779  
NOUS45 KBOU 310045  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-312300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
645 PM MDT SAT MAY 30 2026  
   
..THIS WEEK IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
26-31 IN 1995...FROM THE 26TH THROUGH THE 31ST...A COOL PERIOD  
WITH LIGHT MORNING SHOWERS AND MODERATE TO HEAVY  
AFTERNOON SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS PUSHED RIVERS  
ALREADY SWOLLEN FROM MOUNTAIN SNOW MELT OVER THEIR BANKS  
CAUSING MINOR FLOODING. STREAMS AND RIVERS SUCH AS THE  
SOUTH PLATTE AND BOULDER CREEK FLOODED MEADOWLANDS...BIKE  
PATHS...ROADS NEAR STREAMS...AND OTHER LOW LYING AREAS.  
NO SIGNIFICANT PROPERTY DAMAGE WAS REPORTED AND CROP  
DAMAGE WAS UNKNOWN. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.79 INCHES AT THE  
SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AND  
ONLY 1.51 INCHES AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
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.  
30-31 IN 1935...FROM THE 30TH TO THE 31ST...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS  
OVERNIGHT CAUSED FLASH FLOODING EAST OF THE CITY ON BOTH  
KIOWA AND BIJOU CREEKS...RESULTING IN A TOTAL OF 9 DEATHS.  
MOST OF THE DAMAGE WAS ON KIOWA CREEK WHERE THERE WERE MORE  
STRUCTURES. THE WATER ROSE RAPIDLY DURING THE STORM...  
RIPPING HOUSES AND STORES FROM THEIR FOUNDATIONS AND  
SWEEPING THEM DOWNSTREAM. PRECIPITATION IN DENVER TOTALED  
ONLY 0.01 INCH. HAIL FELL IN THE CITY FOR A SHORT TIME. THE  
HAIL WAS VERY SMALL AND CAUSED NO DAMAGE.  
IN 1983...FROM THE 30TH TO THE 31ST...A LATE STORM OF RAIN AND  
SNOW HIT THE FRONT RANGE. OVER AN INCH OF RAIN FELL AT SOME  
SPOTS...AND ABOVE 7 THOUSAND FEET...1 TO 5 INCHES OF SNOW  
WHITENED THE GROUND. SOME SNOW FLAKES EVEN FELL IN THE  
WESTERN SUBURBS OF METRO DENVER ON THE NIGHT OF THE 30TH.  
IN 2002...FROM THE 30TH TO THE 31ST...UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER  
AT THE END OF THE MONTH RESULTED IN 3 TEMPERATURE RECORDS.  
HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 91 DEGREES ON THE 30TH EQUALED THE  
RECORD MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE. LOW TEMPERATURE OF 61 DEGREES  
ON THE 31ST WAS A RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE DATE. HIGH  
TEMPERATURE OF 93 DEGREES ON THE 31ST WAS A RECORD MAXIMUM  
FOR THE DATE.  
31 IN 1917...RAINFALL TOTALED 0.55 INCH AND WAS MIXED BRIEFLY  
WITH SNOW AROUND MIDDAY. ONLY A TRACE OF SNOW FELL. COLD  
TEMPERATURES DURING THE DAY RESULTED IN A HIGH OF 44 DEGREES  
AND A LOW OF 35 DEGREES. THE MONTH CLOSED AS THE COLDEST MAY  
ON RECORD WITH A MEAN TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 48.7 DEGREES...  
ABOUT 8 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL. THE COLD TEMPERATURES DURING  
THE MONTH HAD A MARKED EFFECT ON SHADE TREES AND SHRUBS IN  
THE CITY. ELMS WERE JUST STARTING TO LEAF. LEAVES ON  
COTTONWOODS AND MAPLES WERE ONLY HALF FORMED. LILACS WERE  
JUST BLOOMING...AND SNOWBALL CLUSTERS WOULD NOT BLOOM FOR DAYS.  
IN 1959...THE PUBLIC REPORTED A TORNADO BRIEFLY TOUCHING THE  
GROUND 10 MILES SOUTH OF STAPLETON AIRPORT. NO DAMAGE  
WAS REPORTED.  
IN 1984...A THUNDERSTORM MICROBURST PRODUCED A WIND GUST TO 67  
MPH...7 MILES EAST OF BOULDER.  
IN 1991...HAIL TO GOLF BALL SIZE PUMMELED SOUTHERN AND  
SOUTHEASTERN SECTIONS OF METRO DENVER AND CONTINUED ON EAST  
TO WATKINS. SEVERAL HOUSES AND CARS WERE DAMAGED. LATER...  
THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED HEAVY RAIN ACROSS THE CITY OF DENVER...  
CAUSING STREET FLOODING IN AN AREA JUST SOUTH OF DOWNTOWN  
AND JUST NORTHWEST OF DOWNTOWN. WATER WAS UP TO 10 INCHES  
DEEP OVER NORTHWEST DENVER. A BRIEF TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN  
CASTLE ROCK WHERE 3/4 INCH DIAMETER HAIL ALSO FELL.  
IN 1993...THUNDERSTORMS DROPPED DIME SIZE HAIL IN COMMERCE  
CITY.  
IN 1994...LIGHTNING STRUCK AN APARTMENT IN LOUISVILLE AND  
DAMAGED ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT...INCLUDING A COMPUTER.  
IN 2006...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED 1 INCH DIAMETER  
HAIL NEAR BOULDER.  
IN 2022...MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOWFALL IMPACTED THE FRONT RANGE  
MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS. ABOVE 8 THOUSAND FEET...STORM TOTALS  
GENERALLY RANGED FROM 4 TO 9 INCHES...WITH LOCALLY HIGHER  
AMOUNTS. THE BIG WINNER IN THE EVENT WAS NEAR BLUE VALLEY SOUTH  
OF IDAHO SPRINGS...WHICH PICKED UP 16 INCHES OF SNOW. SEVERAL  
BRIEF ROAD CLOSURES OCCURRED ALONG WESTBOUND I-70...FROM FLOYD  
HILL TO SILVERTHORNE. ALONG THE URBAN CORRIDOR AND IN THE  
FOOTHILLS BELOW 8 THOUSAND FEET...MUCH NEEDED RAINFALL UP TO 1.5  
INCHES WAS OBSERVED. THE OFFICIAL RAINFALL MEASUREMENT AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WAS 0.71 INCH.  
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.  
