RECORD
BEGAN AS RAIN AND CHANGED TO HEAVY WET SNOW. THE STORM
CAUSED HEAVY DAMAGE TO TREES AND SHRUBBERY…WHICH WERE
STILL IN FULL LEAF. THE STORM DUMPED 10.6 INCHES OF SNOW
AT STAPLETON AIRPORT…THE THIRD HEAVIEST SEPTEMBER SNOW
AMOUNT TO DATE. FALLING TREES AND LIMBS DISRUPTED
TRAFFIC…BROKE POWER AND COMMUNICATION LINES…AND DAMAGED
BUILDINGS AND CARS. ONE MAN WAS KILLED IN DENVER BY A
FALLING TREE LIMB…AND FOUR OTHERS DIED OF HEART
ATTACKS WHILE SHOVELING SNOW OR TRYING TO MOVE HEAVY
TREE LIMBS. DIRECT COSTS OF THE STORM FOR CLEANING UP
DEBRIS…REPAIRING UTILITY LINES…AND DAMAGE TO BUILDINGS
AND OTHER PROPERTY ACROSS ALL OF EASTERN COLORADO WERE
ESTIMATED TO BE OVER A HALF MILLION DOLLARS. THE VALUE
OF TREES DESTROYED OR DAMAGED WAS ESTIMATED TO EXCEED
FIVE MILLION DOLLARS. NORTH-NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO
32 MPH AT STAPLETON AIRPORT ON THE 28TH.
IN 1985…AN UNUSUALLY COLD AIR MASS FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR
SETTLED OVER THE AREA. METRO DENVER RECEIVED 8 TO 12
INCHES OF POWDERY SNOW. THE 8.7 INCHES OF SNOW THAT
FELL AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WAS THE FIRST
MEASURABLE SNOW OF THE SEASON AND THE CITY`S HEAVIEST
SEPTEMBER SNOWFALL SINCE 1971. THE SNOW CAUSED FLIGHT
DELAYS OF OVER 2 HOURS AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.
I-70 WAS CLOSED FOR A TIME WEST OF DENVER. SNOW-LADEN
TREE LIMBS SNAPPED OVER ALL OF METRO DENVER…CAUSING
WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES. TEN THOUSAND PEOPLE WERE WITHOUT
ELECTRICITY FOR A TIME IN BOULDER. THE MORNING OF THE 29TH
SAW MID-WINTER TEMPERATURES ALONG THE FRONT RANGE. THE
TEMPERATURE DIPPED TO 17 DEGREES…THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE
EVER RECORDED IN SEPTEMBER IN DENVER. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE
OF ONLY 29 DEGREES ON THE 29TH WAS A NEW RECORD LOW MAXIMUM
FOR THE DATE AND LOWEST EVER RECORDED DURING THE MONTH OF
SEPTEMBER. THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 21 DEGREES ON THE EVENING
OF THE 28TH SET A NEW RECORD LOW FOR THE DATE. THE COLD
WEATHER PERSISTED THROUGH THE 1ST WITH RECORD MINIMUM
TEMPERATURES OF 25 DEGREES SET ON THE 30TH AND 27 DEGREES
SET ON OCTOBER 1ST.
29 IN 1966…A VIGOROUS COLD FRONT MOVED THRU METRO DENVER.
NORTH WINDS GUSTING TO 51 MPH KICKED UP BILLOWS OF BLOWING
DUST…WHICH BRIEFLY REDUCED THE VISIBILITY TO 1 MILE AT
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE COLD AIR CAUSED
TEMPERATURES TO DROP RAPIDLY FROM A HIGH OF 86 DEGREES TO
A LOW OF 46 DEGREES BY DAYS END.
