612  
NOUS45 KBOU 260859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-262300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT THU MAR 26 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
24-26 IN 1959...THE SECOND MAJOR SPRING STORM IN LESS THAN A WEEK  
DUMPED 10 TO 20 INCHES OF WET SNOW ACROSS NORTHEASTERN  
COLORADO. SNOWFALL TOTALED 14.3 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
AIRPORT WHERE NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 36 MPH...CAUSING NEAR-  
BLIZZARD CONDITIONS WITH VISIBILITIES FREQUENTLY REDUCED TO  
1/2 MILE IN SNOW AND BLOWING SNOW. MANY TRAVELERS WERE  
MAROONED WHEN TRAINS...PLANES...AND BUSES WERE UNABLE TO MAKE  
THEIR SCHEDULES. UTILITY LINES WERE AGAIN DAMAGED AS A  
RESULT OF THE STORM.  
25-26 IN 1899...A MAJOR STORM DUMPED 13.1 INCHES OF HEAVY SNOW  
OVER DOWNTOWN DENVER. RAIN CHANGED TO SNOW AROUND MID-  
MORNING ON THE 25TH. SNOWFALL BECAME HEAVY AND CONTINUED  
UNTIL LATE EVENING ON THE 26TH. NORTH TO NORTHEAST  
WINDS GUSTED TO 30 MPH ON BOTH DAYS. THE COLD AIR MASS  
PLUNGED TEMPERATURES FROM A HIGH OF 55 DEGREES ON THE  
25TH TO A LOW OF 8 DEGREES ON THE 26TH.  
IN 1995...A POTENT EARLY SPRING STORM PRODUCED HEAVY SNOW IN  
THE MOUNTAINS...BUT SKIPPED OVER METRO DENVER...BEFORE  
PRODUCING BLIZZARD CONDITIONS AND 6-FOOT DRIFTS OVER  
EASTERN COLORADO...CAUSING THE CLOSURE OF I-70 AND OTHER  
HIGHWAYS. ONLY 0.7 INCH OF SNOW FELL AT THE SITE OF THE  
FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. NORTH WINDS  
GUSTED TO 40 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON  
THE 25TH.  
IN 2001...A PERSISTENT BAND OF MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW SHOWERS  
WITH A FEW EMBEDDED THUNDERSTORMS FORMED IN THE FOOTHILLS  
AROUND ESTES PARK AND SPREAD TO THE SOUTHEAST ACROSS BOULDER  
AND DENVER AND ON THE PLAINS TO THE EAST OF DENVER. THUNDER  
AND SNOW WAS REPORTED AT JEFFERSON COUNTY...CENTENNIAL...AND  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTS DURING THE EVENING OF THE 25TH.  
SNOWFALL TOTALS INCLUDED: 7 INCHES AT BOULDER AND LOUISVILLE;  
6 INCHES AT BROOMFIELD...NIWOT...AND WESTMINSTER; 5 INCHES AT  
ELDORADO SPRINGS...NEDERLAND...AND NEAR STRASBURG. ONLY 2.1  
INCHES OF SNOW FELL AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
25-27 IN 1904...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.0 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER.  
26 IN 1899...A MAJOR WINTER STORM DUMPED 11.3 INCHES OF SNOW OVER  
DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1910...WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 42 MPH. A SNOW SHOWER  
PRODUCED A TRACE OF SNOW.  
IN 1935...A SEVERE DUST STORM SWEPT ACROSS THE CITY. THE  
DENSE DUST BLEW IN ON A GALE FROM THE EAST-NORTHEAST.  
THE DUST "BANK" WAS FIRST VISIBLE ON THE NORTHEASTERN  
HORIZON AT ABOUT 2:00 PM. IT ADVANCED TOWARD THE CITY  
AS A ROLLING...SWIRLING...YELLOWISH-TO SMOKE-BLACK CLOUD.  
AT 2:06 PM...THE CLOUD OF DUST ENVELOPED THE STATION.  
BEFORE THE STORM THE VISIBILITY WAS UNLIMITED. AT  
2:08 PM...THE VISIBILITY WAS REDUCED TO 1/8TH MILE. BY  
2:25 PM...THE VISIBILITY WAS INCREASING AND WAS ABOVE  
1000 FEET AT 3:10 PM. THEREAFTER...THE SUN APPEARED  
AS A DIM "BALL OF FIRE" AT TIMES. THE DUST WAS  
PARTIALLY GONE AT 8:30 PM. DURING THE STORM...NORTHEAST  
WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 32 MPH WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS  
35 MPH.  
IN 1971...THE HIGHEST RECORDED TEMPERATURE IN MARCH...84  
DEGREES...OCCURRED. THIS WAS THE HIGHEST TEMPERATURE  
RECORDED SO EARLY IN THE SEASON. PREVIOUSLY...84 DEGREES  
HAD NOT BEEN REACHED UNTIL APRIL 21ST. THE TEMPERATURE  
ALSO EXCEEDED THE PREVIOUS DAILY RECORD OF 75 DEGREES SET  
IN 1960. STRONG NORTHWEST CHINOOK WINDS GUSTING TO 37 MPH  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WERE PARTIALLY  
RESPONSIBLE FOR CAUSING THE EXTREMELY WARM WEATHER  
SO EARLY IN THE SEASON.  