2 IN 1914...FLOODING OCCURRED ON BOULDER CREEK WHEN HEAVY RAINS  
ADDED TO HEAVY SNOWMELT RUNOFF. FLOODING DAMAGED THE WATER  
SUPPLY SYSTEM FROM THE MOUNTAINS INTO BOULDER AND DESTROYED  
ROADS AND BRIDGES IN THE CANYONS ABOVE BOULDER. THE  
FLOODING IN CENTRAL BOULDER WAS DESCRIBED AS THE WORST  
SINCE THE TRAGIC FLOOD OF MAY 29TH THROUGH JUNE 3RD IN  
1894. HOWEVER...THERE WAS NO REPORTED LOSS OF LIFE. THE  
FLOOD WATERS ALSO INUNDATED PASTURE LAND TO THE EAST OF  
THE TOWN.  
IN 1951...THE LOWEST RECORDED TEMPERATURE IN JUNE...30 DEGREES...  
OCCURRED. THE UNUSUALLY COLD WEATHER WAS ACCOMPANIED BY  
0.3 INCH OF SNOWFALL. PRECIPITATION...BOTH RAIN AND  
MELTED SNOW...TOTALED 0.30 INCH.  
IN 1966...MICROBURST WINDS GUSTED TO 51 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1981...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM ROARED THROUGH METRO DENVER...  
DUMPING 2.00 INCHES OF RAIN IN AS LITTLE AS 20 MINUTES AND  
BOMBING MANY AREAS WITH HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER.  
THE HEAVY RAIN CAUSED LOCAL FLOODING WITH UP TO 3 FEET OF  
WATER IN SOME STREETS IN NORTHWEST METRO DENVER. PART  
OF A STREET WAS WASHED OUT IN THORNTON. LIGHTNING STRIKES  
STARTED A FIRE AND CAUSED A POWER OUTAGE JUST NORTH OF  
DENVER. LIGHTNING ALSO STRUCK A BARN WHICH BURNED TO THE  
GROUND IN BRIGHTON. NUMEROUS CARS SUSTAINED MINOR HAIL  
DAMAGE. A TORNADO WAS SPOTTED 4 MILES NORTHEAST OF THE  
ROCKY MOUNTAIN ARSENAL...BUT CAUSED NO DAMAGE.  
IN 1982...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL ACROSS  
METRO DENVER. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS REPORTED IN  
LOUISVILLE AND NORTHEAST DENVER. GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL  
NEAR STRASBURG WHERE TWO TORNADOES WERE ALSO SIGHTED.  
IN 1983...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN 5 MILES SOUTH OF BENNETT. IT  
DESTROYED AN OUTBUILDING AND DID EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO  
GREYHOUND DOG SHELTERS. GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL NEAR THE  
TORNADO...DESTROYING SOME HAY.  
IN 1985...3/4 INCH HAIL FELL IN SOUTHWEST METRO DENVER.  
IN 1989...LARGE HAIL FELL OVER EASTERN AND CENTRAL DENVER. A  
FEW STONES WERE AS LARGE AS BASEBALLS...AND MANY RANGED FROM  
3/4 INCH TO GOLF BALL SIZE. THE HAIL PILED UP 2 TO 4 INCHES  
DEEP IN SOME AREAS. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH FELL AT BUCKLEY FIELD  
IN AURORA...AND 7/8 INCH HAIL FELL JUST EAST OF AURORA. A  
HOME IN LOUISVILLE WAS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING AND WAS 30  
PERCENT DESTROYED BY THE ENSUING FIRE.  
IN 1991...STRONG THUNDERSTORM WINDS IN ARAPAHOE COUNTY...14  
MILES SOUTHEAST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...DAMAGED  
THE ROOF OF A HOME AND A RADIO ANTENNA. A FUNNEL CLOUD...  
4 MILES NORTHEAST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...WAS  
SIGHTED FOR 11 MINUTES BY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE  
OBSERVERS.  
IN 1993...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY IN SOUTH DENVER...  
DESTROYING THE 4-INCH THICK CONCRETE ROOF OF A BUILDING AND  
CAUSING ABOUT 20 THOUSAND DOLLARS IN DAMAGE. THE TWISTER  
ALSO PICKED UP A TRASH DUMPSTER AND DROPPED IT ONTO A CAR  
30 FEET AWAY...CAUSING AN ESTIMATED 3 THOUSAND DOLLARS IN  
DAMAGE. HAIL UP TO AN INCH IN DIAMETER FELL IN AURORA...  
CONIFER...AND BENNETT. TWO FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE SPOTTED NEAR  
DECKERS. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED FOR 19 MINUTES BY  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OBSERVERS TO THE SOUTHWEST OF  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1994...LIGHTNING STRUCK TWO HOMES IN DENVER...STARTING  
FIRES WHICH CAUSED CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE TO BOTH. HAIL TO  
3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL IN GOLDEN.  
IN 1995...LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOUSE IN NEDERLAND...CAUSING A  
FIRE THAT WAS DOUSED BY SUBSEQUENT RAINFALL. A PORTION  
OF THE ROOF AND WALL WAS DAMAGED. THE STORM ALSO LEFT  
MOST OF NEDERLAND WITHOUT POWER FOR TWO HOURS. LIGHTNING  
ALSO STRUCK A HIGH CHIMNEY OF AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN WEST  
DENVER. THE JOLT SPRAYED BRICKS AROUND THE SCHOOL YARD AND  
PARKING LOT. TWENTY STUDENTS AND TEACHERS WERE IN THE  
SCHOOL BUILDING AT THE TIME...BUT ALL ESCAPED WITHOUT  
INJURY. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED OVER FORT LUPTON...AND  
3/4 INCH HAIL FELL IN LAFAYETTE.  
IN 2003...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED STRONG WINDS AND  
LARGE HAIL. HAIL AS LARGE AS 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL  
NEAR PARKER. ESTIMATED WIND GUSTS TO 70 MPH OCCURRED  
NEAR PARKER AND NEAR DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE  
THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 52 MPH WERE RECORDED. WIND  
GUSTS TO 60 MPH WERE ESTIMATED NEAR BENNETT.  
IN 2005...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED HAIL AS LARGE AS  
1 INCH IN DIAMETER IN THE CITY OF DENVER. A TORNADO  
WAS SIGHTED NEAR BENNETT ALONG WITH 3/4 INCH HAIL.  
