778  
NOUS45 KBOU 190045  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-192300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
645 PM MDT SAT JUL 18 2026  
   
..THIS WEEK IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY  
 
7-25 IN 1934...A STREAK OF 15 CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 90 DEGREES...FROM THE  
7TH TO THE 25TH...RANKED 5TH ON THE LIST OF HOT STREAKS. THE  
RECORD OF 24 CONSECUTIVE DAYS WAS ESTABLISHED IN THE SUMMER OF  
2008.  
13-5 IN 2008...A STREAK OF 24 CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 90 DEGREES...FROM  
JULY 13TH TO AUGUST 5TH...SHATTERED THE PREVIOUS RECORD OF 18  
CONSECUTIVE DAYS ESTABLISHED IN 1901 AND 1874. IRONICALLY...  
NO NEW SINGLE DAY RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES WERE SET IN THE  
MONTH OF JULY. IN AUGUST HOWEVER...A RECORD OF 104 DEGREES  
WAS SET ON THE 1ST...AND ANOTHER RECORD OF 103 DEGREES WAS  
SET ON THE 2ND. IN ADDITION...A RECORD LOW MIN OF 70 DEGREES  
WAS SET ON AUGUST 2ND.  
18-19 IN 2003...FROM THE 18TH INTO THE 19TH...HEAVY RAIN PRODUCING  
THUNDERSTORMS CAUSED FLASH FLOODING ACROSS SOUTHERN METRO  
DENVER. AUTOMATED RAIN GAGES MEASURED 2 TO 3 INCHES OF  
RAIN IN LESS THAN AN HOUR. THE HEAVY RAINFALL CAUSED MANY  
INTERSECTIONS AND UNDERPASSES TO FLOOD...STRANDING MOTORISTS.  
SECTIONS OF I-25 AND I-225 WERE CLOSED DUE TO THE HIGH WATER.  
18-2 IN 1987...FROM JULY 18TH TO AUGUST 2ND...A STREAK OF 16  
CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 90 DEGREES RANKED 4TH ON THE LIST OF HOT  
STREAKS. THE RECORD OF 24 CONSECUTIVE DAYS WAS ESTABLISHED  
IN THE SUMMER OF 2008.  
19 IN 1875...RECENT HEAVY RAINS PRODUCED HIGH WATERS ON MANY  
CREEKS AND RIVERS IN THE AREA...WHICH THREATENED THE  
DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY AT SOME LOCATIONS. CHERRY CREEK  
IN THE CITY WAS RUNNING THE HIGHEST IN 10 YEARS. HEAVY  
RAIN IN THE MINING REGIONS OVER THE LAST 2 DAYS RESULTED  
IN WATER RUNNING "EVERYWHERE" AND THE SUSPENSION OF SOME  
WORK.  
IN 1881...A THUNDERSTORM PASSING ACROSS THE CITY PRODUCED  
LIGHTNING WITH NO RAIN. A WOMAN WAS SERIOUSLY INJURED  
WHEN STRUCK BY LIGHTNING SEVERAL BLOCKS FROM THE WEATHER  
OFFICE IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1934...THE TEMPERATURE REACHED A HIGH OF 100 DEGREES IN  
DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1965...HAIL...RAIN...AND LIGHTNING HIT WEST METRO DENVER.  
HAIL STONES AS LARGE AS 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER ACCUMULATED  
TO A DEPTH OF 2 INCHES IN EVERGREEN WHERE 2.95 INCHES OF  
RAIN IN 2 HOURS CAUSED SOME FLOODING IN THE BUSINESS SECTION  
OF THE TOWN. LIGHTNING CAUSED SOME POWER OUTAGES.  
IN 1973...TWO FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE OBSERVED 5 MILES SOUTHEAST OF  
LITTLETON. THE SAME FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE OBSERVED FOR 20  
MINUTES...5 MILES WEST AND 5 MILES WEST-SOUTHWEST OF ARAPAHOE  
COUNTY AIRPORT...NOW CENTENNIAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1975...LIGHTNING INJURED A MAN IN DENVER AND CAUSED POWER  
OUTAGES IN AURORA...LAKEWOOD...WESTMINSTER...AND WEST DENVER.  
IN 1984...STRONG THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTING TO 45 MPH SHATTERED  
7 LARGE PLATE GLASS WINDOWS AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1985...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN THE SURREY RIDGE AREA OF  
NORTHERN DOUGLAS COUNTY...JUST WEST OF I-25. TEN HOMES WERE  
DAMAGED; ONE UNDER CONSTRUCTION WAS NEARLY DESTROYED. TWO  
VEHICLES WERE THROWN OFF I-25 INJURING THREE PEOPLE. A  
PICK-UP TRUCK WAS THROWN 50 FEET BY THE TWISTER. IN  
ADDITION...A CLUSTER OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS POUNDED ALL  
OF METRO DENVER WITH TORRENTIAL RAIN...HAIL...AND WIND. THE  
HEAVIEST RAIN FELL IN AURORA WHERE ONE LOCATION REPORTED  
2.37 INCHES IN JUST 40 MINUTES. ONE LOCATION IN NORTHEAST  
AURORA RECEIVED A TOTAL OF 4.30 INCHES FROM THE STORM.  
THERE WAS EXTENSIVE STREET AND BASEMENT FLOODING...AND A  
NUMBER OF ROADS WERE DAMAGED OR WASHED OUT. AN AURORA BOY  
SUFFERED MINOR INJURIES WHEN HE WAS WASHED INTO A DRAINAGE  
DITCH. GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL IN AURORA PILED UP TO 5 INCHES  
DEEP. AN INCH OF RAIN FELL IN 20 MINUTES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...CLOSING IT TO AIR TRAFFIC FOR AN  
HOUR. UP TO 1 1/2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN JUST 15 MINUTES  
OVER CENTRAL DENVER WITH THE HIGH WATER CLOSING I-25. THE  
WATER WAS SO DEEP ON THE FREEWAY...THAT ONE VEHICLE WAS  
COMPLETELY SUBMERGED AND PEOPLE WERE DIVING INTO THE WATER  
FROM THE FREEWAY OVERPASS. THREE HOMES IN LITTLETON WERE  
DAMAGED BY LIGHTNING. WIND BLEW OUT SEVERAL WINDOWS FROM  
A HIGH RISE APARTMENT BUILDING IN SOUTHEAST DENVER.  
