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7/15 PHL: 92 EWR: 91 TTN: 90 BLM: 90 New Brnswck: 90 TEB: 89 LGA: 89 NYC: 88 ACY: 88 JFK: 86 ISP: 85
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Records: Highs: EWR: 104 (1995) NYC: 102 (1995) LGA: 103 (1995) Lows: EWR: 54 (1940) NYC: 57 (1930) LGA: 62 (1960) Historical: 1901: The city of Marquette, Michigan set their all-time record high temperature with 108-degree reading. 1916 - A dying South Atlantic Coast storm produced torrential rains in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Altapass, NC, was drenched with more than 22 inches of rain, a 24 hour rainfall record for the state. Flooding resulted in considerable damage, particularly to railroads. (David Ludlum) 1954 - The temperature at Balcony Falls, VA, soared to 110 degrees to establish a state record. (The Weather Channel) 1983 - The Big Thompson Creek in Colorado flooded for the second time in seven years, claiming three lives, and filling the town of Estes Park with eight to ten feet of water. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Unseasonably cool weather spread into the south central and eastern U.S. Fifteen cities reported record low temperatures for the date, including Houghton Lake, MI, with a reading of 37 degrees. The high temperature for the date of 58 degrees at Flint, MI, was their coolest of record for July. Thunderstorms spawned several tornadoes in Illinois and Indiana, injuring a cow near Donovan, IL. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Twenty-six cities east of the Mississippi River reported record high temperatures for the date. Charleston, WV, established an all-time record high with a reading of 103 degrees, and Chicago, IL, reported a record fifth day of 100 degree heat for the year. A severe thunderstorm moving across Omaha, NE, and the Council Bluffs area of west central Iowa spawned three tornadoes which injured 88 persons, and also produced high winds which injured 18 others. Winds at the Omaha Eppley Airport reached 92 mph. Damage from the storm was estimated at 43 million dollars. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1989 - Thunderstorms drenched Kansas City, MO, with 4.16 inches of rain, a record for the date. Two and a half inches of rain deluged the city between Noon and 1 PM. Afternoon thunderstorms in South Carolina deluged Williamstown with six inches of rain in ninety minutes, including four inches in little more than half an hour. (The National Weather Summary)(Storm Data)
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77/ 70 and partly cloudy. Humid warm with isolated storms. Upper 80s / near 90/low 90s today in the hot spots. Humid and storm chances Sun (7/16) and Mon (7/17) where and when the sun is out it will warm up quickly. Tue (7/18) - Fri 7/21 continues warm to hot with storm chances but strong heat skirts the area and chance for some mid up upper 90s one or two of those days. Sat (7/22) continued warm, and storm chances with the area being skirted by strong heat into or nearby. A brief cool down has been consistent in the 7/23 - 7/24 period. Western Atlantic ridge near by and expanding will bump up against trough into the GL/NE and create warm humid flow with pieces of the western ridge pushing storng heat in pulses east. Should we get more of a hook between the ridges it will sustain the warmth.
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7/14 BLM: 92 ACY: 89 PHL: 89 TTN: 89 New Brnswck: 87 EWR: 86 TEB: 85 LGA: 84 JFK: 84 NYC: 84 ISP: 82
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Records: Highs: EWR: 102 (1954) NYC: 100 (1954) LGA: 99 (1954) Lows: EWR: 55 (1940) NYC: 58 (1926) LGA: 59 (1940) Historical: 1936 - Extreme heat prevailed across the central U.S. as severe drought raged from Texas to the Dakotas. Record high temperatures were established in sixteen states that summer, including readings as high as 120 degrees in the Great Plains Region. On this particular date, afternoon highs for 113 stations across the state of Iowa averaged 108.7 degrees. (David Ludlum) 1957 - Hail, with some stones up to an inch in diameter, covered the ground to a depth of three inches ruining crops in the Bath area of New Hampshire. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Severe thunderstorms in Iowa produced eight inches of golf ball size hail near Grafton, IA, completely stripping corn stalks in the area. Hail caused more than a million dollars damage to crops in Worth County and Mitchell County, and another million dollars damage in Ada County and Crawford County. Unseasonably cool weather prevailed in the Great Plains Region. Eight cities reported record low temperatures for the date, including Duluth, MN, with a reading of 37 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Severe thunderstorms produced large hail and damaging winds in the Northern Atlantic Coast Region during the afternoon and evening hours. Thunderstorms also spawned a rather strong tornado near Westtown, NY, and drenched Agawam, MA, with four inches of rain. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Afternoon and evening thunderstorms produced severe weather from eastern New Mexico to central Nebraska. One hundred soldiers were injured by flying debris and collapsing tents during a thunderstorm near Trinidad, CO. Thunderstorms in Colorado produced wind gusts to 77 mph at La Junta. Early morning thunderstorms produced torrential rains over parts of Louisiana, with 7.50 inches at Carencro, and 5.85 inches at Morgan City. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1995: On the evening of Friday, July 14th, thunderstorms producing severe weather were occurring over Upper Michigan and adjacent portions of Ontario near Sault Saint Marie. By late evening the storms had evolved into a bowing line just northwest of the Mackinac Bridge. At 10:17 PM EDT, the thunderstorm gust front hit the bridge, and a gust to 90 mph was measured. Sustained winds of 80 mph continued on the bridge for ten more minutes. Thus began the intense "Ontario-Adirondacks Derecho" that would cause hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of damage, several deaths, and many injuries as it raced southeast from the northern Great Lakes to the Atlantic coast. 2005 - Death Valley had 7 consecutive days (July 14-20) with high temperatures equal to or above 125 degrees.