IN 2008...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL OVER  
WESTERN ARAPAHOE...NORTHERN DENVER AND SOUTHERN WELD  
COUNTIES. HAIL...2 INCHES IN DIAMETER...WAS OBSERVED NEAR  
BRIGHTON; WITH HAIL TO 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER...5 MILES  
EAST OF PROSPECT. HAIL TO ONE INCH IN DIAMETER WAS  
OBSERVED NEAR BUCKLEY FIELD...FREDERICK AND DENVER.  
IN 2012...SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED DAMAGING THUNDERSTORM  
WINDS. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED: 82 MPH NEAR STRASBURG...  
61 MPH AT BUCKLEY FIELD...60 MPH NEAR BYERS AND SOUTHWEST  
DENVER...58 MPH NEAR WATKINS AND 52 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE MICROBURST WINDS CAUSED  
EXTENSIVE TREE AND ROOF DAMAGE. IN ADDITION...HAIL UP TO  
1 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS REPORTED 3 MILES EAST-SOUTHEAST OF  
PARKER.  
IN 2019...LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOME IN BROOMIELD. MINOR  
DAMAGE TO THE ROOF WAS OBSERVED.  
2-4 IN 1989...FROM THE 2ND TO THE 4TH...HEAVY RAIN DRENCHED METRO  
DENVER WITH THE GREATEST AMOUNTS RECORDED ON THE 3RD.  
TOTAL RAINFALL RANGED FROM 1 1/2 TO 3 INCHES. ROADS WERE  
WASHED OUT IN BOULDER COUNTY...AND FLOODED BASEMENTS CAUSED  
WATER DAMAGE TO HOUSES IN THE GUNBARREL SECTION OF BOULDER.  
IN SUBURBAN DENVER...HEAVY RAIN CAUSED MINOR FLOODING ALONG  
LENA GULCH IN JEFFERSON COUNTY WHERE TWO MOBILE HOME PARKS  
WERE EVACUATED. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.66 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
2-7 IN 1921...HEAVY RAINFALL FOR NEARLY A WEEK...FROM THE 2ND TO  
THE 7TH...ON TOP OF STREAMS ALREADY SWOLLEN BY MOUNTAIN  
SNOWMELT...PRODUCED WIDESPREAD FLOODING OVER THE SOUTH  
PLATTE RIVER BASIN...INCLUDING THE TRIBUTARIES THROUGH THE  
CANYONS TO THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST OF DENVER. HEAVY  
RAINFALL OVER THE 6-DAY PERIOD TOTALED 3.36 INCHES IN  
BOULDER...4.98 INCHES IN MORRISON...4.27 INCHES  
IN CASTLE ROCK...AND 2.94 INCHES IN THE CITY OF DENVER.  
RAINFALL AMOUNTS IN THE FOOTHILLS WERE ESTIMATED BETWEEN  
3 AND 6 INCHES. THE NARROW-GAGE TRACKS OF THE COLORADO AND  
SOUTHERN RAILROAD WERE DESTROYED IN THE PLATTE CANYON. FROM  
THE MOUTH OF THE CANYON THROUGH THE CITY TO NEAR BRIGHTON...  
THE RIVER SPREAD FROM 1/2 TO NEARLY 1 1/2 MILES WIDE...  
FLOODING FARM AND PASTURE LAND AND DESTROYING OR DAMAGING  
MANY BRIDGES. IN THE CITY...MANY BUSINESSES ALONG WITH AS  
MANY AS 500 HOMES WERE INUNDATED...FORCING THEIR EVACUATION.  
BRIDGES WERE SWEPT AWAY. THE HIGH WATERS FLOODED THE RAIL  
YARDS AND STOCK YARDS IN LOWER DOWNTOWN...CLOSING THREE  
ADJACENT PACKING HOUSES. THE HEAVY RAINS ALSO CAUSED  
FLOODING ON BOULDER CREEK IN BOULDER ON THE 6TH.  
3 IN 1951...A TRACE OF SNOW FELL AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1961...TORRENTIAL RAINS FELL 10 TO 30 MILES NORTH OF  
DENVER...CAUSING FLOODING IN THE TOWN OF FREDERICK. THE  
RUSH OF WATER BROKE THROUGH AND OVER A RETAINING DIKE  
SENDING A 5-FOOT WALL OF WATER INTO THE TOWN...FLOODING  
HOMES AND DAMAGING SEWER LINES...ROADS...AND STREETS.  
GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL IN DERBY...WEST DENVER...AND  
LAKEWOOD...CAUSING MORE THAN ONE MILLION DOLLARS IN DAMAGE.  
IN 1981...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED TORNADOES OVER METRO  
DENVER. THE FIRST TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN AT THE INTERSECTION  
OF ALAMEDA AVE. AND SHERIDAN BLVD. THE TWISTER MOVED NORTH  
ALONG SHERIDAN BLVD....DAMAGING BUSINESSES...APARTMENT  
BUILDINGS...HOMES...AND VEHICLES. OVER TEN HOMES WERE  
UNROOFED. THE ROOF OF ONE LANDED IN THE MIDDLE OF A  
NEIGHBORHOOD PARK. AT LEAST 10 MOBILE HOMES WERE WRECKED.  
THE TORNADO CURVED TO THE NORTHEAST INTO NORTHWEST DENVER...  
HOPPING UP AND DOWN IN SEVERAL PLACES. VERY STRONG WINDS  
OUTSIDE THE ACTUAL FUNNEL CAUSED 20 TO 30 THOUSAND DOLLARS  
IN DAMAGE IN DOWNTOWN DENVER. THE THIRD FLOOR OF ONE OLD  
BUILDING WAS DEMOLISHED. NO MAJOR INJURIES WERE REPORTED  
FROM THE TORNADO...ALTHOUGH SEVERAL PEOPLE WERE HURT  
SLIGHTLY IN TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS ON SHERIDAN BLVD. IN THE  
CONFUSION CAUSED BY THE STORM. DAMAGE IN LAKEWOOD ALONE  
WAS ESTIMATED AT 200 THOUSAND DOLLARS. AT THE SAME TIME...  
THE WORST TORNADO TO EVER HIT METRO DENVER STRUCK THORNTON.  
COMING FROM THE SAME THUNDERSTORM THAT SPAWNED THE DENVER  
TWISTER...THE THORNTON TORNADO TORE A SWATH THROUGH THE  
HEART OF THE CITY. 87 HOMES WERE DESTROYED...110 OTHERS  
DAMAGED AT LEAST MODERATELY. IN ALL...600 HOMES IN A 100  
BLOCK AREA SUSTAINED SOME DAMAGE. THE TWISTER ALSO HIT  
SHOPPING CENTERS...SEVERAL RESTAURANTS...AND OTHER BUILDINGS.  