RAINFALL TOTALED 1.51 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1997...TORRENTIAL RAIN AND DAMAGING HAIL PUMMELED EASTERN  
SECTIONS OF METRO DENVER. HAIL UP TO 1 1/4 INCHES IN  
DIAMETER FELL AT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICE ON THE  
SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE  
HAIL CONTINUED FOR ABOUT 15 MINUTES AND ACCUMULATED TO A  
DEPTH OF 2 TO 3 INCHES...CAUSING EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO CARS IN  
THE AREA. HEAVY RAINFALL TOTALED 3.83 INCHES IN ABOUT AN  
HOUR FROM THE NEARLY STATIONARY THUNDERSTORM. NUMEROUS CARS  
STALLED ALONG I-70...AND SEVERAL HOMES WERE FLOODED IN EAST  
DENVER. THE ROOF OF A BUILDING COLLAPSED UNDER THE WEIGHT  
OF THE WATER. THE NEXT DAY SEVERAL "FATALITIES" WERE  
DISCOVERED NEAR THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICE; TWO  
PRAIRIE DOGS WERE FOUND DEAD ALONG WITH THREE RABBITS THAT  
EITHER DROWNED OR WERE KILLED BY THE LARGE HAIL.  
IN 1999...LIGHTNING STRUCK TWO RESIDENCES IN LITTLETON...BUT  
CAUSED ONLY MINOR DAMAGE. LIGHTNING TRIGGERED A FIRE AT A  
RESIDENCE IN CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE. A SMALL PORTION OF THE  
ROOF AND CEILING WERE DAMAGED BEFORE THE FIRE COULD BE  
EXTINGUISHED.  
IN 2000...HAIL AS LARGE AS 1 1/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL NEAR  
ROGGEN NORTHEAST OF DENVER.  
IN 2004...HEAVY RAINFALL CAUSED FLOODING ON THE VIRGINIA CANYON  
ROAD NEAR IDAHO SPRINGS...WHICH HAD TO BE CLOSED FOR REPAIRS.  
IN 2006...THE TEMPERATURE CLIMBED TO A HIGH OF 100 DEGREES. THE  
HIGH TEMPERATURE WAS NOT A RECORD MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
IN 2007...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED LARGE HAIL...UP TO 1  
INCH IN DIAMETER...ABOUT 6 MILES NORTH OF NORTHGLENN.  
IN 2016...TWO MEN AT THE INDIAN TREE GOLF COURSE IN ARVADA WERE  
STRUCK BY LIGHTNING WHEN THEY SOUGHT SHELTER FROM A RAPIDLY  
DEVELOPING THUNDERSTORM UNDER A TREE. ONE MAN DIED FROM HIS  
INJURIES WHILE THE OTHER SUFFERED MINOR INJURIES. VERY HEAVY  
RAINFALL WAS OBSERVED ACROSS CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PARTS OF  
DENVER. THE STORM DROPPED AROUND 1.5 INCHES OF RAINFALL IN 30  
MINUTES AND CAUSED MINOR STREET FLOODING. NICKEL SIZE HAIL  
WAS REPORTED WEST OF PINE IN CENTRAL JEFFERSON COUNTY.  
19-23 IN 2005...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE CLIMBED ABOVE 100 DEGREES ON  
EACH OF THE 5 DAYS WITH READINGS OF 101 ON THE 19TH...105 ON  
THE 20TH...104 ON THE 21ST...AND 102 ON BOTH THE 22ND AND 23RD.  
A NEW RECORD MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH OF JULY OF 105  
DEGREES WAS SET ON THE 20TH...WHICH ALSO EQUALED THE ALL TIME  
RECORD MAXIMUM FOR DENVER OF 105 DEGREES FIRST SET ON AUGUST  
8TH IN 1878. DAILY MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET ON  
EACH DAY...AND THE 5 DAY PERIOD EQUALED THE RECORD FOR THE  
MOST CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 100 DEGREES OR MORE FIRST SET FROM  
JULY 4TH THROUGH 8TH IN 1989. THE INTENSE HEAT RESULTED IN  
A HIGH USE OF ELECTRICITY FOR COOLING PURPOSES. THE DEMAND  
FOR ELECTRIC POWER EXCEEDED THE SUPPLY AND ROLLING BLACK-OUTS...  
EACH LASTING ABOUT AN HOUR...WERE SCHEDULED ACROSS METRO DENVER  
DURING THE AFTERNOONS AND EARLY EVENINGS.  
20 IN 1898...AN APPARENT THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED SUSTAINED NORTHWEST  
WINDS TO 45 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 51 MPH.  
IN 1939...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE REACHED 102 DEGREES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER. THIS WAS THE HIGHEST TEMPERATURE RECORDED SINCE  
AUGUST 8...1878...A PERIOD OF 61 YEARS...AND THE THIRD HIGHEST  
TEMPERATURE OF RECORD AT THE TIME. SIX MILES TO THE EAST...  
AT DENVER MUNICIPAL AIRPORT...THE MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE REACHED  
104 DEGREES. A DRY PERIOD DURING MID-JULY...COMBINED WITH LOW  
RELATIVE HUMIDITIES...RESULTED IN AN UNUSUALLY LARGE NUMBER  
OF FOREST FIRES IN THE MOUNTAINS WEST OF DENVER.  
IN 1941...AN AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORM CAUSED TWO LIGHTNING  
DEATHS. THE MEN WERE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING NEAR THE DENVER  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1951...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 54 MPH WAS RECORDED AT  
STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1965...HEAVY RAIN WEST OF DENVER DAMAGED ROADS AND BRIDGES.  
TWO BRIDGES IN GOLDEN WERE WASHED OUT. LIGHTNING IN DENVER  
CAUSED SOME POWER FAILURES AND FIRES...MOSTLY IN THE NORTHEAST  
SECTION OF THE CITY. HEAVY RAIN CAUSED STREET FLOODING IN  
THE CITY OF DENVER. HAIL AS LARGE AS 1/2 INCH IN DIAMETER  
AND 0.40 INCH OF RAIN IN 5 MINUTES WERE MEASURED AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE PRECIPITATION TOTALED  
1.09 INCHES. LIGHTNING DAMAGED A HOUSE IN LITTLETON...AND  
CAUSED A POWER OUTAGE IN IDAHO SPRINGS.  
IN 1973...LIGHTNING DAMAGE WAS REPORTED WEST OF ARVADA.  
IN 1975...HEAVY RAINS CAUSED FLASH FLOODING ACROSS METRO  
DENVER...RESULTING IN THE CLOSING OF SEVERAL STREETS AND  
DAMAGE TO NUMEROUS HOMES AND BUSINESSES. HAIL 1/2 TO 3/4  
INCH IN DIAMETER WAS REPORTED.  
IN 1976...HEAVY THUNDERSTORMS CAUSED FLOODING OF STREETS IN  
SOUTHEAST DENVER AND WESTERN ARAPAHOE COUNTIES. A TOTAL OF  
3.35 INCHES OF RAIN WAS MEASURED AT KASSLER SOUTHWEST OF  
LITTLETON.  
IN 1978...A GIRL WAS INJURED BY LIGHTNING AT A COUNTRY CLUB  
SOUTHWEST OF DENVER.  
IN 1984...HEAVY RAIN WAS REPORTED JUST EAST OF BUCKLEY FIELD IN  
AURORA WHERE 1.15 INCHES FELL IN JUST 45 MINUTES.  
