Posted by Austin, Little Rock on 12/21/2007, 1:45 pm
70.232.73.162
Some Details About Past White Christmases in Little Rock...
In 1887...1914...1918...1935...and 1939 snow fell with no accumulation.
In 1897...one inch of snow fell on Christmas Day between 450 am and 1245 pm. By 700 pm that night...only a trace of snow remained on the ground.
In 1913...snow started at midnight and continued until 1130 am Christmas Day. A total of one and one half (1.5) inches of snow fell...but during the afternoon the temperature rose to 40 degrees and most of it melted. By that evening only a trace of snow remained.
On Christmas day in 1926...sleet changed to snow about 815 am and snow continued falling until 130 pm. The total accumulation for that storm was two and one half (2.5) inches. The snow stayed on the ground for several days. Ironically...there was a serious tornado outbreak in Arkansas on Thanksgiving that year.
On Christmas eve in 1962...it snowed an inch and a half (1.5) during the day but melted quickly during the night...leaving only patches of snow on the ground Christmas morning...which melted that day.
In 1963...four inches of snow was on the ground Christmas Day...left over from a 9.8 inch snowfall on December 22. This is the only time snow has been seen on Christmas in consecutive years.
In 1975...it snowed on Christmas afternoon. In many of the hills around the city up to two inches of snow accumulated. For those living in the lower elevations of the city...rain and snow was mixed and little of the snow remained on the ground. By the next day...most of the snow had melted.
In 1983...a total of 2 inches of snow fell earlier in the week and there was some ice on top of that. Due to melting and refreezing...there was about an inch of ice and snow left on the ground by Christmas day.
In 1990...2.4 inches of snow and sleet fell on December 22-23 and most of it remained on the ground through Christmas Day.
In 2000...there was some snow on the ground in northern and western Arkansas on Christmas Day...but not in Little Rock. Instead, one of the largest ice storms in recorded history overspread the state...shutting the state down through the remainder of the year.
In 2004...snow fell in much of northern and central Arkansas on December 22. In Little Rock, roughly 3 inches of snow was measured...with 2 inches still on the ground on Christmas Day.
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