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Author Topic: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.  (Read 1508 times)

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Offline StormNine

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In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« on: March 17, 2009, 08:13:58 AM »
 By Nashville's biggest snowfall on record.  Memphis on this St. Patrick's Day and so did Nashville had a record snowfall and set a 24 hour all time snowfall record that hasn't yet been broken.

  :o17 INCHES in Nashvegas :o
I bet it was hard to find the 4 leaf clovers in 1892.
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The NAO,PNA,PDO,MJO, etc.. and Storm Track will decide.

Offline Clay

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #1 on: March 17, 2009, 09:42:59 AM »
Wow. I would have completely forgotten!   :)
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Offline Curt

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #2 on: March 17, 2009, 11:27:50 AM »
Good write up on this event from NWS Nashville:

Quote
Assorted Historical Weather Events in Middle Tennessee
Mark A. Rose
Meteorologist
National Weather Service
Old Hickory, Tennessee

St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm of 1892

The winter of 1891-92 was almost one with no snowfall. Through March 14, a mere 0.3 inches of snowfall had been measured in Nashville, and it appeared that winter was over.1,2 There had been several days early in March with temperatures in the 60's, and the thermometer had climbed to 70 degrees on the 4th.2 Sometime on March 13, a strong cold front swept through the region, dunking Nashville's high temperature from 65 degrees on the 13th to 40 degrees the next day.2 Then, on the 15th, Nashville received a 4.2-inch snowfall -- the largest by far of the season.2 Much of this snow likely melted the next day, as the temperature rose to 39 degrees, and it appeared that a warming trend was underway.2 But this was not to be the case.

On St. Patrick's Day, March 17, Nashville received the largest snowfall in its history -- 17 inches -- a record which still stands today. The snow began around 6:00 p.m. the previous evening.3 Very little accumulated until after midnight.2 The snow continued into the afternoon.3

Said a Nashville Banner article, which appeared on page eight on the day of the snowstorm,

There has been much complaining, but there is consolation in the fact that the same snow that makes walking disagreeable, is enriching the wheat, fertilizing the land, and holding back the fruit until danger of frost is past. Over these things the farmers rejoice.
Nashville's street cars had been "snowed under," and did not run.3 Suburban workers had to walk to town.3 Morning trains were delayed.3 And the "arteries of trade" were clogged.3 Mailmen didn't leave the post office on their rounds until 10:00 a.m.3 Many letters weren't delivered until late afternoon.4 A freight train from Chattanooga ran upon a freight engine, derailing two cars, at the Winton community (near Murfreesboro), and did not get in until noon.3 A passenger train from Memphis due at 7:00 a.m. did not arrived until 2:00 p.m.3 And members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians in America canceled their annual parade.4

The Nashville Banner that day contained the following anecdotes:

In the city the snow seems to be taken good-naturedly. A real estate dealer on Union street has "For Sale" on a huge pile of snow in front of his door, and all about town the snowdrifts along the sidewalks are labeled with such legends as, "Keep Off the Grass," "Don't Pluck the Roses," "The Sunny South," "Beautiful Spring," "Come Into the Garden, Maud," "Mosquito Bars Made Cheap," "Linen Dusters at Half Cost," "In Memory of Dixie That is Froze," and "Where Are the Violets You Promised?"
In addition, the following conversation took place over the Associated Press wire:

Memphis Operator - The snow here is four feet deep.

Cincinnati - You mean inches, don't you?

Memphis - No, it is up to a man's knee.
So the winter that almost wasn't concluded with 21.8 inches of snowfall, and with 21.5 inches of that accumulating in a single month, March of 1892 remains the snowiest month in Nashville's history.1 The record 17-inch snowfall has been challenged only once. On February 20-21, 1929, Nashville accumulated 15 inches of snow during a remarkable 13-hour period spanning two calendar days.5 The next largest snowfall on record is 9.8 inches, which occurred on February 3, 1886.5

__________
1 National Weather Service. Nashville Monthly Snowfall Table.
2 National Weather Service. Monthly Climate Summary for Nashville, Tennessee for March, 1892.
3 The Beautiful Snow. Nashville Banner. March 17, 1892.
4 O'Donnell, Red. Nashvillians made light of 16-inch snow in '92. Nashville Banner. March 16, 1982.
5 National Weather Service. One-Day Snowfall Totals of at Least 6" at Nashville.

