950  
NOUS45 KBOU 010859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-012300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT MON JUN 1 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
29-1 IN 1894...FROM THE 29TH TO THE 1ST OF THE MONTH...HEAVY  
RAIN COMBINED WITH SNOWMELT RUNOFF CAUSED WIDESPREAD  
FLOODING OVER THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER BASIN.  
RAINFALL WAS HEAVIEST IN THE FOOTHILLS WHERE 5 TO 8  
INCHES WERE MEASURED OVER THE 4 DAYS. HEAVY RAINFALL  
WEST OF BOULDER FLOODED MINING TOWNS AND DAMAGED MINING  
PROPERTIES. IN THE CANYONS ABOVE BOULDER...RAILROADS  
AND ROADS WERE WASHED OUT ALONG WITH MANY BRIDGES. THE  
FLOODWATERS SPREAD INTO CENTRAL BOULDER AND COVERED A  
WIDE AREA FROM UNIVERSITY HILL NORTH TO NEAR MAPLETON  
HILL TO A MAXIMUM DEPTH OF 8 FEET. MANY HOUSES WERE  
SWEPT AWAY...AND EVERY BRIDGE IN BOULDER WAS DESTROYED.  
A FEW PEOPLE...TRAPPED IN THEIR HOMES BY THE FLOODWATERS...  
HAD TO BE RESCUED. HOWEVER...THE GRADUAL RISE OF THE FLOOD  
WATERS RESULTED IN ONLY ONE DEATH. BOULDER CREEK SPREAD TO  
A WIDTH OF NEARLY ONE MILE IN THE PASTURE LAND TO THE EAST  
OF BOULDER. EXTENSIVE FLOODING ON LEFT HAND CREEK NORTH  
OF BOULDER WASHED AWAY RAILROAD AND WAGON BRIDGES. THE  
HEAVY CLOUDBURSTS CAUSED FLOODING ON BEAR CREEK...WHICH  
WASHED AWAY BRIDGES...RAILROAD TRACKS...AND STRUCTURES AND  
DESTROYED THE CANYON ROADWAY. MORRISON SUSTAINED THE  
HEAVIEST FLOOD DAMAGE ON BEAR CREEK. IN DENVER...RAINFALL  
TOTALED ONLY 1.50 INCHES ON THE 30TH AND 31ST...BUT THE  
HEAVY RAINFALL ON UPSTREAM TRIBUTARIES OF THE SOUTH PLATTE  
RIVER CAUSED THE RIVER TO RISE AS MUCH AS 10 FEET ABOVE THE  
LOW WATER MARK IN THE CITY...WHICH CAUSED SOME FLOODING OF  
PASTURE LAND DOWNSTREAM TO A DEPTH OF 6 FEET NEAR BRIGHTON.  
1 IN 1875...A WINDSTORM DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EARLY  
EVENING PRODUCED SUSTAINED WINDS TO 50 MPH.  
IN 1898...SOUTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 41 MPH WITH GUSTS  
TO 46 MPH.  
IN 1917...A TRACE OF UNMELTED SNOW FELL IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
PRECIPITATION FOR THE DAY TOTALED 0.08 INCH...HALF OF  
WHICH WAS ESTIMATED TO BE FROM MELTED SNOW.  
IN 1919...SNOWFALL OF 0.4 INCH WAS MEASURED IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER. THIS WAS THE GREATEST CALENDAR DAY AND 24-HOUR  
SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED DURING THE MONTH OF JUNE.  
PRECIPITATION (RAIN AND MELTED SNOW) TOTALED 0.15 INCH.  
TWO TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET. THE LOW TEMPERATURE  
OF 32 DEGREES WAS A RECORD MINIMUM FOR THE DATE. THE  
HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 40 DEGREES WAS A RECORD LOW  
MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE AND THE MONTH. NORTH WINDS WERE  
SUSTAINED TO 36 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 40 MPH.  
IN 1951...A TRACE OF SNOW FELL AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1961...HAIL AS LARGE AS 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL  
IN WEST DENVER WITH HAIL TO 1 1/4 INCHES REPORTED IN  
DERBY.  
IN 1965...A MAN STRUCK BY LIGHTNING IN SOUTHEAST DENVER DIED  
SHORTLY AFTER BEING ADMITTED TO A HOSPITAL. LIGHTNING  
DAMAGED POWER LINES IN EAST AND SOUTHEAST DENVER.  
IN 1980...STRONG THUNDERSTORM WINDS BLEW IN THE WINDOWS OF A  
MOBILE HOME IN NORTHGLENN.  
