Monday,  July 2, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 354 • 13 of 26 •  Other Editions

Today in Weather History

1921: Barns were destroyed on two farms near Frederick. A boy who could not make it to the cellar was killed in the open near a barn. This is the earliest know death from a significant, estimated F2 tornado in Brown County.

1960: Hail shredded corn, flattened grain and hay, and pounded soybeans into the ground in a strip extending from Clinton to Montevideo in Minnesota. Leaves and bark were stripped from trees. Hail stones were reported to pile up to a depth of four feet in low spots. One farmer reported the loss of 2000 turkeys. Twelve barns demolished, many outbuildings destroyed and several home damaged by winds. Near Appleton, 45 cars of a moving 174 car freight train derailed by the wind, one hanger destroyed, and 2 plans were damaged. In Big Stone County alone, the cost to repair power lines and poles estimated to be near 10,000 dollars. Total crop acreage affected was near 64,000 acres. The three counties of Big Stone, Swift and Chippewa Counties was designed a disaster area.

1950:
Hail piled up to tremendous depths in St. Louis, drifting to the tops of tires on automobiles.

2002: Steve Fossett became the first solo balloonist to circumnavigate the globe. He gave most of the credit for his successful mission to his team of meteorologists.

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