IN 1986...THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED HEAVY RAIN ACROSS METRO DENVER  
CAUSING EXTENSIVE STREET FLOODING...POWER OUTAGES...AND  
BASEMENT FLOODING. THE GREATEST RECORDED RAINFALL WAS 4.39  
INCHES IN LAKEWOOD. IN EXTREME NORTHWEST DENVER...2.29  
INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN JUST 20 MINUTES. ARVADA WAS DRENCHED  
WITH 2.60 INCHES OF RAIN...AND OVER AN INCH FELL IN SOUTHEAST  
DENVER AND ADJACENT SECTIONS OF AURORA.  
IN 1990...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS CAUSED FLASH FLOODING IN  
SECTIONS OF LITTLETON WHERE 1.20 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN  
LESS THAN 30 MINUTES. THE DELUGE CAUSED DRY CREEK TO JUMP  
ITS BANKS...CAUSING DAMAGE TO RESIDENTIAL STREETS...CURBS...AND  
SIDEWALKS. NEARLY 100 VEHICLES WERE STRANDED FOR A TIME IN  
FENDER-DEEP WATER WHEN SEWERS AND DRAINAGE DITCHES BECAME  
CHOKED WITH DEBRIS. THE HEAVY RUNOFF SUBMERGED MANY  
LITTLETON STREETS AND INTERSECTIONS.  
IN 1992...STRONG THUNDERSTORMS MOVED SLOWLY THROUGH EAST METRO  
DENVER...PRODUCING RAINFALL UP TO 2.50 INCHES IN A SHORT TIME.  
WEATHER SPOTTERS REPORTED 0.75 TO 1.00 INCH OF RAIN IN LESS  
THAN 30 MINUTES. MANY AREAS OF SOUTHEAST DENVER WERE  
FLOODED...INCLUDING I-25 WHERE UP TO 6 FEET OF WATER  
FILLED SOME UNDERPASSES. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER  
FELL IN AURORA.  
IN 1995...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY IN AN OPEN FIELD  
NEAR STRASBURG. THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO 58 MPH AT  
CENTENNIAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1996...STRONG THUNDERSTORM WINDS DAMAGED THE BUILDING OF  
A TELEPHONE INSTALLATION COMPANY IN THE CITY OF DENVER.  
IN 1998...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE REACHED 100 DEGREES AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2006...HEAVY RAINFALL IN THE OVERLAND WILDFIRE BURN AREA  
CAUSED MINOR FLASH FLOODING IN JAMESTOWN. THE ROADS BEHIND  
THE JAMESTOWN FIRE HALL WERE WASHED OUT...WHEN A CULVERT WAS  
BLOCKED BY DEBRIS. A ROCKSLIDE WAS ALSO REPORTED IN TOWN.  
IN 2009...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED DAMAGING WINDS...LARGE  
HAIL AND VERY HEAVY RAIN ACROSS THE WESTERN AND SOUTHERN  
SUBURBS OF DENVER. WIDESPREAD DAMAGE WAS OBSERVED IN THE  
CITIES OF ARVADA...LAKEWOOD AND WHEAT RIDGE. THE INTENSE  
STRAIGHTLINE WINDS WERE THE RESULT OF A WET MICROBURST WHICH  
DOWNED HUNDREDS OF TREES AND SNAPPED POWER POLES. WIND  
GUSTS TO 80 MPH WERE REPORTED ALONG WITH HAIL UP TO 1 3/4  
INCHES IN DIAMETER. THE COMBINATION OF WIND AND HAIL  
CAUSED WIDESPREAD DAMAGE TO HOMES AND VEHICLES. THE DAMAGE  
CLAIM ESTIMATES TOTALED 350 MILLION DOLLARS; ABOUT 32900  
CLAIMS WERE FILED FOR HOMES...WHILE ANOTHER 19500 CLAIMS  
WERE FILED FOR VEHICLES. AS MANY AS 90000 HOMES AND  
BUSINESSES WERE LEFT WITHOUT POWER. IN SOME AREAS IT TOOK  
UP TO 3 DAYS TO COMPLETELY RESTORE ELECTRICAL SERVICE.  
MINOR INJURIES WERE REPORTED FROM BROKEN GLASS DURING THE  
STORM...BUT NO ONE WAS HOSPITALIZED. THE STORM CRIPPLED THE  
COMPUTERS AT THE COLORADO CRIME INFORMATION CENTER IN  
LAKEWOOD FOR NEARLY 3 HOURS. ONE WEAK TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN  
NEAR PARKER BUT DID NO DAMAGE. IN SOUTHERN WELD COUNTY...  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED WIDEPREAD DAMAGE OVER 150  
SQUARE MILES OF FARMLAND. IN ALL...400 FARMS WERE DIRECTLY  
IMPACTED BY SEVERE WEATHER. DAMAGE TO CROPS ALONE WAS  
ESTIMATED TO 3 MILLION DOLLARS. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...A PEAK WIND GUST TO 48 MPH WAS OBSERVED FROM THE  
NORTHEAST. IN ADDITION...1.01 INCHES WAS MEASURED AT THE  
AIRPORT.  
IN 2013...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL...RANGING IN  
SIZE FROM NICKEL TO GOLFBALL...ACROSS PORTIONS OF ARAPAHOE...  
DENVER...ELBERT AND WELD COUNTIES. IN ADDITION...DAMAGING WIND  
GUSTS TO 60 MPH SNAPPED LARGE TREE BRANCHES IN THORNTON AND  
3 MILES WEST-SOUTHWEST OF BUCKLEY AFB. IN BENNETT...HAIL UP  
TO 1 1/2 INCHES IN DIAMETER WAS REPORTED. AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...A PEAK WIND GUST TO 58 MPH WAS  
RECORDED FROM THE NORTHEAST.  
IN 2017...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM NORTH OF ELIZABETH PRODUCED HAIL  
UP TO 1 INCH IN DIAMETER. THE HAIL COMPLETELY COVERED THE  
GROUND.  
IN 2019...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED A WIND GUST TO 60 MPH  
AT CENTENNIAL AIRPORT. A THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED A FLASH FLOOD  
IN SOUTHERN JEFFERSON AND SOUTHWEST DENVER COUNTIES. THE  
FLOODING WAS PARTICULARLY BAD ON SOUTHBOUND I-25 NEAR 6TH  
AVENUE. ONE WOMAN WAS RESCUED BY A PASSERBY IN LAKEWOOD WHEN  
FLOODWATERS BEGAN POURING INTO HER CAR NEAR CASA BONITA. STANDING  
WATER UP TO 3 FEET DEEP WAS OBSERVED ON OTHER STREETS IN LAKEWOOD.  
A HOMELESS WOMAN DROWNED NEAR WEST 12TH AVENUE AND MILLER  
STREET WHEN SHE WAS SWEPT AWAY IN THE FLOODWATERS. HER BODY  
WAS RECOVERED THE FOLLOWING DAY.  
