406  
NOUS45 KBOU 090859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-092300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT TUE JUN 9 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
7-9 IN 1979...RAIN...AT TIMES WITH THUNDER ON THE 7TH...FELL ALMOST  
CONTINUOUSLY THROUGH THE MORNING OF THE 9TH. RAINFALL  
TOTALED 2.28 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
OVER THE 3 DAYS. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 49 DEGREES ON  
THE 8TH WAS A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
9 IN 1900...AN APPARENT COLD FRONT PRODUCED NORTH WINDS TO  
42 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 47 MPH.  
IN 1923...HEAVY RAINFALL TOTALED 2.18 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER...WHERE NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 27 MPH.  
HEAVY RAIN ALSO FELL IN BOULDER...CAUSING FLOODING ON  
BOULDER AND SOUTH BOULDER CREEKS.  
IN 1939...POST-FRONTAL SUSTAINED NORTHWEST WINDS TO 35 MPH  
PRODUCED SOME BLOWING DUST...WHICH REDUCED THE VISIBILITY  
TO ONE MILE AT TIMES DURING THE AFTERNOON. DUSTY  
CONDITIONS PREVAILED INTO THE EARLY EVENING. THE AIRPORT  
STATION REPORTED A MAXIMUM WIND OF 56 MPH. A FEW MINOR  
INJURIES AND SOME DAMAGE RESULTED. A FEW TREES WERE  
UPROOTED...SOME FRUIT WAS BLOWN FROM TREES...AND A SECTION  
OF POWER LINES WAS BLOWN DOWN.  
IN 1959...DRY THUNDERSTORM WINDS...ESTIMATED TO NEAR 70 MPH...  
TOPPLED A 40-FOOT-HIGH POPLAR TREE...WHICH WAS 4 TO 5 INCHES  
IN DIAMETER...NEAR CHERRY CREEK DAM. THE COLORADO STATE  
PATROL REPORTED A POSSIBLE TORNADO 1 MILE SOUTH OF THE DAM.  
IN 1960...STRONG GUSTY WINDS TORE THE ROOFS FROM 2 PATIOS IN  
AURORA. ONE OF THE ROOFS WAS BLOWN OVER A HOUSE AND LANDED  
ON A CAR DAMAGING ITS TOP. A HOUSE TRAILER WAS ALSO  
OVERTURNED. OTHER MINOR DAMAGE WAS REPORTED TO ROOFS...  
WINDOWS...AND TREES IN AURORA. A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST  
TO 43 MPH WAS RECORDED AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1963...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL AT CHERRY CREEK RESERVOIR.  
IN 1967...A SMALL TORNADO DAMAGED TREES AND A DWELLING IN  
SOUTH DENVER. THE STORM TOUCHED DOWN AT THE INTERSECTION  
OF 1ST AVENUE AND HARRISON STREET AND MOVED NORTHEAST TO  
THE INTERSECTION OF 3RD AVENUE AND ALBION STREET.  
DAMAGE INCLUDED 3 SMALL ROOFS REMOVED...15-20 LARGE TREES  
UPROOTED...ONE CAR OVERTURNED AND THROWN AGAINST A HOUSE...  
PLUS OTHER MINOR DAMAGE. A FUNNEL CLOUD REPORTED AT THE  
SAME TIME 10 MILES NORTH OF DENVER POSSIBLY TOUCHED GROUND.  
LATER...FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE REPORTED 12 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHEAST  
OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...10 MILES SOUTHWEST...AND  
5 MILES NORTH. A TORNADO WAS SIGHTED 3 1/2 MILES EAST OF  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT BY WEATHER BUREAU PERSONNEL  
FOR A DURATION OF 5 MINUTES. HEAVY RAIN AND SOME HAIL FELL  
OVER MUCH OF THE AREA.  
IN 1974...THE START OF THE SHORTEST SEASONAL SNOW FREE PERIOD  
ON RECORD...94 DAYS...OCCURRED WITH THE LAST SNOW OF THE  
SEASON...A TRACE...ON THE 8TH. THE FIRST SNOW OF THE NEXT  
SEASON OCCURRED ON SEPTEMBER 11TH WHEN A TRACE OF SNOW  
FELL AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. A FUNNEL CLOUD  
WAS OBSERVED JUST EAST OF AURORA AND A SMALL FUNNEL WAS  
SIGHTED JUST NORTHEAST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1985...A THUNDERSTORM WIND GUST TO 62 MPH WAS REPORTED AT  
GOLDEN GATE CANYON IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER.  
IN 1986...A THUNDERSTORM...WHICH DUMPED HEAVY RAIN AND CAUSED  
SOME STREET FLOODING ACROSS NORTH METRO DENVER...PRODUCED  
A SMALL TORNADO 5 MILES EAST OF BRIGHTON. NO DAMAGE WAS  
REPORTED.  