SEVEN OF THE 42 INJURED WERE CONSIDERED SERIOUS. THE STORM  
WAS STRONG ENOUGH TO SNAP LAMP POSTS IN HALF AND DRIVE A 6-  
INCH SLAB OF WOOD 2 FEET INTO THE GROUND. DAMAGE WAS  
ESTIMATED AT UP TO 50 MILLION DOLLARS. THE SAME STORM THAT  
STRUCK THORNTON PRODUCED ANOTHER DAMAGING TORNADO THAT  
TOUCHED DOWN IN THE NORTHWEST SECTION OF FORT LUPTON. THIS  
TWISTER DAMAGED 16 HOMES AND NUMEROUS CARS AND CAMPERS.  
TWO CHILDREN WERE SLIGHTLY INJURED WHEN THE CAR THEY WERE  
IN WAS KNOCKED ABOUT AND ITS WINDOWS SHATTERED BY THE  
STORM. THE TWISTER ALSO DAMAGED TWO COMMERCIAL  
BUILDINGS. DAMAGE WAS VERY SPOTTY...AND OBSERVERS SAID  
THE STORM HOPPED UP AND DOWN AT LEAST 3 TIMES. DOLLAR  
DAMAGE WAS ESTIMATED AT 500 THOUSAND DOLLARS. THE  
THUNDERSTORM COMPLEX THAT PRODUCED 3 DAMAGING TORNADOES  
ALSO DROPPED LARGE HAIL WHICH DAMAGED MANY CARS OVER  
NORTHWEST DENVER. ONE TO 2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN LESS  
THAN AN HOUR...FLOODING A MOBILE HOME PARK WITH 3 TO 4 FEET  
OF WATER ON THE NORTHWEST EDGE OF DENVER. THE HIGH WATER  
DAMAGED ABOUT HALF OF THE 392 HOMES IN THE PARK. LOCAL  
FLOODING WAS ALSO REPORTED IN OTHER AREAS ACROSS METRO  
DENVER. A TORNADO WAS ALSO SIGHTED NEAR FRANKTOWN...BUT  
CAUSED NO DAMAGE. A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 52 MPH WAS  
RECORDED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1982...A COLD AIR FUNNEL CLOUD TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY IN  
SOUTHWEST DENVER. TWO TORNADOES WERE BRIEFLY SPOTTED NEAR  
WATKINS. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED FROM THESE STORMS. A  
BRIEF FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED BY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE  
OBSERVERS AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE 1/4 INCH  
HAIL FELL.  
IN 1984...THERE WERE SEVERAL SIGHTINGS OF TORNADOES AROUND  
PARKER. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 1985...A TORNADO JUST SOUTHEAST OF AURORA WAS SPOTTED BY A  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE EMPLOYEE. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PUMMELED THE METRO AREA WITH HAIL.  
ONE INCH TO BASEBALL SIZE HAIL WAS REPORTED IN SOUTH  
LAKEWOOD...ONE INCH HAIL IN LITTLETON...3/4 INCH TO 1 INCH  
HAIL IN AURORA...AND GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL IN SOUTH DENVER.  
IN 1989...HAIL UP TO GOLF BALL SIZE FELL OVER ARVADA. A GOLF  
COURSE HAD TO BE EVACUATED AS THE HAIL ACCUMULATED UP TO 3  
INCHES DEEP IN SOME PLACES. ONE INCH DIAMETER HAIL FELL IN  
WEST DENVER AND WESTMINSTER.  
IN 1993...AN EARLY MORNING THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED LIGHTNING...  
WHICH CAUSED AN ATTIC FIRE AT A RESIDENCE IN NIWOT  
NORTHEAST OF BOULDER. DAMAGE WAS ESTIMATED AT 40 THOUSAND  
DOLLARS. NO ONE WAS INJURED.  
IN 1994...HAIL TO 1 1/2 INCH DIAMETER FELL JUST NORTHEAST OF  
BOULDER. ONE INCH DIAMETER HAIL FELL IN GOLDEN.  
THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 70 MPH WERE RECORDED IN ERIE.  
IN 1995...A TORNADO WAS SIGHTED OVER OPEN COUNTRY NEAR  
STRASBURG. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS  
SIGHTED 11 MILES EAST OF AURORA WHERE 3/4 INCH HAIL FELL.  
IN 2001...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL OVER EAST  
AND SOUTHEAST METRO DENVER. HAIL AS LARGE AS 1 3/4 INCHES  
IN DIAMETER FELL AT CENTENNIAL AIRPORT WITH 1 1/2 INCH  
HAIL NEAR BUCKLEY FIELD...1 1/4 INCH HAIL IN PARKER...1 INCH  
HAIL NEAR ELIZABETH...7/8 INCH HAIL AT CHERRY CREEK  
RESERVOIR...AND 3/4 INCH HAIL 20 MILES NORTH OF KIOWA IN  
ELBERT COUNTY.  
IN 2002...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED LARGE HAIL ACROSS METRO  
DENVER. HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL OVER  
SOUTHEAST DENVER AND 4 MILES NORTH OF AURORA. HAIL TO  
1 1/4 INCHES PELTED PARKER. ONE INCH HAIL WAS MEASURED  
NEAR FT. LUPTON...AND 3/4 INCH HAIL FELL 9 MILES SOUTHEAST  
OF BUCKLEY FIELD...NEAR STRASBURG...AND AT THE SITE OF THE  
FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2005...THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCING HEAVY RAIN AND HAIL CAUSED  
FLASH FLOODING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHEAST METRO DENVER.  
PEOPLE BECAME TRAPPED IN THEIR VEHICLES BY THE HIGH WATER...  
AND NUMEROUS WATER RESCUES WERE REQUIRED. THE HARDEST HIT  
AREAS INCLUDED THE VICINITY OF I-25 AND ALAMEDA AVENUE...AS  
WELL AS THE INTERSECTION OF YALE AVENUE AND QUEBEC STREET.  
SEVERAL BASEMENTS WERE FLOODED ALONG EASTMAN PLACE.  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS BROUGHT HEAVY RAIN AND HAIL TO  
EASTERN CENTENNIAL AND SOUTHEASTERN AURORA. UP TO 3 FEET  
OF STANDING WATER WAS REPORTED ON EAST ORCHARD ROAD WHERE  
SEVERAL MOTORISTS WERE STRANDED IN THEIR VEHICLES AND NEEDED  
TO BE RESCUED. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL IN THE  
AREA. TEN VEHICLES WERE STRANDED ON GRAND AVENUE...AND MOST  
HAD TO BE TOWED ONCE THE FLOODWATERS RECEDED. WATER WAS  
REPORTEDLY CHEST DEEP AT ONE LOCATION ON GIRARD AVENUE.  