20-23 IN 1961...FROM THE 20TH TO THE 23RD...UNUSUALLY COOL WEATHER FOR  
JULY RESULTED IN SEVERAL TEMPERATURE RECORDS. RECORD  
MINIMUM TEMPERATURES WERE SET OR EQUALED ON EACH DAY WITH  
READINGS OF 51...51...49 AND 49 DEGREES. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF  
ONLY 64 DEGREES ON THE 21ST WAS A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE  
DATE.  
20-25 IN 1965...FROM THE 20TH TO THE 25TH...HEAVY SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS DOUSED METRO DENVER WITH SIGNIFICANT RAIN EACH  
DAY. RAINFALL FOR THE SIX DAYS TOTALED 5.16 INCHES AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. MASSIVE RAINFALL OCCURRED  
ON THE 20TH...21ST...AND 25TH...FLOODING STREETS AND BASEMENTS  
AND CAUSING STREAMS TO OVERFLOW. THE HEAVIEST RAINFALL...  
2.05 INCHES...AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT OCCURRED ON  
THE 25TH.  
21 IN 1879...LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOUSE IN NORTH DENVER. THE BOLT  
STRUCK THE CENTER OF THE ROOF DRIVING PART OF IT INTO THE  
HOUSE AND SCATTERED SHINGLES ALL OVER THE YARD. FURNITURE  
IN THE HOUSE WAS HEAVILY DAMAGED...BUT NONE OF THE THE NINE  
RESIDENTS WERE INJURED OTHER THAN BEING STUNNED. THE NOISE  
SOUNDED AS IF A CANNON HAD BEEN EXPLODED. RAINFALL WAS ONLY  
0.02 INCH DOWNTOWN.  
IN 1921...NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 42 MPH WITH GUSTS  
TO 48 MPH.  
IN 1943...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM DURING THE EVENING CAUSED THE  
DEATH OF A MAN WHOSE TRUCK SKIDDED ON A MUDDY ROADWAY ON  
A STEEP HILL AND OVERTURNED PINNING HIM UNDERNEATH. SEVERAL  
SMALL FIRES WERE STARTED BY THE LIGHTNING...AND ELECTRICAL  
WIRES WERE DOWNED. NO SERIOUS PROPERTY DAMAGE WAS REPORTED...  
BUT FIREMEN ANSWERED 19 ALARMS IN 2 HOURS. ONE PERSON WAS  
INJURED BY LIGHTNING.  
IN 1965...A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED IN THE NORTHERN PORTION OF  
DENVER. LATER...4 OR 5 FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE SIGHTED ABOUT 15  
MILES NORTH OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. HEAVY RAIN  
ACCOMPANIED BY HAIL WASHED AWAY PART OF A CITY STREET AND  
CAUSED OTHER FLOODING IN CENTRAL CITY. THERE WERE HEAVY  
SHOWERS AND SOME DAMAGE FROM LIGHTNING IN BOTH DENVER AND  
BOULDER. MARBLE TO GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL 10 MILES  
NORTHWEST OF STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1966...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS FLOODED STREETS AND  
BASEMENTS ACROSS METRO DENVER.  
IN 1973...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY 2 MILES NORTHEAST  
OF PARKER...CAUSING MINOR DAMAGE. FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE ALSO  
SIGHTED 3 MILES NORTHEAST OF SEDALIA...11 MILES SOUTH  
SOUTHEAST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...AND NEAR  
PARKER. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL OVER THE WESTERN  
SUBURBS OF DENVER.  
IN 1974...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS CAUSED FLASH FLOODING IN  
METRO DENVER. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.26 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1976...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS OCCURRED ACROSS SOUTH METRO  
DENVER WITH 1.75 INCHES OF RAIN RECORDED IN 40 MINUTES  
IN SOUTHEAST AURORA AND 2.00 INCHES IN 20 MINUTES AT CHERRY  
CREEK RESERVOIR. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED BY THE PUBLIC  
EAST OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY AIRPORT...NOW CENTENNIAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1981...THE TEMPERATURE REACHED 100 DEGREES...SETTING A NEW  
RECORD HIGH FOR THE DATE.  
IN 1983...DOWNPOURS DRENCHED THE FRONT RANGE WHERE AMOUNTS OF  
1 TO 2 INCHES WERE COMMON. THE HEAVIEST REPORTED RAINFALL  
WAS 2.36 INCHES IN A 6-HOUR PERIOD AT PARKER WHERE HAIL TO  
3/4 INCH AND WIND GUSTS AS HIGH AS 75 MPH OCCURRED. UP TO  
GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL IN THE PARKER AND CASTLE ROCK AREAS;  
WIND GUSTS TO 75 MPH WERE RECORDED IN CASTLE ROCK.  
IN 1993...THUNDERSTORM WINDS TOPPLED A 3 STORY HIGH RUSSIAN  
OLIVE TREE IN BOULDER. THE TREE BARELY HIT AND ONLY  
SLIGHTLY DAMAGED A PARKED CAR.  
IN 1995...THUNDERSTORM WINDS FROM THE WEST GUSTED TO 55 MPH  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2002...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL CAUSED FLASH FLOODING  
IN THE HAYMAN FIRE BURN AREA. SOUTH DECKERS ROAD...STATE  
HIGHWAY 126...WAS CLOSED WHEN 4 FEET OF WATER INUNDATED  
A SECTION OF THE ROADWAY. THE U.S. FOREST SERVICE HAD  
TO REMOVE 40 TRUCK LOADS OF SEDIMENT TO REOPEN THE ROAD.  
ALSO...HEAVY DEBRIS FLOW WASHED OUT A SECONDARY SERVICE  
ROAD IN SOUTHWEST DOUGLAS COUNTY. HAIL AS LARGE AS 3/4  
INCH IN DIAMETER FELL NEAR BENNETT.  
IN 2011...LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOME IN ARAPAHOE COUNTY AND  
CAUSED SUBSTANTIAL FIRE DAMAGE. FIVE PEOPLE WERE IN THE  
HOME BUT NO ONE WAS INJURED. THERE WAS STRUCTURAL DAMAGE  
TO BOTH THE INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR OF THE RESIDENCE.  
22 IN 1874...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON  
PRODUCED 1.36 INCHES OF RAINFALL IN AN HOUR...MOST OF WHICH  
FELL IN 20 MINUTES. THERE WAS MUCH DAMAGE FROM FLOODING  
OF STREETS AND CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE TO PRIVATE PROPERTY.  
