230  
NOUS45 KBOU 210859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-212300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT THU MAY 21 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY  
 
18-26 IN 2023...SMOKE AND HAZE FROM MASSIVE WILDFIRES IN CANADA  
SIGNIFICANTLY IMPACTED AIR QUALITY AND VISIBILITY ACROSS  
DENVER AND THE REST OF NORTHEAST COLORADO.  
20-21 IN 1891...FROM THE 20TH TO THE 21ST...HEAVY RAIN WAS MIXED WITH  
SNOW AT TIMES AND TOTALED 2.02 INCHES IN THE CITY. SNOWFALL  
WAS 1.0 INCH. NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO 28 MPH ON THE 20TH.  
20-22 IN 1959...FROM THE 20TH TO THE 22ND...THE THREE-DAY RAIN CAUSED  
SOME FLOODING IN METRO DENVER WHERE RAIN TOTALED 1.68 INCHES  
AT STAPLETON AIRPORT. SHOWERS...ACCOMPANIED BY HAIL NEAR  
BRIGHTON...CAUSED SOME DAMAGE TO TRUCK CROPS. HEAVY SNOW IN  
THE FOOTHILLS CAUSED DAMAGE TO POWER AND TELEPHONE LINES.  
20-27 IN 2002...LIGHTNING SPARKED A WILDFIRE NEAR DECKERS THE  
CONTINUED FROM THE 20TH TO THE 27TH. EXTREMELY DRY  
CONDITIONS AND VERY STRONG WINDS THE FOLLOWING DAY ALLOWED  
THE FIRE...KNOWN AS THE SCHOONOVER...TO CONSUME 3850 ACRES  
BEFORE IT COULD BE CONTAINED. THIRTEEN STRUCTURES WERE  
DESTROYED...INCLUDING 4 HOMES...RESULTING IN 2.2 MILLION  
DOLLARS IN DAMAGE.  
21 IN 1874...AN EXTENSIVE FIRE AT CENTRAL CITY IN THE MOUNTAINS TO  
THE WEST OF DENVER PRODUCED LARGE COLUMNS OF SMOKE THAT WERE  
VISIBLE FROM THE CITY. IN THE AFTERNOON...THE SMOKE AND FIRE  
PRODUCED A DARK INKY BLACK CONVECTIVE CLOUD...WHICH SPREAD OVER  
THE CITY AND PRODUCED BRIEF STRONG AND GUSTY WINDS ALONG WITH  
A FEW SPRINKLES OF RAIN.  
IN 1880...WEST WINDS INCREASED TO A SUSTAINED VELOCITY OF 40 MPH  
DURING THE AFTERNOON.  
IN 1893...NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 48 MPH.  
IN 1914...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WAS ATTENDED BY HAIL...EXCESSIVE  
RAINFALL WHICH TOTALED 1.94 INCHES...AND AN UNUSUAL AMOUNT  
OF VIVID LIGHTNING. THE HEAVY RAINFALL OF 0.83 INCH IN 15  
MINUTES PRODUCED FLOODING...WHICH CAUSED CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE  
TO BOTTOM LANDS IN EASTERN AND SOUTHERN PARTS OF THE CITY.  
MANY GARDEN TRACTS AND CELLARS WERE FLOODED. SOUTHWEST  
WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 29 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 34 MPH.  
IN 1935...NO PRECIPITATION OCCURRED...MAKING THIS ONE OF  
ONLY TWO DAYS WITHOUT PRECIPITATION DURING THE ENTIRE  
MONTH. THE OTHER DAY WAS THE 10TH. PRECIPITATION  
TOTALED 4.95 INCHES FOR THE MONTH.  
