Weather History
For Tuesday,June 9,2020
For Tuesday,June 9,2020
1953
 - A tornado hit the town of Worcester MA killing ninety persons. The 
northeastern states usually remain free of destructive tornadoes, 
however in this case a low pressure system, responsible for producing 
severe thunderstorms in Michigan and Ohio the previous day, brought 
severe weather to New Hampshire and central Massachusetts. The tornado, 
up to a mile in width at times, tracked 46 miles through Worcester 
County. It mangled steel towers built to withstand winds of 375 mph. 
Debris from the tornado fell in the Boston area, and adjacent Atlantic 
Ocea. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
1972
 - A cloudburst along the eastern slopes of the Black Hills of South 
Dakota produced as much as 14 inches of rain resulting in the Rapid City
 flash flood disaster. The rains, which fell in about four hours time, 
caused the Canyon Lake Dam to collapse. A wall of water swept through 
the city drowning 237 persons, and causing more than 100 million dollars
 property damage. (David Ludlum)
1987
 - Lightning struck   Tire Mountain   near Denver CO, destroying two 
million tires out of a huge pile of six million tires. Thunderstorms 
spawned three tornadoes around Denver, and a man was killed at Conifer 
CO when strong thunderstorm winds lifted up a porch and dropped it on 
him. A thunderstorm near Compton MD produced two inch hail, and high 
winds which destroyed twenty barns and ten houses injuring five persons.
 (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
1988
 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather from North Carolina to the 
Central Gulf Coast Region. Hail in North Carolina caused more than five 
million dollars damage to property, and more than sixty million dollars 
damage to crops. Hail three and a half inches in diameter was reported 
at New Bern NC. Thunderstorms in the Central High Plains produced 
eighteen inches of hail at Fountain CO. The temperature at Del Rio TX 
soared to an all-time record high of 112 degrees. (The National Weather 
Summary) (Storm Data)
1989
 - Severe weather abated for a date, however, showers and thunderstorms 
continued to drench the eastern U.S. with torrential rains. Milton, FL, 
was deluged with 15.47 inches in 24 hours. Record heat and prolonged 
drought in south central Texas left salt deposits on power lines and 
insulators near the coast, and when nighttime dew caused arcing, the 
city of Brownsville was plunged into darkness. (The National Weather 
Summary)
 
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