IN 1985…THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED IN SEPTEMBER…
17 DEGREES…OCCURRED. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE WARMED TO ONLY
29 DEGREES…THE ALL-TIME RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE MONTH.
IN 1994…THE TEMPERATURE REACHED A HIGH OF 91 DEGREES AT
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THIS WAS THE 60TH DAY
OF THE YEAR THAT THE TEMPERATURE HAD REACHED 90 DEGREES
OR MORE…ESTABLISHING A NEW RECORD AT THAT TIME. THE
PREVIOUS RECORD OF 52 “90 DEGREE DAYS” OCCURRED IN 1978.
ONLY 43 “90 DEGREE DAYS” WERE RECORDED AT DENVER
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT DURING 1994.
IN 1995…LIGHTNING STRUCK A COUPLE IN AURORA AS THEY WERE
WALKING IN THE RAIN. THE BOLT STRUCK THE UMBRELLA THE MAN
WAS CARRYING…INJURING BOTH THE MAN AND HIS WIFE.
IN 2000…LATE AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED STRONG WIND
GUSTS TO 76 MPH IN WESTMINSTER…TO 69 MPH NEAR BOULDER…AND
TO 60 MPH AT JEFFERSON COUNTY AIRPORT NEAR BROOMFIELD. NO
DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.
30 IN 1898…SOUTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 41 MPH WITH GUSTS TO
54 MPH.
IN 1940…A LATE SEASON THUNDERSTORM IN THE CITY CAUSED ONE
LIGHTNING DEATH.
IN 1944…THE MONTH ENDED WITH A TRACE OF RAIN ON THIS DATE
AND FOR THE MONTH. A TRACE OF RAIN ALSO OCCURRED ON THE
4TH…9TH…AND 10TH. THERE WAS NO MEASURABLE PRECIPITATION
FOR THE MONTH. THE TOTAL OF A TRACE OF PRECIPITATION FOR
THE MONTH EQUALED THE DRIEST SEPTEMBER ON RECORD FIRST SET
IN 1892.
30-1 IN 1959…HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 5.9 INCHES AT STAPLETON
AIRPORT. WINDS WERE LIGHT.
1 IN 1892…THE HIGHEST TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED IN OCTOBER…
90 DEGREES…OCCURRED. THIS IS ALSO THE LATEST 90 DEGREE
READING OF THE SEASON.
IN 1898…SOUTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 40 MPH WITH
GUSTS TO 49 MPH IN THE CITY.
IN 1927…A TRACE OF SNOW WAS THE ONLY SNOW OF THE MONTH…
RANKING THE YEAR…AMONGST SEVERAL OTHER YEARS…THE
SECOND LEAST SNOWIEST ON RECORD.
IN 1971…A WIND GUST TO 90 MPH WAS RECORDED AT BUCKLEY
FIELD IN AURORA. THE SEVERE WINDS CAUSED DAMAGE IN
NORTHEAST METRO DENVER. A BRICK WALL OF A BOWLING ALLEY
WAS BLOWN DOWN…THE ROOF WAS BLOWN OFF A GARAGE…AND SOME
BUSINESS SIGNS WERE DAMAGED. A MAN IN THE BOWLING ALLEY
WAS INJURED BY FLYING GLASS. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO
43 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.
IN 1994…UNUSUALLY STRONG THUNDERSTORMS FOR SO LATE IN THE
SEASON PUMMELED METRO DENVER WITH LARGE HAIL. THE LARGEST
HAIL…2 INCHES IN DIAMETER…FELL AT BUCKLEY FIELD. HAIL
1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL 7 MILES NORTHEAST OF BOULDER
AND AT NIWOT. HAIL 3/4 TO 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL IN
BOULDER…ARVADA…WHEAT RIDGE…EDGEWATER…CAPITOL HILL AND
NORTHWEST DENVER…BENNETT…AND STRASBURG. HAIL OF UNKNOWN
SIZE DAMAGED A BOEING 737 AIRCRAFT AND INJURED BOTH PILOTS
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHEN THE WINDSHIELD WAS
BROKEN OUT ON TAKEOFF. HALF INCH DIAMETER HAIL FELL AT
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE NORTHWEST WINDS
GUSTED TO 40 MPH AND RAINFALL TOTALED 0.82 INCH.