HAIL AS LARGE AS 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER ALSO WAS REPORTED IN  
LITTLETON...NEAR PARKER...AND NEAR BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE.  
HAIL TO 7/8 INCH WAS MEASURED NEAR SHERIDAN AND CHERRY  
CREEK RESERVOIR.  
3-4 IN 1904...A THUNDERSTORM DURING THE EARLY MORNING OF THE  
3RD TURNED INTO WIDESPREAD GENERAL RAIN...WHICH CONTINUED  
INTO THE EARLY AFTERNOON OF THE 4TH. RAINFALL TOTALED  
2.04 INCHES.  
4 IN 1878...A "WATERSPOUT" OR CLOUDBURST OF RAIN WAS SIGHTED  
UP THE SOUTH PLATTE CANYON AT AROUND NOON. THE RESULTING  
HIGH WATERS ON THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER SLIGHTLY DAMAGED A  
RAILROAD BRIDGE IN THE CITY.  
IN 1937...A TRACE OF SNOW FELL IN DOWNTOWN DENVER WHERE  
RAINFALL TOTALED 0.25 INCH. MINIMUM TEMPERATURE OF 34  
DEGREES WAS A RECORD LOW FOR THE DATE. NORTHEAST WINDS  
WERE SUSTAINED TO 22 MPH.  
IN 1951...THE START OF THE SECOND SHORTEST SNOW-FREE PERIOD  
ON RECORD...109 DAYS...OCCURRED WITH THE LAST SNOW OF THE  
SEASON...A TRACE...ON THE 3RD. THE FIRST SNOW OF THE NEXT  
SEASON OCCURRED ON SEPTEMBER 21ST WHEN 4.2 INCHES OF SNOW  
FELL AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1954...A MICROBURST PRODUCED BRIEF SUSTAINED WINDS OF 40  
MPH WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS 64 MPH AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1956...THE FAILURE OF THE GEORGETOWN DAM CAUSED DOWNSTREAM  
FLOODING ON CLEAR CREEK AT IDAHO SPRINGS AND GOLDEN.  
IN 1976...FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE SIGHTED NEAR BRIGHTON...ERIE...AND  
DACONO...ALL NORTH OF DENVER. A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY  
1 1/2 MILES EAST OF LAFAYETTE. ANOTHER TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN  
BRIEFLY AT HYLAND HILLS GOLF COURSE IN WESTMINSTER. NO  
DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 1983...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE AFTERNOON PRODUCED  
3/4 INCH HAIL IN SOUTH DENVER...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL 5 MILES  
WEST OF PARKER...1 1/4 INCH HAIL IN LITTLETON...1 1/2 INCH  
HAIL IN SOUTH AURORA.  
IN 2001...HAIL AS LARGE AS 1 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL 17 MILES  
NORTH OF BENNETT IN ADAMS COUNTY.  
IN 2005...SNOW WAS MIXED WITH RAIN FOR NEARLY AN HOUR AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT DURING MID TO LATE MORNING.  
THE TEMPERATURE AT THE TIME WAS 45 DEGREES. PRECIPITATION  
TOTALED 0.36 INCH FOR THE DAY. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED  
TO 37 MPH.  
IN 2008...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED LARGE HAIL...UP TO  
1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER IN ARVADA...A NORTHWEST SUBURB OF  
DENVER. SEVERAL VEHICLES WERE DAMAGED. IN ADDITION...A  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL TO 1 INCH IN DIAMETER...  
10 MILES NORTHEAST OF MANILA...EAST OF DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT.  
IN 2015...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS BROKE OUT ACROSS BOULDER...  
DENVER...ELBERT...JEFFERSON AND SOUTHERN LARIMER COUNTIES.  
TWO LARGE AND LONG LIVED TORNADOES DEVELOPED NEAR BERTHOUD  
AND NEAR SIMLA. THE TORNADO THAT OCCURRED ALONG THE BOULDER  
AND LARIMER COUNTY LINE. IT FIRST TOUCHED ABOUT 3 MILES  
SOUTH OF BERTHOUD...AND THEN TRACKED TO THE WEST/NORTHWEST  
AND LIFTED ABOUT 6 MILES SOUTHWEST OF BERTHOUD. THE  
MAJORITY OF THE DAMAGE WAS EF1...WITH SOME AREAS OF EF2...  
AND A FEW SMALL AREAS OF EF3. AT LEAST 25 HOMES BETWEEN  
LONGMONT AND BERTHOUD WERE DAMAGED; THREE OF THEM  
DESTROYED. NO INJURIES WERE REPORTED AS THE WINDS TORE  
APART HOMES AND ROLLED VEHICLES. THE EF3 RATING IS  
DEFINED AS MAXIMUM WINDS ESTIMATED AT 135 TO 140 MPH. THE  
PATH LENGTH WAS 6 MILES LONG WITH A WIDTH OF ONE  
QUARTER MILE AT TIMES. LARGE HAIL FROM QUARTER TO TENNIS  
TENNIS BALL SIZE WAS OBSERVED. THE LARGEST HAIL OCCURRED  
IN NORTHEAST BOULDER COUNTY. THE HAIL DAMAGED CARS AND  
HOMES; BREAKING WINDOWS AND WINDSHIELDS. IN ADDITION...  
NUMEROUS ROADS WERE CLOSED ALONG THE LARIMER AND BOULDER  
COUNTY LINE DUE TO FLASH FLOODING. JUST WEST OF BERTHOUD...  
3.47 INCHES OF RAIN HAD FALLEN. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...ONLY 0.01 INCHES OF RAINFALL WAS RECORDED...  
WITH A PEAK WIND GUST TO 35 MPH FROM THE NORTHEAST.  
IN 2020...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED INTENSE WIND GUSTS  
ACROSS PARTS OF ADAMS AND DENVER COUNTIES. A PEAK WIND  
GUST OF 64 MPH WAS OBSERVED NEAR BENNETT...WITH A GUST TO  
58 MPH OBSERVED AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
4-5 IN 1965...LIGHTNING AND AN 18-HOUR RAIN STORM...FROM THE 4TH  
TO THE 5TH...DAMAGED STREETS AND ROADS AND TELEPHONE AND  
POWER LINES ACROSS METRO DENVER. PRECIPITATION TOTALED  
2.77 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE THE  
VISIBILITY WAS REDUCED TO 3 MILES AT TIMES FROM  
PRE-FRONTAL THUNDERSTORMS AND HEAVY UPSLOPE RAINS.  