IN 1952...A TORNADO PRODUCED A HIGH COLUMN OF DUST AND DIRT  
OVER NORTHWEST DENVER. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 1988...A MICROBURST WIND GUST TO 52 MPH WAS RECORDED AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2002...VERY STRONG WINDS OCCURRED OVER METRO DENVER AND  
NORTHEASTERN COLORADO AS A DEVELOPING SURFACE LOW PRESSURE  
CENTER INTENSIFIED. TREES AND BRANCHES SNAPPED...DOWNING  
POWER LINES ACROSS PARTS OF METRO DENVER. ABOUT 20 THOUSAND  
RESIDENTS LOST ELECTRICITY. THE STRONG WINDS PRODUCED MUCH  
BLOWING DUST AND DIRT ESPECIALLY TO THE NORTHEAST OF METRO  
DENVER. WINDS GUSTED TO 61 MPH AT PARKER. SOUTH WINDS  
GUSTED TO 58 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2006...A LARGE DUST DEVIL FORMED NEAR QUINCY RESERVOIR IN  
SOUTH AURORA. THE TALL COLUMN RESEMBLING A TORNADO OR  
SMOKE PLUME EXTENDED UPWARD INTO SMALL HIGH-BASED CUMULUS  
CLOUDS AND WAS VISIBLE FOR MILES ACROSS SOUTHERN AURORA  
AND EASTERN CENTENNIAL. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 2014...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OCCURRED IN AND AROUND METRO  
DENVER. THE STORMS PRODUCED LARGE HAIL...FROM QUARTER TO  
GOLFBALL SIZE. FRONTIER AIRLINES CANCELED 16 FLIGHTS...WHEN  
SEVERAL PLANES SUSTAINED HAIL DAMAGE. FORTY FLIGHTS AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WERE EITHER DELAYED OR CANCELED. SOME  
HOMES IN GREEN VALLEY RANCH...EAST OF DENVER...WERE DAMAGED BY  
HAIL. SEVERAL VEHICLES WERE ALSO DAMAGED. FIVE SHORT LIVED  
TORNADOES TOUCHED DOWN NEAR BENNETT AND BYERS BUT NO DAMAGE  
WAS REPORTED. THE STORMS ALSO PRODUCED HEAVY RAIN AND STRONG  
DAMAGING WINDS. THE WIND DOWNED TREES AND POWER LINES EAST OF  
DENVER. THE HEAVY RAIN AND HAIL...UP TO 6 INCHES DEEP IN  
SPOTS...CAUSED STREET FLOODING AROUND THE METRO AREA. THE  
HAILSTORM AT DICK'S SPORTING GOODS PARK KNOCKED OUT POWER TO  
THE STADIUM WHERE THE 4A AND 5A GIRLS SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIP  
GAMES WERE ABOUT TO BE PLAYED. THE INCLEMENT WEATHER SNARLED  
TRAFFIC ON INTERSTATE 70...PE A BOULEVARD...U.S. 85 AND  
ELSEWHERE DUE TO THE FLOODED ROADS. IN SOME AREAS...SNOW PLOWS  
WERE CALLED OUT TO CLEAR THE HAIL. PARTS OF TOWER ROAD AND  
PEORIA STREET...AND OTHER ROADS IN COMMERCE CITY...WERE CLOSED  
THROUGH THE LATE EVENING HOURS...BECAUSE OF STANDING WATER.  
SEVERAL VEHICLES STALLED IN STANDING WATER WHERE WATER POOLED  
IN THE UNDERPASSES. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...1.2  
INCHES OF WATER WAS OBSERVED...ALONG WITH A WIND GUST TO 42  
MPH FROM THE NORTHWEST.  
21-22 IN 1878...OVERNIGHT...FROM THE 21ST TO THE 22ND...HEAVY RAINS OF  
CLOUDBURST INTENSITY ON THE PALMER DIVIDE TO THE SOUTH OF  
THE CITY CAUSED FLASH FLOODING ON CHERRY CREEK IN DENVER...  
WHICH RESULTED IN 2 DEATHS. A WALL OF WATER SWEPT THROUGH  
THE CITY BETWEEN 2:00 AM AND 3:00 AM ON THE MORNING OF THE  
22ND. THE FLOOD WAS SO SUDDEN AND UNEXPECTED THAT HOMES  
ALONG THE CREEK IN THE CITY WERE SUBMERGED IN WATER KNEE  
DEEP BEFORE THE SLUMBERING OCCUPANTS KNEW ANYTHING ABOUT IT.  
