845  
NOUS45 KBOU 070859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-072300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT TUE APR 7 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
4-7 IN 1909...POST-FRONTAL RAIN CHANGED TO HEAVY SNOW ON THE  
AFTERNOON OF THE 4TH AND CONTINUED THROUGH MID-MORNING OF  
THE 7TH. TOTAL SNOWFALL WAS 18.7 INCHES...BUT MOST OF THE  
SNOW...14.0 INCHES...FELL FROM 6:00 PM ON THE 4TH TO 6:00 PM  
ON THE 5TH. NORTH TO NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO  
32 MPH ON THE 4TH AND TO 30 MPH ON THE 7TH. TOTAL  
PRECIPITATION FROM THE STORM WAS 1.78 INCHES.  
5-7 IN 1916...RAIN CHANGED TO SNOW BEHIND A COLD FRONT ON THE  
5TH AND TOTALED 4.5 INCHES IN THE CITY. A THUNDERSTORM  
PRODUCED SNOW ON THE 6TH. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO  
35 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 38 MPH ON THE 7TH.  
6-7 IN 1872...RAIN CHANGED TO SNOW OVERNIGHT. SNOW WITH HIGH  
NORTH WINDS CONTINUED ALL DAY ON THE 7TH. PRECIPITATION  
(RAIN AND MELTED SNOW) TOTALED 0.50 INCH. DUE TO PROBLEMS  
ON THE LINES...THE MORNING WEATHER REPORT WAS NOT SENT BY  
TELEGRAPH UNTIL 3:10 PM AND THE MIDNIGHT REPORT WAS NOT  
SENT AT ALL.  
IN 1957...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 7TH...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED  
6.6 INCHES AT STAPLETON AIRPORT WHERE NORTH WINDS GUSTED  
TO 46 MPH. THIS WAS THE SECOND HEAVY SNOW EVENT IN LESS  
THAN 4 DAYS.  
IN 1969...WINDS GUSTING AS HIGH AS 50 TO 60 MPH CAUSED ONLY  
LIGHT DAMAGE ALONG THE EASTERN FOOTHILLS. THE STRONG  
WINDS CONTRIBUTED TO THE SPREAD OF A FOREST FIRE NEAR  
BOULDER. SUSTAINED WINDS OF 25 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 53 MPH  
WERE RECORDED IN BOULDER. SOUTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 38  
MPH ON THE 6TH AND 44 MPH ON THE 7TH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1980...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 7TH...HIGH WINDS HOWLED ALONG  
THE FOOTHILLS EACH DAY. A WIND GUST TO 72 MPH WAS RECORDED  
IN LAKEWOOD. THE STRONG WINDS BLEW A CAMPER TOP OFF A  
PICKUP TRUCK IN DENVER. AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...  
WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 41 MPH ON BOTH DAYS.  
IN 1998...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 7TH...A SPRING STORM BROUGHT A  
MIX OF SNOW AND THUNDER TO METRO DENVER...THE FOOTHILLS...AND  
PALMER DIVIDE. CONIFER AND ELIZABETH BOTH MEASURED 4  
INCHES OF NEW SNOW. ON THE 6TH...ONLY 0.1 INCH OF SNOW FELL  
AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
WHERE THUNDER WAS HEARD ON BOTH DAYS. PRECIPITATION  
TOTALED 0.60 INCH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE  
WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 43 MPH ON THE 6TH.  
6-8 IN 1973...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 8TH...A MAJOR SPRING SNOWSTORM  
DUMPED 11.6 INCHES OF SNOWFALL OVER METRO DENVER. NORTH  
WIND GUSTS OF 30 TO 35 MPH PRODUCED SOME BLOWING SNOW.  
MOST OF THE HEAVY WET SNOW...10.1 INCHES...FELL ON THE 7TH  
WHEN TEMPERATURES REMAINED IN THE 20'S. SNOW ACCUMULATED  
ON THE GROUND TO A MAXIMUM DEPTH OF 9 INCHES. LOW  
TEMPERATURE OF 5 DEGREES ON THE 8TH WAS A NEW RECORD MINIMUM  
FOR THE DATE AND THE LOWEST FOR SO LATE IN THE SEASON.  