THE LIGHTNING WAS BRILLIANT AND CONTINUOUS DURING THE  
STORM. SEVEN BUILDINGS WERE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING IN THE  
CITY...IN ADDITION TO MANY PLACES WHERE IT STRUCK ONLY THE  
GROUND. A MAGNIFICENT EXAMPLE OF BALL LIGHTNING WAS  
OBSERVED. WHEN ABOUT 200 FEET ABOVE THE HOUSE TOPS...THE  
BALL EXPLODED AND BROKE INTO 7 OR 8 DIFFERENT BALLS...EACH  
ABOUT 6 INCHES IN DIAMETER. UPON REACHING ABOUT 20 FEET  
ABOVE THE GROUND...THESE BALLS BROKE INTO SMALL FRAGMENTS  
ABOUT 3 INCHES LONG AND 1/2 INCH WIDE. A SHED SITUATED  
IN AN ALLEY ABOUT ONE BLOCK AWAY WAS LITERALLY COVERED  
WITH THESE SPARKS. AFTER THE STORM WAS OVER...THE SHED  
AND ADJACENT AREA SHOWED NO TRACE OF THE EVENT. NOT THE  
SLIGHTEST MARK COULD BE DETECTED ON STRUCTURES OR ON THE  
GROUND.  
IN 1879...A TERRIFIC ELECTRICAL STORM PASSED OVER THE CITY  
DURING THE AFTERNOON. THE LIGHTNING DISPLAY WAS UNUSUALLY  
VIVID AND THE CRASH OF THUNDER SEEMED AT THE VERY HOUSE  
TOPS. A FEW HOMES AND BUILDINGS WERE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.  
A HOME ON CAPITOL HILL SUSTAINED MUCH DAMAGE TO FURNITURE...  
BUT THE RESIDENTS IN ANOTHER WING OF THE HOUSE WERE NOT  
INJURED. LIGHTNING STRUCK A FENCE AT THE CORNER OF CURTIS  
AND BROADWAY. A LIGHTNING BOLT STUNNED A WORKMAN AND  
KNOCKED A MASON'S TROUGH FROM HIS HAND. A SCHOOL WAS STRUCK  
BUT WAS NOT DAMAGED. LIGHTNING STRUCK THE GROUND NEAR  
TENTH AND COLFAX. RAIN FELL IN TORRENTS FOR A TIME...BUT THE  
HEAVIEST WAS ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF THE CITY. RAINFALL IN THE  
CITY WAS ONLY 0.30 INCH.  
IN 1882...LIGHTNING STRUCK AND KILLED A MAN IN THE NORTHERN  
PART OF THE CITY.  
IN 1895...HEAVY RAINFALL OF 1.53 INCHES WAS MEASURED IN  
DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1931...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE REACHED 100 DEGREES IN  
DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1965...LIGHTNING STRUCK AND KILLED A BOY STANDING BY AN  
AUTOMOBILE NEAR STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. SCATTERED  
HEAVY SHOWERS ACCOMPANIED BY HAIL AND WIND OCCURRED ACROSS  
METRO DENVER. HEAVY RAIN CAUSED SOME STREET DAMAGE IN  
COMMERCE CITY.  
IN 1973...MINOR THUNDERSTORM WIND DAMAGE WAS REPORTED IN  
AURORA.  
IN 1983...HEAVY THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED TORRENTIAL RAIN AND LARGE  
HAIL ACROSS METRO DENVER. THE MOST SERIOUS PROBLEMS WERE  
CAUSED BY HEAVY RAINFALL IN THE FOOTHILLS...WHICH PRODUCED  
FLOODING ON BEAR CREEK. RUNOFF FROM 3 INCHES OF RAIN IN  
45 MINUTES AT KITTREDGE CAUSED BEAR CREEK TO RISE 5 FEET IN  
10 MINUTES AT MORRISON...WASHING OUT TWO BRIDGES. ONE BRIDGE  
COLLAPSED...PLUNGING A FIRE TRUCK INTO THE WATER...BUT THE  
OCCUPANTS WERE NOT INJURED. THE TOWN WAS EVACUATED FOR 2  
HOURS. EVERGREEN WAS DRENCHED WITH 2.61 INCHES OF RAIN IN  
30 MINUTES...WHICH CAUSED STREET FLOODING ALONG WITH POWER  
OUTAGES. HAIL TO GOLF BALL SIZE DAMAGED CARS. A DECK ON A  
HOUSE EAST OF EVERGREEN WAS WASHED AWAY. AT IDAHO SPRINGS...  
2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN 45 MINUTES. GOLDEN RECEIVED  
3 INCHES OF RAIN IN AN HOUR WITH 0.80 INCH OF RAIN IN SEVEN  
MINUTES AT LITTLETON. HEAVY RAIN AND LARGE HAIL ALSO FELL  
IN THE CITY OF DENVER AND ITS NORTHERN AND EASTERN SUBURBS...  
CAUSING STREET FLOODING. WATER WAS 6 FEET DEEP ON ONE  
AURORA STREET.  
IN 1991...HEAVY RAINS CAUSED EXTENSIVE FLOODING ACROSS NORTH  
METRO DENVER. RALSTON CREEK IN ARVADA FLOWED OUT OF  
ITS BANKS. AT THE INTERSECTION OF I-25 AND I-70...UP TO 8  
FEET OF WATER COVERED THE HIGHWAY. A FOOT OF WATER COVERED  
A STRETCH OF I-70 IN NORTHWEST DENVER. THUNDERSTORM  
RAINFALL TOTALED ONLY 0.82 INCH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1998...LIGHTNING SPARKED A FIRE WHICH CAUSED EXTENSIVE  
DAMAGE TO A HOME IN ENGLEWOOD. MOST OF THE SECOND FLOOR  
WAS DESTROYED.  
IN 2004...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL TO 1.25 INCHES  
IN DIAMETER IN COMMERCE CITY AND NEAR BRIGHTON.  
IN 2019...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL UP TO 1 INCH IN  
DIAMETER...AND INTENSE THUNDERSTORM WINDS IN ARAPAHOE...  
DENVER AND WELD COUNTIES. A STRONG THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED  
7/8 INCH DIAMETER HAIL IN DOUGLAS COUNTY. AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...A WET MICROBURST THAT FORMED OVER  
THE AIRFIELD PRODUCED A PEAK WIND GUST TO 79 MPH ALONG  
WITH 1.10 INCHES OF RAINFALL AND SMALL HAIL.  
22-23 IN 1991...FROM THE 22ND INTO THE 23RD...HEAVY RAINS OVER THE  
PALMER DIVIDE AND ALONG THE FRONT RANGE CAUSED THE SOUTH  
PLATTE RIVER TO FLOOD FROM NEAR HENDERSON TO FORT LUPTON.  
THE RIVER WAS OUT OF ITS BANKS AT SEVERAL LOCATIONS WITH  
WATER COVERING THE ROADS THROUGH THE NIGHT. ONLY MINOR  
DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
23 IN 1901...THE TEMPERATURE CLIMBED TO A HIGH OF 90 DEGREES...  
MARKING THE 18TH CONSECUTIVE DAY WITH A HIGH TEMPERATURE  
OF 90 DEGREES OR MORE. THIS EQUALED THE RECORD OF 18  
CONSECUTIVE DAYS SET FROM JULY 1ST THROUGH JULY 18TH IN  
1874.  
