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The 23 inches (58.4 cm) inches of snow that fell on Chicago for 29 hours from the morning of January 26, 1967 is a record for a single storm. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 8 ] [ 10 ] The 19.8 inches (50.3 cm) that fell on January 26–27 was the greatest amount of snow for a 24-hour period, later surpassed by Groundhog Day Blizzard of 2011 with 20.0 inches (50 ...
The Oak Lawn, Illinois Tornado (Storm Track) Map of April 21, 1967, tornadoes; 40th Anniversary of Northern Illinois' Worst Tornado Disaster (NWS Chicago) Federal Disaster Declaration (Federal Emergency Management Agency) Personal Memories of the Oak Lawn Tornado; Oak Lawn tornado outbreak. Funnels of Destruction. WGN-TV news coverage.
The deadliest storm of the outbreak was an F4 tornado that traveled north along Minnesota State Highway 13 and through Waseca, where it cut a four-block wide damage path, destroying 16 homes, heavily damaging 25, and killing six people. Farm buildings were also destroyed north and south of the town.
1967: A porch roof in Clay Twp. collapsed killing two children after 2-feet of snow fell in the South Bend area. The Sheriff's Dept. is investigating.
The City of Chicago's second annual “You Name a Snowplow" contest is entering Phase 2, and now you can vote for your favorite names!
Saturday's snowfall of 11.2 inches recorded Friday and Saturday was beat only by a snowstorm ending on Nov. 26 in 1895 that saw 12 inches of snow fall. After the snow, Midwest gets deep freeze ...
During the many years Volkman spent at various Chicago-area television stations, he received local Emmys for his weather forecasting in 1961, 1964 and 1967. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] [ 17 ] At the time of his 2004 retirement, Volkman had spent 54 years in television.
Pages in category "1967 natural disasters in the United States" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. ... 1967 Chicago blizzard; S.