Offline Clay

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #3 on: March 17, 2009, 12:21:53 PM »
One of these day I believe we will see an early April snow of a few inches or more. It is definitely possible IMO.
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Offline StormNine

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2009, 12:42:26 PM »
One of these day I believe we will see an early April snow of a few inches or more. It is definitely possible IMO.

Some of us North and Northwest of Nashville have seen that already.

I had 2 inches on 4/13/04 and parts of Benton County had a storm high of 8 inches.  That was also the last snowball fight I participated in.  Even though we had decent snow events afterwards I forgot to do a snowball fight maybe next winter.
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What does Winter 11-12 hold??
The NAO,PNA,PDO,MJO, etc.. and Storm Track will decide.

Offline Clay

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2009, 01:50:25 PM »
I think an inch is the most Nashville has seen in April.
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Offline Cameron K.

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #6 on: March 17, 2009, 02:47:17 PM »
I think an inch is the most Nashville has seen in April.
Nashville has recorded 6 measureable snowfalls. The highest being 1.5".
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Offline Clay

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #7 on: March 17, 2009, 06:19:37 PM »
Ahh.. thanks.
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Offline Curt

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #8 on: March 17, 2009, 07:08:08 PM »
Pretty cool write up with weather maps and all from this day from Channel 7 in Little Rock:


http://www.katv.com/blogs/wx/st._patrick_s_day_snowstorm...1892.html

Offline Curt

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #9 on: March 19, 2009, 11:01:10 PM »
After reviewing some maps of the set up for this storm, I have to comment again. Wow this was obviously a huge synoptic type event, not an ULL with some freak snowstorm as a couple of weeks ago. Memphis and Nashville had highs in the 20's, almost unprecendented for a March or anytime for that matter. Memphis reported 1.8 inches of precip that day, and Nashville about the same for this and the following day. Shreveport LA saw 7 inches, whilt Hot Springs and Pine Bluff AR had over 20 inches. Can you imagine a snow event without having to wait on temps to drop for sticking and precip changes all in MARCH?? Can you imagine the board if this were to occur again? I long for the day this happens in January, but have a feeling I may be an old man by then (no comments on the age thing pls). Again, cold arctic air already in place in March with no mixing issues as far as I can tell...Unbelievable.

Offline Curt

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #10 on: March 21, 2009, 10:56:47 PM »
Out of boredom of just surfing after NCAA b-ball all day, found this clip in the NYT's from Jan 1893. Can you imagine back to back major snowstorms within a year's period? One must wonder if the average snowfall wasnt higher in our areas back in the day. Let's hope we are moving in that direction:

http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9E02EED61331E033A2575AC1A9679C94629ED7CF
« Last Edit: March 21, 2009, 11:25:13 PM by ctbpharmd »

Offline Curt

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #11 on: March 14, 2010, 06:31:59 PM »

Offline kailynleto | Nightwolf

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Re: In 1892 Four Leaf Clovers were buried.
« Reply #12 on: March 24, 2010, 03:16:58 AM »
There is not a chance of huge snows later than mid-April, but there is a remote possibility (less than 1% according to probability) that Nashville could receive an accumulating snow all the way into mid-May, as the latest ever snow observation was May 17, 1892, if memory serves me right.  I have no way of quoting this because I have not seen this statistic written anywhere for a few years, but I distinctly remember seeing it and thought I would share it.

If I find this, I'll post about it, and re-quote anything I've misspoken.
Quote
UNIQUE SOUTHERN BONDING EXPERIENCE OF FIGHTING FOR THE LAST MILK AND BREAD ON THE SHELVES AS THE STORM APPROACHES.
i just got off work and seen the latest gfs, its most def. smoking some good sh-t.
snOMG.
2010-11:
11/25 2.0"
12/12 2"
12/25 2"
1/10-1/13 0.5"
1/25 2"
2/1 trace
2/4 0.3"
2/7 6"

 

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