IN 1998...FROM THE 4TH TO THE 5TH...A LATE SEASON SNOW STORM  
STRUCK THE FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS. UP TO 5 INCHES OF SNOW  
FELL IN COAL CREEK CANYON. LIGHT SNOW ALSO FELL OVER  
WESTERN SECTIONS OF METRO DENVER AND BRIEFLY AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. SNOW COVERED THE GRASS AT THE  
DENVER FEDERAL CENTER IN LAKEWOOD BEFORE MELTING AROUND  
MID-MORNING ON THE 5TH. NO SNOW FELL AT THE SITE OF THE  
FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. SEVERAL  
TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 47  
DEGREES ON THE 4TH AND 49 DEGREES ON THE 5TH WERE RECORD  
LOW MAXIMUMS FOR THEIR RESPECTIVE DATES. MINIMUM  
TEMPERATURE OF 34 DEGREES ON BOTH THE 5TH AND 6TH WERE  
RECORD LOWS FOR THOSE DATES.  
5 IN 1864...HIGH WATER ON THE WEST FORK OF CLEAR CREEK CAUSED  
A SMALL DAM NEAR EMPIRE TO FAIL...WHICH DESTROYED SEVERAL  
DOWNSTREAM BRIDGES.  
IN 1885...A WINDSTORM DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING  
PRODUCED SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST WINDS AT SUSTAINED SPEEDS UP  
TO 42 MPH.  
IN 1937...A TRACE OF SNOW FELL IN DOWNTOWN DENVER. THIS WAS  
THE LATEST SNOWFALL OF RECORD AT THE TIME. LIGHT RAIN AND  
SNOW WERE MIXED AROUND MID-DAY. PRECIPITATION TOTALED ONLY  
0.01 INCH. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 20 MPH.  
IN 1941...HAIL OF UNKNOWN SIZE FELL ON THE CITY.  
IN 1961...LIGHTNING STRUCK AND INJURED AN AIRMAN OUTSIDE A  
BASE CLASSROOM AT LOWRY AIR FORCE BASE. FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE  
SIGHTED NEAR FREDERICK AND FIRESTONE NORTH OF DENVER. THE  
ONE NEAR FREDERICK BRIEFLY TOUCHED DOWN IN AN OPEN FIELD  
BUT CAUSED NO DAMAGE. HEAVY RAIN AND HAIL HIT THE FORT  
LUPTON AREA CAUSING DAMAGE TO CROPS. HEAVY RAIN IN  
FREDERICK ADDED TO THE FLOOD DAMAGE OF THE 3RD. A PILOT  
REPORTED A FUNNEL CLOUD THAT TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY AND  
THEN DISSIPATED SOUTH OF CASTLE ROCK.  
IN 1965...A LIGHTNING-CAUSED FIRE DESTROYED A MOUNTAIN HOME  
NEAR ROLLINSVILLE.  
IN 1988...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN 5 MILES EAST OF LAFAYETTE  
NEAR I-25 AND STAYED ON THE GROUND FOR 15 MINUTES. THE  
TWISTER HIT A CAMPGROUND...DEMOLISHING ONE TRAILER AND  
DAMAGING SIX OTHERS...ALONG WITH 4 CARS. THE ROPE-LIKE  
FUNNEL ALSO BLEW DOWN FENCES...SIGNS...AND ELECTRICAL BOXES.  
THE TWISTER MOVED A 1500-POUND HAY WAGON 150 FEET. TOTAL  
DAMAGE TO THE CAMPGROUND WAS ESTIMATED AT 50 THOUSAND  
DOLLARS. ANOTHER TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BETWEEN BROOMFIELD  
AND LAFAYETTE...STAYING ON THE GROUND FOR ABOUT 20 MINUTES.  
THE TWISTER HIT A SUBDIVISION...UNROOFING ONE ABANDONED  
HOUSE AND CAUSING MINOR DAMAGE TO A DOZEN OTHERS. A FOUR-  
CAR GARAGE AND THREE BARNS WERE DESTROYED. AT ONE LOCATION  
A CHAIN LINK FENCE...A SATELLITE DISH...AND A SHED WERE  
DESTROYED...WHILE THE DECK AND GARAGE OF THE HOUSE WERE  
DAMAGED. A GRAIN STORAGE TANK WAS MOVED 200 FEET. THERE  
WERE REPORTS OF BOARDS BEING BLOWN THROUGH WALLS; ONE CAME  
THROUGH A KITCHEN.  
IN 1992...LIGHTNING STRUCK A 15-YEAR-OLD BOY...CAUSING MINOR  
INJURIES...IN ADAMS COUNTY 6 MILES NORTH-NORTHEAST OF  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED  
TO 63 MPH AT JEFFERSON COUNTY AIRPORT NEAR BROOMFIELD...TO 58  
MPH AT THE U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION'S FACILITY AT ROCKY  
FLATS...TO 58 MPH IN THORNTON...AND TO 48 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE 1/8 INCH DIAMETER HAIL FELL.  
IN 1996...STRONG MICROBURST WINDS UP TO 60 MPH DAMAGED SEVERAL  
TREES IN BOULDER...SNAPPING LARGE BRANCHES 1 TO 2 INCHES IN  
DIAMETER.  
IN 1997...A WOMAN WAS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING AS SHE WAS WALKING  
TO HER CAR IN NEDERLAND. THE LIGHTNING BOLT APPARENTLY  
STRUCK A NEARBY POWER LINE AND ARCED INTO HER LEFT HAND.  
SHE RECEIVED MINOR INJURIES.  
IN 2014...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS BROKE OUT ACROSS PARTS OF  
ARAPAHOE...DOUGLAS...ELBERT AND JEFFERSON COUNTIES...  
IMPACTING AREAS GENERALLY SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH OF DENVER.  
THE STORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL...FROM QUARTER TO GOLFBALL  
SIZE.  
IN 2015...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL UP TO 1 1/2 INCHES  
IN DIAMETER IN CASTLE ROCK AND HAIL UP TO 1 INCHES IN  
DIAMETER...SOUTHWEST OF BYERS. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...0.99 INCHES OF RAINFALL WAS RECORDED. A PEAK WIND  
GUST TO 35 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST AS ALSO OBSERVED.  