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78 / 69 and partly cloudy. Had a brief shower move through. Partly - mostly cloudy today, warm, humid and scattered storms, some soakers. Where and when the sun comes out mid to upper 80s near or to 90 in the warmer spots. More of the same Sat (7/15) warm / very humid and scattered storms. Sun look most widespread storms with mostly cloudy and humid. Mon (7/17) warm and humid more isolated storms should get some pots back to 90, same for Tue (7/18) as stronger heat skirts the area. Wed (7/19) back to more scattered storms warm and humid. Beyond - overall warm and humid with storm chances, the area will get skirted with stronger heat from the western ridge and Western Atlantic ridge creating elavated heights and s/sw flow with trough into the GL and Northeast. Could see some upper 90s a day or two if clouds and storms hold off a 19-21 period. Perhaps a cooler 2-3 days in the 22-24 period. Beyond there ridge and next surge of heat moving east.
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7/13 PHL: 95 New Brnswck: 94 EWR: 93 TEB: 92 TTN: 91 BLM: 90 LGA: 89 ACY: 89 NYC: 88 JFK: 85 ISP: 85
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7/13 PHL: 95 New Brnswck: 94 EWR: 93 TEB: 92 TTN: 91 BLM: 90 LGA: 89 ACY: 89 NYC: 88 JFK: 85 ISP: 85
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SST temps https://coastalwatertemperatureguide-noaa.hub.arcgis.com/
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Records: Highs: EWR: 100 (1966) Hot summer continued to roll on that July. NYC: 101 (1966) more records highs in NY from 1966 LGA: 99 (1966) Lows: EWR: 57 (1940) NYC: 54 (1888) LGA: 58 (1990) Historical: 1895 - A tornado struck Cherry Hill in New Jersey causing fifty thousand dollars damage. It also descended into the Harlem and Woodhaven areas of New York City killing one person, and finally ended as a waterspout in Jamaica Bay. (David Ludlum) 1951: Rivers across eastern Kansas crest well above flood stage, causing the most significant destruction from flooding in the Midwestern United States at that time. Five-hundred-thousand people were left homeless, and 24 people died in the disaster. Click HERE for more information from the History Channel. 1975 - Dover, DE, was deluged with 8.50 inches of rain to establish a 24 hour record for the state. (The Weather Channel) 1977 - Lightning struck a key electrical transmission line in Westchester County of southeastern New York State plunging New York City into darkness. (David Ludlum) 1980 - Afternoon highs of 108 degrees at Memphis, TN, 108 degrees at Macon, GA, and 105 degrees at Atlanta, GA, established all-time records for those three cities. The high of 110 degrees at Newington, GA, was just two degrees shy of the state record. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Unseasonably cool weather prevailed across the Midwest. Ten cities reported record low temperatures for the date, including Casper, WY, with a reading of 39 degrees. By way of contrast, record heat was reported in the eastern U.S., with highs of 93 degrees at Burlington, VT, and 101 degrees around Miami, FL. (The National Weather Summary) 1988 - There were just three reports of severe weather across the country, and just one record high temperature reported. Thunderstorms brought much needed rains to the Tennessee Valley area, producing nine inches at Senatobia, MS. (The National Weather Summary) 1989 - A thunderstorm at Albany, GA, produced 1.40 inches of rain in forty minutes, along with wind gusts to 82 mph. Afternoon highs of 98 degrees at Corpus Christi, TX, 110 degrees at Tucson, AZ, and 114 degrees at Phoenix, AZ, equalled records for the date. Greenwood, MS, reported 55.65 inches of precipitation for the year, twice the amount normally received by mid July. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
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80 / 71 and cloudy as an area of clouds quickly moves through. Partly sunny, more humid and hot today. Low mid 90s and higher humidity will add to the index with isolated daytime and evening storms. Fri (7/14) humid, hot and more scattered storms later in the day. Places with enough sun will add a 90. Sat (7/15) and Sun (7/16) warm, humid with widespread storms possible with slow moving soakers. More clouds around but any breaks where and when the sun comes out will warm up quickly. Rain totals could become flood level with these storms, and available moisture >2 - 4 inches in places. Mon (7/17) and beyond. Overall warm, humid with blasts of stronger heat from the southwest ridge nearby or skirting the area. Should add a few 90s Mon - Wed but storms chances continue. As the Western Atlantic Ridge expands and west and pulses with the trough into the GL and NE continued storms chances. Still see a 2-3 day cool towards normal by the 22 with heat building into the west and heading east in the last week of the month.