7 IN 1906...NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 48 MPH IN THE CITY.  
IN 1958...STRONG SOUTH WINDS BLEW MOST OF THE DAY ACROSS METRO  
DENVER. A WIND GUST TO 52 MPH WAS RECORDED AT STAPLETON  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1962...STRONG GUSTY WINDS ASSOCIATED WITH A COLD FRONT  
CAUSED CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE TO POWER LINES...SIGNS...  
BUILDINGS...AND TREES ACROSS METRO DENVER. IN BOULDER...AN  
OUTDOOR MOVIE SCREEN...VALUED AT 10 THOUSAND DOLLARS...WAS  
WRECKED. IN DENVER...A YOUTH WAS INJURED WHEN A CAR WAS  
BLOWN OFF A JACK...PINNING HIM UNDERNEATH. WIND GUSTS TO  
61 MPH WERE RECORDED AT STAPLETON AIRPORT WHERE VISIBILITY  
WAS REDUCED TO 1/2 MILE IN BLOWING DUST. SNOWFALL TOTALED  
2.6 INCHES AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1971...WIND GUSTS TO 69 MPH WERE RECORDED AT THE NATIONAL  
BUREAU OF STANDARDS IN BOULDER. IN DOWNTOWN BOULDER...WINDS  
PEAKED TO 54 MPH. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 31 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1989...HIGH WINDS OCCURRED IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER.  
AT NEDERLAND WEST OF BOULDER...HIGH WINDS DAMAGED ROOFS...  
TOPPLED TREES...AND CAUSED POWER OUTAGES. WINDS ESTIMATED  
AS HIGH AS 90 MPH IN GEORGETOWN OVERTURNED CAMPERS AND EVEN  
SEMI-TRAILERS ON I-70 AND DAMAGED ROAD SIGNS. THREE TRAILER  
HOMES WERE BLOWN OFF THEIR FOUNDATIONS AND A 50-FOOT TREE  
TOPPLED ONTO THE ROOF OF A HOME...CAUSING CONSIDERABLE  
DAMAGE. WINDS REACHED 94 MPH AT ROLLINSVILLE SOUTHWEST OF  
BOULDER. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 43 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
7-9 IN 1913...FROM THE 7TH TO THE 9TH...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 10.9  
INCHES IN DOWNTOWN DENVER BEHIND A COLD FRONT. MOST OF THE  
SNOW FELL ON THE 8TH. NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 35 MPH  
WITH GUSTS TO 38 MPH ON THE 9TH.  
IN 1935...MODERATE DUST BLEW INTO THE CITY AROUND 9:00 PM ON  
THE 7TH AND PERSISTED UNTIL EARLY AFTERNOON ON THE 9TH.  
SOUTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO AROUND 20 MPH ON THE 7TH  
AND 8TH. WINDS SHIFTING TO THE WEST AT SUSTAINED SPEEDS  
TO 20 MPH CLEARED THE DUST FROM THE AIR ON THE 9TH.  
7-12 IN 1959...SNOW FALLING OVER A 5-DAY PERIOD TOTALED 20 TO 30  
INCHES JUST EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS...WHILE OVER THE PLAINS  
BLIZZARD CONDITIONS CLOSED SCHOOLS AND BLOCKED HIGHWAYS.  
THE SECOND BIG STORM IN TWO WEEKS DUMPED 16.4 INCHES OF  
SNOWFALL ON STAPLETON AIRPORT WITH THE MOST...11.6 INCHES...  
OCCURRING ON THE 8TH. EAST WINDS GUSTED TO 37 MPH ON THE  
9TH. TEMPERATURES DIPPED INTO THE SINGLE DIGITS ON THE  
MORNINGS OF THE 7TH AND 12TH WHEN 7 DEGREES WERE  
REGISTERED. THE COLD TEMPERATURES CAUSED STREETS TO  
GLAZE WITH ICE...RESULTING IN THE DEATH OF A PEDESTRIAN  
WHO WAS STRUCK BY A CAR IN DENVER. THREE PEOPLE DIED FROM  
HEART ATTACKS WHILE SHOVELING THE HEAVY...WET SNOW.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page