IN 1910...THE TEMPERATURE CLIMBED TO A HIGH OF 101 DEGREES  
IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1936...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE REACHED 100 DEGREES IN  
DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 1957...A TORNADO WAS OBSERVED BY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE  
PERSONNEL 25 MILES EAST-NORTHEAST OF STAPLETON AIRPORT FOR  
7 MINUTES. NO PROPERTY DAMAGE OR INJURIES WERE REPORTED.  
THE PUBLIC REPORTED A FUNNEL CLOUD 10 MILES NORTHEAST OF  
BRIGHTON.  
IN 1960...LIGHTNING STRUCK MANY LOCATIONS ACROSS METRO DENVER.  
A BOY SCOUT LEADER WAS STRUCK AND INJURED AT THE ROCKY  
MOUNTAIN ARSENAL. SOME SECTIONS OF ARVADA WERE BLANKETED  
WITH A WHITE LAYER OF HAILSTONES. A NUMBER OF WEED FIRES  
WERE STARTED BY LIGHTNING. SOME HOUSES WERE STRUCK...BUT NO  
SERIOUS DAMAGE OCCURRED. HEAVY RAIN FELL FROM NORTHWEST  
DENVER TO BRIGHTON WITH UP TO 1.50 INCHES IN SOME AREAS.  
IN 1965...HEAVY RAIN FLOODED AND DAMAGED HOMES IN GEORGETOWN...  
WHERE THE SEWER SYSTEM WAS DAMAGED AND THE WATER SUPPLY  
CONTAMINATED. HEAVY RAINS IN AURORA WASHED OUT EARTHEN  
BRIDGES OVER SAND CREEK. STREETS WERE FLOODED IN DENVER.  
SEVERAL HIGHWAYS WERE WASHED OUT TO THE EAST AND SOUTHEAST  
OF DENVER.  
IN 1975...HEAVY RAINS CAUSED FLASH FLOODING IN THE FOOTHILLS  
WEST OF DENVER. SEVERAL ROADS AND BUSINESSES WERE DAMAGED  
IN THE CENTRAL CITY AND BLACKHAWK AREAS.  
IN 1983...HEAVY THUNDERSTORMS BLASTED DENVER AND AREAS TO THE  
SOUTH. DOUGLAS COUNTY WAS HARDEST HIT. GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL  
FELL IN AND NEAR PARKER. MANY HOMES AT THE PINERY SOUTH OF  
PARKER HAD WINDOWS BROKEN AND PAINT STRIPPED BY THE STORM  
WITH SOME VEHICLES DENTED BY THE LARGE STONES. IN PARKER...  
1.90 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN JUST 30 MINUTES. MANY ROADS IN  
DOUGLAS COUNTY WERE WASHED OUT...AND AT LEAST ONE BRIDGE WAS  
DAMAGED. UP TO 2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN LAKEWOOD...AND  
LITTLETON WAS DRENCHED BY 1.60 INCHES IN 15 MINUTES. A  
DEPARTMENT STORE IN LAKEWOOD SUFFERED WATER DAMAGE WHEN A  
PIPE HANDLING RUNOFF BROKE...SENDING 4 INCHES OF WATER ONTO  
THE FLOOR OF THE STORE.  
IN 1990...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 53 MPH WAS RECORDED AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...WHERE 1/8 INCH DIAMETER  
HAIL FELL.  
IN 1992...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINS CAUSED HOWARD GULCH IN  
SOUTHEAST DENVER TO FLOW OVER ITS BANKS. A WEATHER SPOTTER  
RECORDED THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 63 MPH IN AURORA.  
ANOTHER SPOTTER MEASURED A WIND GUST TO 60 MPH...WHICH  
TOPPLED A LARGE TREE. THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO ONLY  
41 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1996...HAIL...AS LARGE AS AN INCH IN DIAMETER...FELL 5 MILES  
WEST OF CASTLE ROCK.  
IN 1997...DAMAGING THUNDERSTORM WINDS ASSOCIATED WITH A WET  
MICROBURST RIPPED THE ROOF OFF A BARN NEAR BRIGHTON...  
CAUSING THE EAST SIDE OF THE STRUCTURE TO COLLAPSE. THE  
ROOF OF A NEARBY UTILITY SHED WAS ALSO LIFTED OFF AND BLOWN  
60 FEET AWAY. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 38 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2001...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM PELTED LITTLETON WITH HAIL AS  
LARGE AS 1 1/2 INCHES. TOTAL DAMAGE TO VEHICLES...ROOFS...  
BUILDINGS...AND LANDSCAPING TOTALED OVER 600 THOUSAND  
DOLLARS. RAIN LEAKED INTO OFFICES...DAMAGING COMPUTERS.  
ALMOST EVERY VEHICLE PARKED IN THE LITTLETON CENTER LOT  
SUSTAINED SOME HAIL DAMAGE. THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO  
55 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2002...A SMALL TORNADO BRIEFLY TOUCHED DOWN NEAR BENNETT.  
NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 2004...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL IN THE OVERLAND FIRE  
BURN AREA CAUSED FLASH FLOODING IN JAMESTOWN. UP TO A FOOT  
OF WATER REPORTEDLY COVERED THE HIGHWAY NEAR JAMESTOWN.  
MANY OF THE TOWN'S CULVERTS FILLED WITH DIRT AND DEBRIS...  
CAUSING THE OVERFLOW TO WASH ONTO STREETS AND INTO HOMES.  
HEAVY MACHINERY HAD TO BE USED TO REMOVE PILES OF MUD  
UP TO 7 FEET DEEP. PARKED CARS SLID DOWN THE STREET  
WITH THE MUD AND WATER...AND MANY HAD TO BE DUG OUT. THE  
FIRE STATION IN JAMESTOWN WAS INUNDATED WITH 10 INCHES OF  
MUDDY WATER. HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL CAUSED STREET  
FLOODING IN FEDERAL HEIGHTS AND THORNTON. SEVERAL STREETS  
WERE INUNDATED WITH 2 TO 4 FEET OF WATER...INCLUDING 84TH  
AVENUE AND GRANT STREET...CONIFER STREET AND HURON BLVD....  
102ND AVE. AND MELODY...AS WELL AS 83RD AVE. AND WASHINGTON.  
SEVERAL CARS WERE STRANDED IN THE FLOOD WATERS. HEAVY  
RAINFALL ALSO CAUSED STREET FLOODING IN PARTS OF WESTMINSTER.  
WATER REPORTEDLY FLOWED INTO CAR WINDOWS JUST NORTH OF 104TH  
AVENUE AND U.S. HIGHWAY 36. SECTIONS OF TWO ROADS HAD  
TO BE CLOSED DUE TO FLOODING. HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL  
OF UP TO 2 INCHES IN 45 MINUTES CAUSED FLASH FLOODING JUST  
EAST OF AURORA. FLOODWATERS RANGING FROM 2 TO 3 FEET DEEP  
FORCED THE CLOSURE OF POWHATEN...GUN CLUB AND PICADILLY ROADS.  