2 IN 1903…SOUTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 42 MPH WITH GUSTS
AS HIGH AS 60 MPH. THE STRONG CHINOOK WINDS WARMED THE
TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 78 DEGREES.
IN 1910…AN APPARENT DRY MICROBURST PRODUCED SUSTAINED
NORTHEAST WINDS TO 43 MPH.
IN 1934…A TRACE OF RAIN WAS THE ONLY PRECIPITATION OF THE
MONTH. THIS WAS THE DRIEST OCTOBER ON RECORD.
3 IN 1875…VERY DENSE HAZE HID THE MOUNTAINS FROM VIEW AS
OBSERVED FROM THE CITY.
IN 1933…RAINFALL OF JUST 0.01 INCH WAS THE ONLY PRECIPITATION
OF THE MONTH. THIS WAS THE SECOND DRIEST OCTOBER ON RECORD.
IN 1954…THE LOW TEMPERATURE COOLED TO ONLY 60 DEGREES…THE
ALL-TIME RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE MONTH OCTOBER.
3-4 IN 1969…THE FIRST SNOWFALL OF THE SEASON TOTALED 16.0 INCHES
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THERE WAS A THUNDER
SNOW SHOWER ON THE EVENING OF THE 3RD…BUT OTHERWISE LITTLE
WIND WITH THE STORM. THE GREATEST SNOW DEPTH ON THE GROUND
WAS 8 INCHES DUE TO MELTING. HEAVY WET SNOW ACCUMULATED ON
TREES…WHICH WERE STILL IN FULL LEAF…AND CAUSED WIDESPREAD
DAMAGE FROM BROKEN LIMBS AND DOWNED UTILITY LINES.
3-5 IN 1984…THE REMNANTS OF PACIFIC HURRICANE POLO PRODUCED
HEAVY RAIN OVER NORTHEASTERN COLORADO. MOST LOCATIONS
RECEIVED BETWEEN 1.00 TO 2.50 INCHES OF RAIN…BUT 3.45
INCHES FELL IN LITTLETON. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.73 INCHES
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT…WHERE NORTH WINDS
GUSTED TO 24 MPH.
4 IN 1912…SUSTAINED SOUTH WINDS TO 55 MPH WITH GUSTS TO
60 MPH RAISED THE TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 83 DEGREES…
THE WARMEST TEMPERATURE OF THE MONTH THAT YEAR.
IN 1924…WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 46 MPH WITH GUSTS
TO 50 MPH IN THE CITY. THE APPARENT BORA WINDS COOLED
THE TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 57 DEGREES FROM A HIGH OF
70 DEGREES ON THE 3RD.
IN 2004…SEVERAL SMALL TORNADOES TOUCHED DOWN NEAR BRIGHTON…
BARR LAKE…AND HUDSON IN ADAMS AND SOUTHERN WELD COUNTIES.
MOST OF THESE CAUSED NO DAMAGE. HOWEVER…A SMALL TORNADO
5 MILES SOUTHEAST OF BRIGHTON CAUSED EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO A
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE AND SEVERELY DAMAGED A BARN. THE BARN
WAS TORN FROM ITS FOUNDATION…AND THE ROOF WAS THROWN 100
FEET. FOUR LLAMAS IN THE BARN WERE INJURED WHEN IT
COLLAPSED.
4-5 IN 1997…UNUSUALLY WARM WEATHER RESULTED IN TWO TEMPERATURE
RECORDS. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 87 DEGREES ON THE 4TH EXCEEDED
THE OLD RECORD SET IN 1922 BY ONE DEGREE. HIGH TEMPERATURE
OF 86 DEGREES ON THE 5TH EQUALED THE RECORD SET IN 1990 AND
PREVIOUS YEARS.
Historical information compiled by and courtesy of the National Weather Service.