Birmingham's Second Greatest Snow

A swarm of tornadoes ripped across parts of Alabama on January 18, 1936. Four people died as an F2 tornado passed from near Fyffe to near Rainsville in DeKalb County. Another twister touched down near Columbiana. One person died from a tornado in Dale County. The activity was ahead of a powerful cold front. It would be followed by a a ten day siege of winter weather that would be remembered for decades across Alabama.

Headlines in the Birmingham News on Sunday, January 26th noted that the upper Midwest was bracing for a brutal assault of frigid air. Photos of cars abandoned in snowdrifts in Pittsburgh dominated the front page of the “South’s Greatest Newspaper.” Light snows fell across parts of North Alabama that night. The News from the 27th warned that the local Weather Bureau forecaster was calling for lows of 2F to 8F that night in the Magic City. On Tuesday, January 28, 1936, dramatic headlines reported that four children had died in Birmingham the night before from suffocating in their cribs under heavy blankets. There was a serious coal shortage, and the local fire chief also warned about the danger of house fires. The morning low in Birmingham was actually 13F.

The U.S. Weather Bureau weather map for the morning of Wednesday, January 29, 1936 showed a low pressure system over the western Gulf of Mexico. A large shield of precipitation was spreading up into the cold air ahead of the low. Snow began falling in Birmingham at 7:46 a.m. The afternoon edition of The News said that the local weatherman called for it to continue through the night. It did, and did not end until 720 a.m. on Thursday. At 7 a.m. CST on Thursday, it was 26F in Birmingham with a strong northerly wind and eleven inches of snow on the ground. It would be the city’s greatest snowfall until the March Blizzard of 1993 in the Magic City. Snow fell as far south as Brweton. Other amounts across the state: Tuscaloosa 8 inches; Montgomery 3/4 of an inch; Gadsden 9 inches; Huntsville 9 inches; Decatur 7 inches; Anniston 10 inches and Selman 1 inch. Under the deep snow cover and clear skies, the mercury would fall to –4F at Birmingham the following morning.
Posted by Mikey  
on January 30, 2006, 1:43 am
Oh, for another one of these...

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Posted by Stephen  
on January 30, 2006, 9:02 am
It would be nice but you can forget it. Last week, Feb was going to be a very cold month with winter storm threats, but this week it's the same old story. I'll bet you anything that when Feb is gone it will wind up being warmer that normal and without any winterstorm threats

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Posted by  
on January 30, 2006, 9:47 am
Hey Stephen I was thinking the same thing, but the cold air is still there so let's just wait and see what happens. Febuary is not here yet I know the first is Wednesday but nobody can tell what the month will be like. I still think Febuary will be cool to cold or just normal temps.

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