IN 1985...STRONG WINDS OCCURRED ALONG THE FOOTHILLS. A WIND  
GUST TO 76 MPH WAS RECORDED IN BOULDER. A DUST STORM  
PRODUCED BY THE STRONG WINDS CAUSED A 35-CAR PILEUP ON I-25  
NORTH OF DENVER. IN DENVER...THE HIGH WINDS BLEW OUT WINDOWS  
IN A FEW DOWNTOWN BUILDINGS. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 52 MPH  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1993...STRONG WINDS FROM HIGH BASED THUNDERSTORMS BLEW A  
ROOF OFF AN ENGLEWOOD BUSINESS ONTO SEVERAL PARKED CARS.  
THE WINDS ALSO CAUSED HALF OF A FURNITURE WAREHOUSE ROOF TO  
COLLAPSE IN NORTH DENVER...RIPPED A MECHANICAL SHED OFF THE  
ROOF OF A BUILDING IN DOWNTOWN DENVER...AND DOWNED POWER  
LINES IN COMMERCE CITY. WIND GUSTS RANGING FROM 55 TO  
68 MPH WERE RECORDED. AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...  
WHERE NO THUNDER WAS HEARD...A MICROBURST WIND GUST TO 55 MPH  
BRIEFLY REDUCED THE VISIBILITY TO ZERO IN BLOWING DUST.  
IN 1994...HEAVY SNOW FELL IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER AND  
OVER THE PALMER DIVIDE TO THE SOUTH OF METRO DENVER.  
SNOWFALL TOTALED 11 INCHES AT BOTH THE ELDORA SKI AREA AND  
AT IDAHO SPRINGS. ONLY 1.3 INCHES OF SNOWFALL WERE MEASURED  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE NORTH WINDS  
GUSTED TO 28 MPH.  
IN 2006...POST-FRONTAL STRONG WINDS QUICKLY DISSIPATED THE  
DENSE MORNING FOG ACROSS METRO DENVER. WEST TO NORTHWEST  
WINDS WERE STRONG AND GUSTY FROM MID-MORNING UNTIL SUNSET.  
WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 37 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 52 MPH  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
26-27 IN 1886...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.1 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1911...POST-FRONTAL NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 48 MPH ON  
THE 26TH AND TO 47 MPH ON THE 27TH.  
IN 1931...A COLD FRONT BROUGHT SNOW AND VERY COLD WEATHER TO  
THE CITY. SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.3 INCHES OVER DOWNTOWN DENVER  
WITH MOST OF THE SNOW...6.4 INCHES...OCCURRING ON THE 26TH...  
WHEN NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 38 MPH WITH GUSTS TO  
44 MPH. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 31 DEGREES ON THE 26TH EQUALED  
THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF THE PREVIOUS DAY AS THE TEMPERATURE  
PLUNGED TO A LOW OF 1 DEGREE BELOW ZERO. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF  
ONLY 15 DEGREES ON THE 27TH WAS A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE  
DATE. LOW TEMPERATURE OF 2 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 27TH  
WAS NOT A RECORD.  
IN 1975...A MAJOR PRE-EASTER BLIZZARD...THE WORST SINCE THE  
VICIOUS STORM OF 1949...BATTERED NORTHEASTERN COLORADO AND  
LEFT LIVESTOCK LOSSES IN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS...BUT METRO  
DENVER ESCAPED THE MAIN BRUNT OF THE STORM AND RECEIVED  
ONLY 5.0 INCHES OF SNOWFALL. NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 38 MPH  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE TEMPERATURES  
PLUNGED FROM A HIGH OF 50 DEGREES TO 18 DEGREES BY MIDNIGHT  
ON THE 26TH.  
IN 1991...HEAVY SNOW FELL OVER PORTIONS OF THE EASTERN  
FOOTHILLS WITH 9 INCHES RECORDED AT LAKE ELDORA WEST OF  
BOULDER. THE SNOW SPREAD ACROSS METRO DENVER...BUT  
SNOWFALL TOTALED ONLY 1.7 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WHERE NORTH TO NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTING TO 31 MPH  
ON BOTH DAYS PRODUCED SOME BLOWING SNOW.  
IN 2018...A STORM SYSTEM PRODUCED A PERIOD OF MODERATE TO HEAVY  
SNOWFALL IN AND NEAR THE SOUTHERN FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS AND  
PALMER DIVIDE. STORM TOTALS INCLUDED: 12.5 INCHES AT ASPEN  
SPRINGS...12 INCHES NEAR ELIZABETH...11 INCHES AT ECHO LAKE...  
10 INCHES NEAR PINECLIFFE...9 INCHES NEAR FLOYD HILL...8  
INCHES NEAR ARAPAHO PARK...CONIFER AND CRESCENT VILLAGE; 6  
INCHES AT CHEESMAN...EVERGREEN AND GROSS RESERVOIR. THE  
OFFICIAL SNOWFALL MEASUREMENT AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WAS 2.1 INCHES.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page