IN 2017...AN INTENSE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED DAMAGING DOWNBURST  
WINDS WHICH SNAPPED A POWER POLE NEAR THE INTERCHANGE OF  
INTERSTATE 70 AND US 36. A WEAK SHORT-LIVED LANDSPOUT  
ALSO TOUCHED DOWN SOUTH OF I-70 NEAR BENNETT AND TOSSED  
AROUND SOME LAWN FURNITURE.  
5-6 IN 1977...FROM THE 5TH TO THE 6TH...LIGHTNING CAUSED SEVERAL  
POWER OUTAGES AND MODERATE DAMAGE TO A RAILROAD BUILDING.  
6 IN 1954...THUNDERSTORM WINDS AT SPEEDS OF 50 MPH WITH GUSTS AS  
HIGH AS 59 MPH BRIEFLY REDUCED THE VISIBILITY TO 1 MILE IN  
BLOWING DUST AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1967...THE PUBLIC REPORTED GOLF BALL TO 1 3/4 INCH DIAMETER  
HAIL IN THE CITY...3 MILES WEST-SOUTHWEST OF STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE AMOUNT OF DAMAGE WAS UNKNOWN.  
THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO 46 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1981...HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS REPORTED IN EAST  
DENVER.  
IN 1990...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL WAS REPORTED NEAR STRASBURG ON  
I-70 EAST OF DENVER.  
IN 1991...A TORNADO WAS SPOTTED BY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE  
PERSONNEL AND WEATHER SPOTTERS...14 TO 17 MILES NORTHEAST OF  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED  
OVER SOUTH AURORA JUST EAST OF BUCKLEY FIELD...AND A TORNADO  
WAS SPOTTED JUST EAST OF WATKINS. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
THUNDERSTORMS MOVED THROUGH AURORA AND DROPPED HAIL UP TO  
1 INCH IN DIAMETER. THE STORMS ALSO PRODUCED HEAVY RAIN...  
UP TO 1 INCH IN 30 MINUTES...CAUSING FLOODING OF STREETS.  
WATER WAS REPORTED HOOD DEEP...STRANDING MOTORISTS. WATER  
COVERED FIRE HYDRANTS AT SOME INTERSECTIONS.  
IN 1995...A WATERSPOUT SIGHTED OVER STANDLEY LAKE IN NORTHERN  
JEFFERSON COUNTY...QUICKLY DISSIPATED ONCE IT REACHED SHORE.  
A BRIEF TORNADO...WHICH WAS MOMENTARILY VISIBLE BY A DUST  
DEBRIS CLOUD ON THE GROUND...DAMAGED THE ROOF OF A HOUSE IN  
WESTMINSTER. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED JUST SOUTH OF  
LAFAYETTE. HAIL FROM 3/4 TO 1 1/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL  
OVER NORTH BOULDER. THUNDERSTORM OUTFLOW PRODUCED NORTH  
WIND GUSTS TO 44 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1997...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN NEAR BASELINE RESERVOIR JUST  
EAST OF BOULDER. THE TORNADO STRUCK A HOME...TEARING OFF  
PART OF THE ROOF. A STORAGE BUILDING NEARBY WAS NEARLY  
LEVELED AND 5 TREES WERE UPROOTED. THE TWISTER THEN MOVED  
ONTO BASELINE RESERVOIR...FORMING A HUGE WATERSPOUT. SEVERAL  
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES AND A BOAT DOCK WERE ALSO DAMAGED.  
A NEARLY STATIONARY LINE OF THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED 4.60 INCHES  
OF RAIN ON PORTIONS OF THORNTON. EXTENSIVE FLOODING OF  
STREETS AND UNDERPASSES AND OTHER LOW LYING AREAS WAS  
REPORTED. SEVERAL BUSINESSES WERE FLOODED AND BASEMENTS  
IN THE AREA WERE DAMAGED. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.02 INCHES AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AND 1.24 INCHES AT THE SITE OF  
THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. LARGE HAIL...UP  
TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER...FELL OVER THE CITY OF DENVER  
WITH 3/4 INCH HAIL MEASURED IN LITTLETON AND NEAR HENDERSON.  
IN 1999...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED FOR A BRIEF TIME IN AND NEAR THE  
FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER. THE GAMOW TOWER ON THE UNIVERSITY OF  
COLORADO CAMPUS RECORDED A WIND GUST TO 87 MPH. WINDS  
PEAKED TO 71 MPH ATOP NIWOT RIDGE NEAR THE CONTINENTAL  
DIVIDE WEST OF BOULDER.  
IN 2003...A SMALL TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN NEAR STRASBURG...BUT DID  
NO DAMAGE.  
IN 2012...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS BROKE LATE IN THE EVENING...  
STRIKING AREAS HARDEST FROM DENVER SOUTHWARD. LOCATIONS  
IMPACTED BY THE STORMS INCLUDED BUT WERE NOT LIMITED TO:  
AURORA...CASTLE ROCK...CENTENNIAL...HIGHLANDS RANCH...LONE TREE...  
PARKER AND SURREY RIDGE. THE STORMS PRODUCED A BARRAGE OF  
LARGE HAIL...DAMAGING STRAIGHT LINE WINDS...FLASH FLOODING  
AND SEVERAL SHORT LIVED TORNADOES. THE HAIL RANGED IN SIZE  
FROM 1 TO 2 INCHES IN DIAMETER...AND CAUSED EXTENSIVE DAMAGE  
TO HOMES AND AUTOMOBILES. THE HAIL INUNDATED THE ROADWAYS  
WITH SEVERAL INCHES OF HAIL IN DOUGLAS COUNTY. CONSEQUENTLY...  
SNOW PLOWS HAD TO BE CALLED OUT TO CLEAR THE ROADWAYS.  