BY DAYBREAK THE BANKS ON BOTH SIDES OF THE CREEK WERE LINED  
BY RESIDENTS VIEWING THE DESTRUCTION CAUSED BY THE RAGING  
WATERS IN SUCH A SHORT TIME. SEVEN BRIDGES ACROSS THE  
CREEK WERE DESTROYED IN THE CITY. DAMAGE TO PRIVATE AND  
CITY PROPERTY WAS ESTIMATED BETWEEN 30 AND 50 THOUSAND  
DOLLARS. QUITE A NUMBER OF CATTLE AND SHEEP WERE KILLED  
ALONG THE REACH OF THE CREEK. ONLY 0.01 INCH OF RAIN  
FELL IN THE CITY ON THE 21ST WITH A TRACE OF RAIN ON THE  
22ND. FLASH FLOODING ALSO OCCURRED ON KIOWA CREEK NEAR  
BENNETT ON THE NIGHT OF THE 21ST WHEN THE FLOOD WATERS  
WASHED OUT THE KANSAS PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE. AN EAST  
BOUND FREIGHT TRAIN PLUNGED INTO THE TURBULENT WATERS  
KILLING THE THREE CREWMEN. THE LOCOMOTIVE WAS COMPLETELY  
BURIED IN THE SAND AND NEVER FOUND TO THIS DAY!  
21-23 IN 1876...FROM THE 21ST TO THE 23RD...SNOW CHANGED TO HEAVY  
RAIN OVER THE CITY...RESULTING IN WIDESPREAD FLOODING  
ALONG CHERRY CREEK AND THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER...NEARLY AS  
GREAT AS THE FLASH FLOOD OF MAY 19-20...1864. HOWEVER...  
DAMAGE WAS GREATER BECAUSE THE CITY HAD GROWN MUCH LARGER  
AND THERE WERE MORE BRIDGES FOR THE FLOOD WATERS TO  
DESTROY. PRECIPITATION IN THE CITY TOTALED 6.70 INCHES  
FROM 10:00 PM ON THE 21ST THROUGH 3:00 AM ON THE 23RD. THE  
GREATEST PRECIPITATION EVER RECORDED IN DENVER IN 24 HOURS...  
6.53 INCHES...OCCURRED ON THE 21ST AND 22ND. SMALL  
BUILDINGS AND BRIDGES ALONG CHERRY CREEK WERE WASHED AWAY  
BY THE FLOOD WATERS. BRIDGES OVER THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER  
WERE DAMAGED. THE CITY IRRIGATION DITCH WAS DAMAGED AND  
RENDERED UNFIT FOR SERVICE. STRONG WINDS AT SPEEDS OF 30  
TO 40 MPH DROVE THE HEAVY RAIN THROUGH BRICK WALLS 12 TO  
16 INCHES THICK. MANY SHEEP AND CATTLE WERE EITHER KILLED  
BY LIGHTNING OR DROWNED...INCLUDING SOME 100 HEAD OF CATTLE  
IN JEFFERSON COUNTY ALONE. THERE WAS IMMENSE DAMAGE TO  
RAILROAD TRACKS...ESPECIALLY THE KANSAS PACIFIC LINE TO THE  
EAST OF THE CITY. THE COLORADO CENTRAL SUFFERED ESTIMATED  
DAMAGE OF 10 TO 15 THOUSAND DOLLARS. IN ADDITION...THE  
HEAVY RAIN CAUSED EXTENSIVE FLOODING ON SODA AND BEAR CREEKS  
IN THE FOOTHILLS. FLOODING ALONG BOULDER CREEK INUNDATED  
FARM AND PASTURE LAND IN THE BOULDER VALLEY AND DAMAGED A  
FEW BRIDGES. RAIL TRAVEL HAD TO BE SUSPENDED IN THE AREA  
FOR SEVERAL DAYS.  
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page