LIGHTNING CAUSED POWER OUTAGES IN PARTS OF ARVADA. ABOUT  
9800 CUSTOMERS WERE WITHOUT POWER FOR UP TO 90 MINUTES.  
24 IN 1896...HEAVY CLOUDBURSTS IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER  
CAUSED FLASH FLOODING ON BEAR CREEK...CLEAR CREEK...GOLDEN  
GATE GULCH...AND MOUNT VERNON CREEK...RESULTING IN A TOTAL OF  
27 DEATHS. THE DOWNPOUR DISLODGED LARGE BOULDERS...ONE OF  
WHICH CRUSHED A HOUSE. THE HEAVY RAIN ALSO CAUSED A DAM ON  
CUB CREEK TO WASH OUT...ADDING EVEN MORE WATER TO THE FLOOD.  
A WALL OF WATER AS HIGH AS 10 FEET FLOODED EVERGREEN AND  
PASSED DOWN BEAR CREEK...WASHING AWAY MANY STRUCTURES ALONG  
THE WAY. THE FLOOD CREST PRODUCED 3 FEET OF WATER IN  
DOWNTOWN MORRISON DURING THE EARLY EVENING. FLASH FLOODING  
ON MOUNT VERNON CREEK ADDED TO THE FLOODING IN MORRISON.  
IN GOLDEN...THE FLOODING WASHED OUT BRIDGES ON CLEAR CREEK  
AND ON CRESMAN AND TUCKER GULCHES AND FORCED THE CLOSURE OF  
THE POWER PLANT. IN DENVER...A THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED HAIL  
OF UNKNOWN SIZE DURING THE AFTERNOON AND RAINFALL OF 1.23  
INCHES OVERNIGHT.  
IN 1958...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 52 MPH WAS RECORDED AT  
STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1965...HEAVY RAIN CAUSED FLOODING ON CLEAR CREEK AND TUCKER  
GULCH IN GOLDEN AND WEST DENVER. DAMAGE IN GOLDEN WAS  
ESTIMATED AT 80 THOUSAND DOLLARS. HEAVY RAIN SOUTH OF  
DENVER WASHED OUT TEMPORARY EARTHEN BRIDGES CONSTRUCTED  
FOLLOWING THE JUNE FLOODS IN CASTLE ROCK...LITTLETON...  
ENGLEWOOD...AND DENVER. BEAR CREEK IN SOUTH DENVER REACHED  
FLOOD STAGE. A CLOUDBURST ON CUB CREEK IN EVERGREEN WASHED  
OUT BRIDGES AND ROADS. HEAVY RAIN FELL OVER ALL THE DENVER  
AND AURORA AREAS...CAUSING SOME FLOODING OF ROADS...STREETS...  
AND BRIDGES. A MAN DROWNED IN A FLOODED IRRIGATION CANAL  
NEAR HUDSON. HEAVY RAIN CAUSED FLOODING OF STREETS AND  
ROADS IN BLACKHAWK AND CENTRAL CITY. HAIL CAUSED MINOR  
DAMAGE IN IDAHO SPRINGS.  
IN 1967...SEVEN BRIDGES WERE WASHED OUT ALONG A NORMALLY DRY  
CREEK BED SOUTH OF STATE HIGHWAY 7 WEST OF BRIGHTON. ONE  
CAR WAS WASHED INTO THE CREEK WHEN A BRIDGE GAVE WAY.  
IN 1970...HAIL STONES TO 1 1/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL IN THE  
FOOTHILLS OF JEFFERSON COUNTY SOUTHWEST OF DENVER.  
IN 1971...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL WAS REPORTED IN FOOTHILL AREAS  
OF JEFFERSON COUNTY WEST OF DENVER. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS  
SIGHTED IN AURORA. WIND GUSTS ESTIMATED AT 60 MPH...HAIL...  
AND HEAVY RAIN UP TO AN INCH IN 15 MINUTES CAUSED LOCAL  
FLOODING AND SOME OTHER DAMAGE IN SEVERAL AREAS OF METRO  
DENVER. HAILSTONES TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL 7 MILES  
SOUTHEAST OF DENVER.  
IN 1973...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 52 MPH WAS RECORDED  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE ONE INCH DIAMETER  
HAIL WAS MEASURED.  
IN 1981...STRONG WINDS DOWNED A POWER LINE IN NORTHEAST DENVER.  
WIND GUSTS TO 50 MPH WERE RECORDED AT CHATFIELD RESERVOIR.  
IN 1987...3/4 INCH DIAMETER HAIL FELL 5 MILES NORTHEAST OF  
COMMERCE CITY.  
IN 1996...HAIL...UP TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER...FELL AT  
CHATFIELD RESERVOIR. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS  
MEASURED NEAR BENNETT.  
IN 2000...LIGHTNING STRUCK NEAR TWO GOLFERS AT UTE CREEK GOLF  
COURSE NEAR LONGMONT...KNOCKING THEM TO THE GROUND. THE  
MEN RECEIVED ONLY MINOR INJURIES.  
IN 2001...LIGHTNING FROM A THUNDERSTORM KNOCKED OUT ELECTRICAL  
POWER TO ABOUT 1500 RESIDENTS IN THE CITY OF DENVER.  
IN 2004...A CHILLY DAY WITH FOG AND THUNDERSTORMS RESULTED IN  
TWO TEMPERATURE RECORDS. THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 49 DEGREES  
WAS A RECORD MINIMUM FOR THE DATE. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF  
ONLY 58 DEGREES WAS A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
IN 2016...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED DAMAGING STRAIGHT-LINE.  
A STORM LEVELED A GREENHOUSE AND CAUSED TREE DAMAGE NEAR  
BYERS. A PEAK WIND GUST TO 74 MPH WAS MEASURED AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2018...THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED VERY HEAVY RAINFALL...1 TO 2  
INCHES IN LESS THAN 30 MINUTES. IN ENGLEWOOD...THE FLOODWATERS  
QUICKLY INUNDATED A BASEMENT APARTMENT AND TRAPPED A WOMAN  
INSIDE. SHE WAS FOUND UNRESPONSIVE IN THE APARTMENT AND DIED  
SEVERAL HOURS LATER. SEVERAL HOMES IN THE IMMEDIATE AREA  
SUFFERED SEVERE FLOOD DAMAGE. THE FLOODWATERS ALSO STALLED  
VEHICLES AND FORCED THE CLOSURE OF SEVERAL INTERSECTIONS. IN  
SHERIDAN...THE HEAVY RAIN CREATED A LARGE SINKHOLE WHICH  
SWALLOWED A SMALL SUV. A DOWNED POWER LINE CAUSED A FIRE IN  
ARAPAHOE COUNTY.  
IN 2023...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED VERY STRONG WIND GUSTS  
OVER PARTS OF ADAMS...DENVER AND WELD COUNTIES. PEAK GUSTS  
INCLUDED: 68 MPH NEAR COMMERCE CITY...63 MPH...16 MILES EAST-  
NORTHEAST OF DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT; AND 58 MPH...13 MILES  
NORTHEAST OF D.I.A. AND 8 MILES NORTH-NORTHEAST OF FRONT  
RANGE AIRPORT.  