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7/12 EWR: 95 BLM: 94 LGA: 93 TEB: 93 ACY: 92 New Brnswck: 92 ISP: 91 PHL: 91 NYC: 91 TTN: 90 JFK: 90
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Clean sweep 7/12 EWR: 95 BLM: 94 LGA: 93 TEB: 93 ACY: 92 New Brnswck: 92 ISP: 91 PHL: 91 NYC: 91 TTN: 90 JFK: 90
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2PM Roundup EWR: 94 BLM: 92 ACY: 92 LGA: 91 TEB: 91 New Brnswck: 91 JFK: 90 PHL: 90 ISP: 89 TTN: 89 NYC: 89
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Totally agree was kidding to the other end of the spectrum. Can see adding 5 of 7 of the next days. 3 at NYC (park(
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40 away from last years total
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10 AM Round up EWR: 87 BLM: 86 New Brnswck: 86 JFK: 85 ISP: 85 ACY: 85 LGA: 84 TEB: 84 PHL: 82 NYC: 82 TTN: 81
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Records: Highs: EWR: 99 (2011) NYC: 99 (1966) LGA: 98 (1966) Lows: EWR: 52 (1945) NYC: 57 (1926) LGA: 58 (1940) Historical: 1951 - The Kaw River flood occurred. The month of June that year was the wettest of record for the state of Kansas, and during the four days preceding the flood much of eastern Kansas and western Missouri received more than ten inches of rain. Flooding in the Midwest claimed 41 lives, left 200 thousand persons homeless, and caused a billion dollars property damage. Kansas City was hardest hit. The central industrial district sustained 870 million dollars property damage. (The Kansas City Weather Alamnac) 1980 - Lightning struck a large broiler house in Branford, FL, and the ensuing fire broiled 11,000 nearly ready broilers. Firemen were able to save a few thousand chickens, however. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Cool air invaded the High Plains Region. Eight cities reported record low temperatures for the date, including Sheridan, WY, with a reading of 37 degrees. Thunderstorms developing along the cold front in the central U.S. produced 6.5 inches of rain at Fort Dodge, IA, and 2.5 inches in one hour at St. Joseph MO. (The National Weather Summary) 1988 - Evening thunderstorms produced severe weather over the Dakotas, including baseball size hail at Aberdeen, SD, and softball size hail near Fullerton, ND. Thunderstorms produced heavy rain in Arkansas and northeastern Texas, with 6.59 inches reported at Mesquite, TX, in just an hour and fifteen minutes. Garland, TX, reported water up to the tops of cars following a torrential downpour. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Early morning thunderstorms over eastern Kansas deluged McFarland with more than six inches of rain. Afternoon thunderstorms in Wyoming produced up to eighteen inches of dime size hail near Rock Springs, along with torrential rains, and a three foot high wall of mud and water swept into the town causing more than 1.5 million dollars damage. Evening thunderstorms produced severe weather in Oklahoma and Arkansas, deluging Dardanelle, AR, with 3.50 inches of rain in less than twenty minutes. About seventy cows were killed when lightning struck a tree in Jones County, TX. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1995: An intense heat wave affected much of the Midwest for a 4-day period beginning on this day. The worst effects of the heat were noted in the Chicago metropolitan area, where 583 people died from the heat. Temperatures across the region reached as high as 104 degrees, overnight lows on falling to the upper 70s to low 80s. Dew point temperatures in the upper 70s to low 80s created heat indexes peaking at 125 degrees. Electricity and water usage reached record levels, causing periodic outages. 1996: Hurricane Bertha makes landfall near Wrightsville Beach, NC with maximum winds of 105 mph, but the storm surge dealt the most devastation. The U.S. Virgin Islands, along with North Carolina, were declared federal disaster areas. Surveys indicate that Bertha damaged almost 2,500 homes on St. Thomas and St. John. For many, it was the second hit in the ten months since Hurricane Marilyn devastated the same area. The primary effects in North Carolina were to the coastal counties and included storm surge flooding and beach erosion, roof damage, piers washed away, fallen trees and damage to crops. Over 5,000 homes were damaged, mostly from storm surge. Storm total rainfall amounts ranged from 5 to 8 inches along a coastal strip from South Carolina to Maine. Overall, as many as 12 deaths resulted with 8 in the U.S. and territories.
