Great Blizzard of 1899
Snowball fight on the steps of the Florida State Capitol in Tallahassee on February 1899. | |
Type | Winter storm |
---|---|
Formed | February 10, 1899 [1] |
Dissipated | February 14, 1899 |
Casualties | Over 100 deaths [2] |
Areas affected | East Coast of the United States |
The Great Blizzard of 1899 also known as the Great Arctic Outbreak of 1899 was an unprecedented winter weather event that affected the Southern United States. What made it historic was both the severity of winter weather and the extent of the U.S. it affected, especially in the Southern states. The first reports indicated record-high barometric pressure over Assiniboia (now Saskatchewan) due to the weight of the frigid and dense air. Later reports of the impending freeze were relayed down through Florida by the Florida East Coast Railway.
Arctic cold
The event started out on February 11 as a severe cold wave in which every state on the East Coast from Florida to Maine received sub-zero temperatures. The coldest-known temperature ever recorded in the history of Florida occurred during this event, when Tallahassee in extreme north Florida recorded a low of −2 °F (−19 °C). The following record low temperatures for February were achieved:
- Cape May, New Jersey: 0 °F (−17.8 °C) all-time record low
- Gainesville, Florida: 6 °F (−14.4 °C) all-time record low
- Tallahassee, Florida: −2 °F (−18.9 °C) (only recorded instance of a sub-zero Fahrenheit temperature in Florida)
- Diamond, Georgia: −12 °F (−24.4 °C)
- Atlanta, Georgia: −9 °F (−22.8 °C) all-time record low
- Sandy Hook, Kentucky: −33 °F (−36.1 °C)
- Minden, Louisiana: −16 °F (−26.7 °C) all-time record low for Louisiana
- Fort Logan, Montana: −61 °F (−51.7 °C)
- Camp Clark, Nebraska: −47 °F (−43.9 °C) tied for Nebraska's all-time record low
- Sioux Falls, South Dakota: −42 °F (−41.1 °C)
- Raleigh, North Carolina: −2 °F (−18.9 °C)
- Milligan, Ohio: −39 °F (−39.4 °C) all-time record low for Ohio
- Lawrenceville, Pennsylvania: −39 °F (−39.4 °C)
- Marienville, Pennsylvania: −40 °F (−40 °C)
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: −20 °F (−28.9 °C) (the coldest temperature on record until reaching −22 °F or −30 °C on January 19, 1994)
- Kansas City, Missouri: −22 °F (−30 °C) (coldest temperature on record until the December 1989 cold wave with −23 °F or −30.6 °C measurements)
- Columbia, Missouri: −26 °F (−32.2 °C) all-time record low
- Santuc, South Carolina: −11 °F (−23.9 °C)
- Harrison, Arkansas: −24 °F (−31.1 °C),[3] all-time record low
- Erasmus, Tennessee: −20 °F (−28.9 °C)
- Austin, Texas: −1 °F (−18.3 °C)
- Dallas, Texas: −8 °F (−22.2 °C), all-time record low
- San Antonio, Texas: 4 °F (−15.6 °C)
- Monterey, Virginia: −29 °F (−33.9 °C) all-time record low for Virginia until 1985
- Dayton, West Virginia: −35 °F (−37.2 °C)
- Washington, D.C.: −15 °F (−26.1 °C) all-time record low
- Altoona, Pennsylvania: −22 °F (−30 °C) (the coldest temperature on record in Altoona until reaching −25 °F or −31.7 °C on January 18, 1994)
Winter weather
During the days proceeding the storm, cold temperatures were hitting starting with the West Coast with Los Angeles reached temperatures of 33 °F (1 °C), 9 °F (−13 °C) in Portland and 9 °F (−13 °C) in Boise in February 4, and by February 6 30 °F (−1 °C) reaches up to North Carolina. [4]
On February 12, snow flurries were reported in some areas from Fort Myers and Tampa in Florida west towards New Orleans. The storm crossed the Florida peninsula and intensified as it rapidly moved up the Eastern United States. High Point, North Carolina, recorded 10–12 inches (25–30 cm) of snow, and temperatures as low as 10 °F (−12 °C) on February 11, 5 °F (−15 °C) on February 13, and 3 °F (−16 °C) on February 14. It was said to be the coldest weather known to the oldest inhabitants. Washington, D.C., recorded a single snowfall of 20.5 inches (52 cm), which was a record for the time. (The "Washington and Jefferson snowstorm" had left 36 inches (91 cm) of snow in the Washington area on 28 January 1772, but that had been before official weather recording began.[5]) Cape May, New Jersey, recorded 34 inches (86 cm), which is the highest single storm snowfall total ever in New Jersey, in what is normally the least-snowy part of the state.
The port of New Orleans was completely iced over by February 13, with ice floes reportedly floating out of the Mississippi River into the Gulf of Mexico. On February 14 the city experienced its coldest-ever Mardi Gras reading of 7 °F (−14 °C). The Krewe of Rex Parade was delayed while snow was removed from the route.[6][7]
Also on February 14, the low temperature in Miami was 29 °F (−2 °C), the second-coldest (and the first sub-30 °F (−1 °C)) temperature that the city has ever recorded.
North of the Mid-Atlantic region, the storm weakened somewhat, but it was still a very powerful blizzard. New York's Central Park recorded 16 inches (41 cm), which at the time was its third-biggest snowfall, but many surrounding areas recorded 2–3 feet (61–91 cm), as did most of New England.
There are even Cuban reports (made by the U.S. Weather Bureau, as Cuba was a U.S. territory at the time) that the country experienced hard frost which killed or damaged many crops. This was despite the cold air first having to cross the Florida Strait and its warm Gulf Stream waters. The blizzard of 1899 is referred to as "The Snow King".
The only other cold wave of such severity in the Southeast was the 1985 Florida freeze, which caused great losses to the massive citrus groves in central Florida.
Notes
- ↑ Griffin, Melissa (February 11, 2015). "The Great Blizzard of 1899". WeatherSTEM.
- ↑ "Climate History: The Great Arctic Outbreak of February 1899". National Climatic Data Cente.
- ↑ "NWS Little Rock, AR - Climate Data". noaa.gov.
- ↑ "Climate History: The Great Arctic Outbreak of February 1899". National Climatic Data Cente.
- ↑ National Weather Service, Mid Atlantic Winters – SNOW, WIND, ICE, AND COLD
- ↑ "2013 Mardi Gras Climatology". National Weather Service. January 6, 2013.
- ↑ "Weather Service Marks Centennial of Benchmark Cold Wave". NOAA News. February 9, 1999.
References
- Kocin, Paul J.; Weiss, Alan D.; Wagner, Joseph J. (December 1988). "The Great Arctic Outbreak and East Coast Blizzard of February 1899". Weather and Forecasting. 3 (4): 305–318. Bibcode:1988WtFor...3..305K. doi:10.1175/1520-0434(1988)003<0305:TGAOAE>2.0.CO;2.