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Significant Snow/Sleet/Ice
Storm Events
North Texas Cold Waves
February 1899
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Severe
and widespread cold January 26 – February 14
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Record lows through
much of central and southeast United States
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Heavy snow Atlantic
coast (great Eastern Blizzard of '99)
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Flow of ice down
Mississippi River past New Orleans (first since1784)
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Poultry and domestic
animals suffered and froze to death
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Game birds perished in
large numbers, fish killed by cold water (southern states)
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Cold attributed to
deaths of 105 people nationwide, 15 in Texas
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Travel delayed,
communications interrupted, schools closed
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Food and fuel famines
threatened in larger cities
February 1905
January 1912
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Destructive cold waves January 6 and 11
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Cold wave of January 11 moved very rapidly
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All unprotected vegetation killed
January 1918
- Destructive cold waves January 10-12 and January 21-22 with snow
January 1930
- Severe cold wave January 17-18 comparable to February 1899 except
for rapid movement
- Sleet storms general over state 7th-10th; northeast and central
11th-13th; extensive 16th-18th; occasional east and central
21st-22nd.
- At Dallas, freezing rain and sleet the 7th-11th caused ice two
inches thick of trees and utility lines; caused many traffic
accidents, and killed barley and wheat
- At Fort Worth, ice seven inches thick at Lake Worth
- Freezing rain the 19th-21st caused more property damage.
February 1933
- Sharp cold wave 7th-10th
- Temperature dropped from 57 degrees at midnight to 30 degrees at
1A and 10 degrees at 8A
- Freezing rain on 10th; some injuries due to people slipping on ice
January 1949
- Severe ice storm west Texas 9th-13th
- In metroplex, up to one inch of ice made streets and sidewalks
slippery and dangerous
- At Dallas on the 25th, five inches of rain caused a moderate flood
on the Trinity
- At Fort Worth, 72 hours of below freezing temperatures coupled
with freezing rain, sleet and snow made it one of the most damaging
ice storms on record.
- January 28-February 1, three inches of snow and record cold caused
many pipes to burst
January 1962
- Severe cold wave January 9-12
- At Fort Worth, storm struck suddenly with near blizzard conditions
- Cars stranded on icy roads; schools and businesses forced to close
- 3 ½ days of below freezing temperatures caused pipes to burst
- Freeze in lower Rio Grande Valley caused extensive damage to crops
December 1983
- Series of cold waves December 18-30; a record 295 consecutive
hours below freezing
- Inconvenienced travel, strained power supplies
- Many water pipes burst, damaging residences and causing icy roads
- Damage $50-100 million statewide; $1.5 million in Tarrant county
alone
December 1989
- Sharp cold wave December 20-24 spread over all of Texas and
southeast U.S.
- Record demands for power; many pipes frozen; $25 million in damage
at Dallas
- Considerable damage to citrus in Florida and south Texas
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National Weather Service
Fort Worth Weather Forecast Office
3401 Northern Cross Blvd.
Fort Worth, TX 76137
Page last modified: 02/16/07
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