THE COMBINATION OF TORRENTIAL HAIL AND HEAVY RAIN PRODUCED  
FLASH FLOODING IN PARTS OF ELBERT...DOUGLAS AND ARAPAHOE  
COUNTIES...AS THUNDERSTORMS BROUGHT UP TO 3.35 INCHES OF RAIN  
TO SOME AREAS WITHIN 90 MINUTES. IN AURORA...PICADILLY ROAD  
WAS CLOSED FROM FLOODING NORTH OF 6TH AVENUE. A WATER RESCUE  
TOOK PLACE ON SOUTH GUN CLUB ROAD IN ARAPAHOE COUNTY...WHERE  
FLOODWATERS WERE RUSHING TO DEPTH OF 3 FEET. FLASH FLOODING  
FORCED THE CLOSURE OF SEVERAL STREETS AND ROADS FROM PARKER  
SOUTH TO THE PINERY...WHERE THE FLOODWATERS INUNDATED THE  
ROADWAY WITH UP TO 2 FEET IN SEVERAL LOCATIONS. AT  
CENTENNIAL AIRPORT...A HISTORIC B-17 FLYING FORTRESS SUFFERED  
EXTENSIVE DAMAGE AS HAILSTONES AS LARGE AS PING PONG BALLS  
STRUCK THE AIRCRAFT. ALTHOUGH THE AIRFRAME ITSELF DID NOT  
REQUIRE REPAIR...THE FABRIC-COVERED AILERONS AND ELEVATORS  
WERE EXTENSIVELY DAMAGED. THE HAIL CAME STRAIGHT DOWN AND  
PUNCHED HOLES IN THE FABRIC-COVERED CONTROL SURFACES. THE  
AIRCRAFT LANDED JUST HOURS BEFORE THE STORM HIT TO  
PARTICIPATE IN A WEEKEND TOUR STOP. LIGHTNING ALSO STRUCK  
TWO HOMES...ONE IN LAKEWOOD AND THE OTHER IN PARKER.  
STRAIGHT LINE WINDS DOWNED TREES AND POWER LINES IN AURORA.  
AS A RESULT...SCATTERED ELECTRICAL OUTAGES AFFECTED AROUND  
FIVE THOUSAND RESIDENTS. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...  
0.61 INCHES RAINFALL WAS RECORDED ALONG WITH A PEAK WIND  
GUST OF 41 MPH.  
IN 2016...POWERFUL THUNDERSTORMS FIRED UP ALONG THE URBAN  
CORRIDOR AND PRODUCED DAMAGING HAIL...STRONG OUTFLOW WINDS...  
HEAVY RAIN AND LIGHTNING. GOLF-BALL SIZE HAIL IN HIGHLANDS  
RANCH CAUSED EXTENSIVE DAMAGE INCLUDING BROKEN WINDOWS ON  
HOMES AND WINDSHIELDS ON VEHICLES. HEAVY RAINFALL...ALSO  
PRODUCED STREET FLOODING. IN AND AROUND HIGHLANDS RANCH...  
ANYWHERE FROM 2.3 TO 2.8 INCHES OF RAINFALL WAS OBSERVED...  
WITH 1.0 TO 1.5 INCHES AROUND METRO DENVER. AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...0.38 INCHES OF RAINFALL WAS  
RECORDED.  
IN 2020...A COMBINATION OF AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH MOVING  
NORTHWEST ACROSS THE STATE...COUPLED WITH A STRONG SURFACE  
PRESSURE GRADIENT...LED TO NUMEROUS REPORTS OF HIGH WIND  
GUSTS ACROSS THE DENVER THE SURROUNDING REGION. MOST OF  
THE WIND DAMAGE OCCURRED WITH THE PASSAGE OF A RARE  
DERECHO; A LARGE FAST-MOVING COMPLEX OF THUNDERSTORMS WITH  
POWERFUL STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS. IN ADDITION...STRONG WIND  
GUSTS FROM 59 TO 71 MPH NOT ASSOCIATED WITH THE DERECHO...  
OCCURRED PRIOR TO AND FOLLOWING THE PASSAGE OF THIS SYSTEM.  
BY MIDDAY THE DERECHO...MOVED OVER THE MOUNTAINS...AND THEN  
RAPIDLY NORTHEAST ACROSS THE I-25 CORRIDOR BY MID AFTERNOON.  
WIND GUSTS FROM 60 TO 80 MPH WERE COMMON WITH A FEW GUSTS  
EXCEEDING 90 MPH. THE HIGHEST GUST OBSERVED WAS 110 MPH...AT  
THE WINTER PARK SKI AREA...AROUND 12000 FEET. XCEL ENERGY  
REPORTED MORE THAN 208000 CUSTOMERS LOST POWER BECAUSE OF  
THE STORM STATEWIDE. WIDESPREAD TREE DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
THE INTENSE WIND TOPPLED A BILLBOARD THAT CRASHED ONTO  
DENVER BAKERY. TWO DELIVERY TRUCKS PARKED NEARBY WERE  
HEAVILY DAMAGED. TWO INJURIES OCCURRED IN DENVER...ONE  
SERIOUSLY. A MAN AND HIS NINE-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER WERE  
INJURED BY A FALLEN TREE. THEY WERE STANDING IN FRONT OF A  
FAMILY MEMBER’S HOUSE WHEN THE INCIDENT OCCURRED. THE TREE  
IMPALED THE FATHER THROUGH HIS BACK AND HE REQUIRED SEVERAL  
SURGERIES. HIS DAUGHTER SUSTAINED CUTS AND BRUISES THAT  
REQUIRED STITCHES. SOUTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 78 MPH AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...WITH A PEAK GUST TO 76 MPH  
AT CENTENNIAL AIRPORT.  
6-7 IN 2004...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 7TH...A BRIEF HOT SPELL PRODUCED  
3 TEMPERATURE RECORDS. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 95 DEGREES ON  
THE 6TH AND 98 DEGREES ON THE 7TH WERE RECORD MAXIMUM  
TEMPERATURES FOR THE DATES. LOW TEMPERATURE OF 68 DEGREES  
ON THE 7TH WAS A RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
IN 2007...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 7TH...AN UNUSUALLY STRONG STORM  
SYSTEM BROUGHT VERY STRONG WINDS TO THE FRONT RANGE  
FOOTHILLS AND URBAN CORRIDOR. PEAK GUSTS INCLUDED: 92 MPH  
AT BOULDER...85 MPH...2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER...83 MPH...  
10 MILES SOUTH OF BOULDER AND 55 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT. HIGH WINDS FORCED THE CLOSURE OF MT. EVANS ROAD  
AND TRAIL RIDGE ROAD. SEVERAL TREES WERE UPROOTED ACROSS  
THE URBAN CORRIDOR. IN AURORA...THE DRIVER OF A CAR WAS  
INJURED WHEN SOME BUILDING MATERIAL BLEW OFF THE FITZSIMMONS  
COMPLEX. THE DEBRIS LANDED ON THE CAR AND KNOCKED THE  
DRIVER UNCONCIOUS. THE WIND FORCED THE CANCELLATION OF 60  
FLIGHTS AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. XCEL REPORTED  
OUTAGES IN BOULDER...DENVER...LAKEWOOD AND LONGMONT.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page