IN 1990...A THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED WIND GUSTS TO 63 MPH IN  
BOULDER. A SMALL TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN A FARMER'S FIELD  
BETWEEN THE TOWNS OF LOUISVILLE AND LAFAYETTE. ANOTHER  
TORNADO WAS SPOTTED IN AN OPEN FIELD 3 MILES WEST OF  
BRIGHTON. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED NEAR HUDSON.  
A MICROBURST WIND GUST TO 55 MPH WAS RECORDED AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED FROM ANY OF  
THESE EVENTS.  
IN 1991...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCING LARGE HAIL...DAMAGING  
WINDS...FUNNEL CLOUDS...AND HEAVY RAIN WERE WIDESPREAD ACROSS  
METRO DENVER. FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE REPORTED IN LAKEWOOD...  
BOULDER...ARVADA...AND JUST EAST OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN  
ARSENAL. HAIL UP TO GOLF BALL SIZE FELL IN LAKEWOOD...JUST  
WEST OF SEDALIA...IN LITTLETON...ARVADA...ENGLEWOOD...AND THE  
CITY OF DENVER. A MOBILE HOME PARK IN JEFFERSON COUNTY  
REPORTED HAIL TO 3 FEET DEEP. UP TO 1.00 INCH OF RAIN  
FELL IN 45 MINUTES NEAR BOULDER...CAUSING BOULDER CREEK TO  
FLOW OUT OF ITS BANKS. ROCK AND MUD SLIDES FORCED THE  
CLOSURE OF MANY ROADS IN BOULDER COUNTY. LATER IN THE  
AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 2 TO  
3 INCHES OVER A COUPLE OF HOURS. CLEAR CREEK IN GOLDEN  
SPILLED OVER ONTO U.S. HIGHWAY 6. HEAVY RAINS WASHED AWAY  
PART OF A BRIDGE NEAR ERIE. WATER WAS UP TO 18 INCHES  
DEEP IN WESTMINSTER. WIND GUSTS TO 58 MPH WERE REPORTED AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE 1/4 INCH HAIL FELL...  
AND HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL TOTALED 0.82 INCHES...BRIEFLY  
REDUCING THE VISIBILITY TO 1 1/4 MILES. ESTIMATES OF TOTAL  
DAMAGE FROM THESE STORMS WOULD EXCEED 7 MILLION DOLLARS.  
IN 1994...HAIL UP TO 1 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL OVER SOUTH DENVER  
AND LITTLETON.  
IN 1997...TWO SHORT LIVED-TORNADOES FORMED NEAR BENNETT...BUT  
DID NO REPORTED DAMAGE.  
IN 2002...STRONG WINDS FROM THE OUTFLOW OF DISSIPATING SHOWERS  
DEVELOPED TO THE EAST OF DENVER. NEAR STRASBURG...A SPOTTER  
RECORDED A WIND GUST TO 58 MPH.  
IN 2012...IT WAS THE HOTTEST JUNE IN DENVER SINCE WEATHER  
RECORDS BEGAN BACK IN 1872. THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR  
THE MONTH WAS 75.0 DEGREES WHICH WAS 7.6 DEGREES ABOVE  
NORMAL. THERE WERE A TOTAL OF SEVENTEEN 90 DEGREE DAYS IN  
THE MONTH OF JUNE. THE HIGHLIGHT OF RECORD SETTING MONTH  
WAS A STRETCH OF FIVE CONSECUTIVE 100 DEGREE DAYS FROM THE  
22ND TO THE 26TH. THIS WAS ONLY THE THIRD TIME IN DENVER  
WEATHER HISTORY IN WHICH THIS HAPPENED. TWO OF THE HIGH  
TEMPERATURES DURING THE STRETCH PEAKED AT 105 DEGREES...  
WHICH SET THE ALL TIME RECORD FOR THE MONTH OF JUNE AND  
TIED THE ALL-TIME MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE FOR DENVER.  
IN 2019...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL FROM 1 TO  
1 3/4 INCH HAIL EAST OF CENTENNIAL AND OVER SOUTHEAST  
AURORA.  
1-2 IN 2002...UNUSUALLY VERY WARM WEATHER FOR SO EARLY IN JUNE  
RESULTED IN TWO TEMPERATURE RECORDS. MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES  
OF 96 DEGREES ON THE 1ST AND 93 DEGREES ON THE 2ND WERE  
RECORD HIGHS FOR EACH DATE...RESPECTIVELY.  
1-4 IN 1977...UNUSUALLY WARM WEATHER FOR THIS EARLY IN JUNE  
RESULTED IN 3 MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE RECORDS BEING EQUALED  
AT THE TIME: 88 DEGREES ON THE 1ST...90 DEGREES ON THE 2ND...  
AND 93 DEGREES ON THE 4TH. MAXIMUM OF 91 DEGREES ON THE  
3RD WAS NOT A RECORD.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page