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the warmer sites push 95 today and perhaps tomorrow.
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80 / 64 very warm and turning hot. Low mid 90s with warmer spots to 95 or above on the warm southwest flow with a skirt of 850 mb temps >18c. Similar Thu (7/13) but humidity builds and isolated or scattered evening storms. By Fri (7/14) it remains very warm and humid with more widespread storms. Where and when the sun is out it will warm up quickly and some areas can extend the heatwave. Sat (7/15) and Sun (7/16) warm and humid with continued storm chances. Some storms especially Fri can be soaker and slow movers. Where and when the sun is out it will heat up quickly with lots o upper 80s / low 90s Mon (7/17) and beyond. Overall warm to hot with continued storm chances. Western Rockies RIdge will send splashes of the strong heat near or into the region for short stints but overall remaining hotter as the western atlantic ridge bumps west keeping the flow warm and humid with the trough into the GL/NE. Looks like a 2-3 day cool to near/normal in the 21-22 timeframe before next sruge of heat is spreading north and east out of the west.
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7/11 EWR: 92 BLM: 91 LGA: 90 TEB: 90 PHL: 89 ACY: 89 NYC: 89 TTN: 88 New Brnswck: 88 ISP: 88 JFK: 86
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7/11 EWR: 92 BLM: 91 LGA: 90 TEB: 90 PHL: 89 ACY: 89 NYC: 89 TTN: 88 New Brnswck: 88 ISP: 88 JFK: 86
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7/11: 1936: From July 5-17, temperatures exceeding 111 degrees in Manitoba and Ontario claimed 1,180 lives (mostly the elderly and infants) during the most prolonged, deadliest heat wave on record. Four hundred of these deaths were caused by people who drowned seeking refuge from the heat. In fact, the heat was so intense that steel rail lines and bridge girders twisted, sidewalks buckled, crops wilted and fruit baked on trees. Some record temperatures include; 112 degrees at St. Albans and Emerson, Manitoba, 111 at Brandon, Manitoba, 108 at Atikokan, Ontario, and Winnipeg, Manitoba.
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Records: Highs: EWR: 100 (1988) the hot summer of 88 rolled out - records in each month NYC: 98 (1988) one of the two 7.12 non century mark records for NYC in early July LGA: 98 (1988) Lows: EWR: 54 (1934) NYC: 57 (1898) LGA: 62 (1945) one of 7 warmest record lows Historical: 1888 - Heavy snow reached almost to the base of Mt. Washington, NH, and the peaks of the Green Mountains were whitened. (David Ludlum) 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) 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) 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) 1990: The costliest hailstorm in U.S. history occurred along the Front Range of the Colorado Rockies. (Denver, Colorado): Softball-sized hail destroyed roofs and cars, causing more than $600 million in total damage.
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70 / 61 and partly to mostly sunny. Warm one on tap as we move into the seasons first sustained heatwave and overall warm to hot period. Upper 80s to low 90s for those that start the heatwave today. Very isolated storms if any later this evening (doubt any, although one did pop last night into NW NJ). Wed (7/12) stronger heat into the area with low to mid 90s. By Thu (7/13) even stronger heat pushing up on s/sw flow 850 MB temps >18c with humidity and isolated storms chances. Some mid to even perhaps upper 90s in spots. Fri (7/14) higher humidity and continued hot more scattered storms (potentil soakers) with more clouds around (ala last holiday weekend). Where and when the sun is out it heats up rapidly under >16-18C 850 mb temps, Sat (7/15) and beyond - overall warm to hot and humid with storms chances. The western atlantic ridge is epanding to edge the east coast while the western rockies ridge balloons trough remains into the GL. The east stays warm to hot as the stronger heat is nearby and skirts the area with storms chances. Way beyond perhaps trough moves in and out quickly towards the 24 and the western heat poised to blast east.