24-25 IN 2003...MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE OF 100 DEGREES ON THE 24TH WAS A  
RECORD HIGH FOR THE DATE. LOW TEMPERATURE OF 73 DEGREES  
ON THE 25TH WAS A RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
25 IN 1875...BRIEF HEAVY RAIN AND HAIL LASTED ONLY 5 MINUTES...  
BUT THE 1/4 INCH DIAMETER HAIL COVERED THE GROUND TO A  
DEPTH OF 1/2 INCH AND MADE THE STREETS LOOK LIKE THERE  
HAD BEEN SNOWFALL. THERE WAS MUCH CROP DAMAGE...ESPECIALLY  
TO CORN...AND SOME SHEEP WERE KILLED. PRECIPITATION TOTALED  
0.51 INCH IN THE CITY.  
IN 1896...A HEAVY THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED SUSTAINED NORTHWEST  
WINDS TO 45 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 50 MPH AND 1.02 INCHES OF  
RAIN.  
IN 1965...A CLOUDBURST DUMPED 1.99 INCHES OF RAIN IN 30  
MINUTES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE STORM WAS  
ACCOMPANIED BY STRONG WINDS GUSTING TO 70 MPH. THE HEAVY  
RAIN FLOODED NUMEROUS STREETS IN EAST DENVER AND AURORA.  
ONE INCH DIAMETER HAIL ACCOMPANIED A CLOUDBURST...9 MILES  
SOUTHWEST OF DENVER. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED 25 MILES  
NORTHWEST OF DENVER. IN AURORA...THERE WERE UNOFFICIAL  
REPORTS OF 2.30 INCHES OF RAIN IN 40 MINUTES AND 3.30  
INCHES OF RAIN IN 30 TO 40 MINUTES. RAINFALL TOTALED 2.05  
INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. RAINFALL OF  
2.42 INCHES FOR 24 HOURS ON THE 24TH AND 25TH WAS THE  
SECOND GREATEST ON RECORD FOR JULY.  
IN 1977...A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY IN AURORA SOUTHEAST  
OF CHERRY CREEK RESERVOIR. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED FOR 4 MINUTES BY NATIONAL  
WEATHER SERVICE PERSONNEL 10 MILES NORTH OF STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT NEAR HENDERSON.  
IN 1991...HEAVY RAIN...UP TO HALF AN INCH IN 10 MINUTES...CAUSED  
FLOODING IN WESTMINSTER...NORTHGLENN...AND NORTH DENVER WHERE  
A SECTION OF RAILROAD TRACK WAS WASHED AWAY. AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAIN TOTALED 1.85  
INCHES AND BRIEFLY REDUCED THE VISIBILITY TO 1/4 MILE.  
HAIL TO 1/8 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS ALSO MEASURED. A TORNADO  
TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY NEAR FORT LUPTON. NO DAMAGE WAS  
REPORTED.  
IN 1998...HEAVY MONSOONAL THUNDERSTORM RAINS CAUSED FLOODING  
AND FLASH FLOODING IN EASTERN AND SOUTHERN SECTIONS OF  
METRO DENVER...INCLUDING ENGLEWOOD AND AURORA...WHEN ABOUT 2  
TO 3 INCHES OF RAIN INUNDATED THE AREA. BOTH I-25 AND I-70  
WERE CLOSED FOR 2 TO 3 HOURS AS SEVERAL LOW LYING AREAS  
BECAME IMPASSABLE DUE TO THE HIGH WATERS. THE WATER WAS  
ESTIMATED TO BE 15 FEET DEEP IN ONE FLOODED UNDERPASS ALONG  
I-25. AS A RESULT...THE FREEWAY WAS CLOSED FROM SOUTH OF  
6TH AVENUE TO UNIVERSITY BLVD. STANDING WATER FORCED THE  
CLOSURE OF I-70 AT GUN CLUB ROAD EAST OF DENVER. IN  
ENGLEWOOD...U.S. HIGHWAY 285 WAS CLOSED...WHEN HIGH WATER  
MADE IT IMPASSABLE. SEVERAL CARS WERE REPORTEDLY FLOATING  
DOWN THE ROADWAY NEAR SHERIDAN BLVD. IN AURORA...THE  
INTERSECTION AT YALE AVE. AND CHAMBERS RD. WAS FLOODED BY  
HIGH WATER UP TO 4 FEET DEEP WHEN A SPILLWAY ON THE HIGH  
LINE CANAL WAS BREACHED. LIGHTNING ALSO KNOCKED OUT 11  
TRANSFORMERS ACROSS METRO DENVER...CAUSING SEVERAL SMALL  
FIRES AND SCATTERED POWER OUTAGES. FLOOD AND FLASH  
FLOODING ALSO OCCURRED NORTH OF STRASBURG WHEN AS MUCH  
AS 2.51 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN AN HOUR. THE DELUGE  
RESULTED IN CONSIDERABLE FLOODING OF LOCAL STREETS AND  
COUNTY ROADS. TORRENTIAL RAINFALL OF 2 TO 3 INCHES IN  
LESS THAN AN HOUR TRIGGERED A FLASH FLOOD IN VIRGINIA  
CANYON. COUNTY ROAD 279 BETWEEN IDAHO SPRINGS AND  
CENTRAL CITY WAS CLOSED FOR TWO DAYS TO CLEAR DEBRIS  
FROM MUDSLIDES. SEVERAL CARS IN IDAHO SPRINGS WERE  
WASHED OFF THE ROAD...AND NUMEROUS BASEMENTS WERE FLOODED  
IN TOWN. THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL TOTALED 2.69 INCHES AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2001...LIGHTNING STRUCK TWO HOMES IN LAFAYETTE...DAMAGING  
THE ROOF AND ATTIC OF ONE AND SHORTING OUT THE ELECTRICAL  
SYSTEM IN ANOTHER. HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER WAS  
MEASURED 7 MILES NORTH OF CASTLE ROCK WITH 3/4 INCH HAIL  
7 MILES NORTH OF SEDALIA.  
IN 2005...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAIN IN THE VICINITY OF THE  
OVERLAND WILDFIRE BURN SCAR TRIGGERED A MUDSLIDE IN  
JAMESTOWN. ROCKS THE SIZE OF BOWLING BALLS...ALONG WITH  
SILT AND MUD SLID DOWN THE MOUNTAIN INTO THE TOWN. NO ONE  
WAS INJURED. ONE PARKED CAR WAS BURIED BY THE DEBRIS.  
IN 2006...HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL CAUSED FLASH FLOODING  
1 MILE NORTH OF THE TOWN OF WESTCREEK IN SOUTHWESTERN  
DOUGLAS COUNTY. SEVERAL MAINTENANCE ROADS WERE WASHED OUT  
BY THE FLOODWATERS.  
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page