IN 1987...STRONG THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS IN CONIFER DESTROYED  
A PORCH ON A HOUSE; THE WIND GUST APPARENTLY PICKED UP THE  
PORCH AND DROPPED IT ON A MAN...KILLING HIM. THE WIND ALSO  
DAMAGED THE ROOF OF THE HOUSE AND A NEARBY BARN. THE SAME  
THUNDERSTORM SPAWNED A TORNADO...WHICH TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY  
JUST SOUTH OF LAKEWOOD. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED. UP TO 3  
INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN A SHORT TIME 8 MILES SOUTHWEST OF  
LITTLETON. A FEW BUSINESSES IN ENGLEWOOD SUFFERED MINOR  
WATER DAMAGE. A TORNADO WAS SIGHTED BETWEEN WATKINS AND  
BENNETT. IT WAS ON THE GROUND FOR 15 MINUTES. A WEAK  
TORNADO ALSO TOUCHED DOWN 4 MILES SOUTHWEST OF CASTLE ROCK.  
THE TWISTER TOSSED AN ALUMINUM SHED INTO THE AIR AND  
CARRIED IT ABOUT 100 FEET. A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED  
15 MILES EAST-NORTHEAST OF STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1988...GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL IN CONIFER ALONG WITH 1.30  
INCHES OF RAIN. THREE MILES NORTH OF LOUISVILLE...1.10  
INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN 20 MINUTES. PING PONG BALL SIZE  
HAIL WAS MEASURED IN ARVADA.  
IN 1990...3/4 INCH HAIL FELL IN CASTLE ROCK.  
IN 1991...HAIL TWO INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL NEAR EVERGREEN.  
HAIL TO 1 INCH DIAMETER FELL IN LAKEWOOD WHERE A FUNNEL  
CLOUD WAS ALSO SIGHTED. ONE INCH DIAMETER HAIL WAS ALSO  
REPORTED IN AURORA.  
IN 2002...HIGH TEMPERATURES...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITIES...AND  
STRONG GUSTY WINDS ALLOWED THE HAYMAN WILDFIRE...LOCATED  
IN THE FOOTHILLS TO THE SOUTHWEST OF DENVER...TO BECOME  
THE LARGEST WILDFIRE IN THE STATE'S HISTORY. ALTHOUGH  
THE FIRE WAS INITIALLY STARTED BY A U.S. FOREST SERVICE  
EMPLOYEE...THE ONGOING DROUGHT AND DRY CONDITIONS ALLOWED  
THE FIRE TO SPREAD RAPIDLY OUT OF CONTROL. THE WILDFIRE  
CONSUMED NEARLY 138 THOUSAND ACRES OF FOREST LAND AND 133  
HOMES BEFORE IT COULD BE CONTAINED AND FINALLY EXTINGUISHED  
ON JUNE 30TH. ABOUT 1800 HOUSEHOLDS HAD TO BE EVACUATED  
DURING THE BLAZE. SOUTHWEST WINDS ALOFT SWEPT THE SMOKE  
PLUME DIRECTLY OVER METRO DENVER...CREATING POOR AIR QUALITY  
AND BLOCKING THE SUN. MUCH OF METRO DENVER CHOKED ON SMOKE  
WITH THE SOUTHERN SUBURBS RECEIVING THE MOST. SMOKE AND  
ASH RESTRICTED SURFACE VISIBILITIES TO A MILE OR LESS AT  
TIMES IN THE DENVER AND CASTLE ROCK AREAS AND TO 2 MILES  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2003...THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO 51 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE STORM PRODUCED ONLY A TRACE  
OF RAIN.  
IN 2004...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL ACROSS  
PORTIONS OF METRO DENVER FOR THE SECOND DAY IN A ROW.  
THE MOST EXTENSIVE DAMAGE OCCURRED ACROSS SOUTHERN SECTIONS  
OF METRO DENVER IN AURORA...LAKEWOOD...LITTLETON...AND SOUTH  
DENVER. THE COMBINED DAMAGE TO HOMES AND VEHICLES...NOT  
INCLUDING COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS...WAS ESTIMATED AT 146.5  
MILLION DOLLARS...MAKING THE EVENT THE 4TH COSTLIEST  
INSURANCE DISASTER IN THE STATE'S HISTORY. HAIL AS LARGE  
AS 2 1/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL NEAR SOUTHERN AURORA WITH  
HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN THE CITY OF DENVER AND IN LAKEWOOD.  
HAIL TO 1 1/2 INCHES FELL NEAR MORRISON WITH 1 INCH HAIL  
MEASURED IN THORNTON...NEAR BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE...AND  
NEAR ROGGEN. HAIL TO 3/4 INCH DIAMETER FELL IN LITTLETON  
AND NEAR CONIFER. A SMALL TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN NEAR  
BENNETT...BUT DID NO DAMAGE.  
9-10 IN 1864...FROM THE 9TH TO THE 10TH...HIGH WATER FROM MELTING  
SNOW COMBINED WITH HEAVY RAINS OVER THE UPPER REACHES OF  
THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER FORCED THE RIVER OVER ITS BANKS AND  
CAUSED FLOODING OF LOW LYING AREAS ALONG THE RIVER IN THE  
CITY. THE AMOUNT OF RAINFALL IN THE MOUNTAINS AND IN THE  
CITY IS UNKNOWN.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page