While 27 low-temperature records fall, September not far from normal
By Blaine Friedlander
Despite 27 low-temperature records falling throughout the Northeast in September, the average temperatures for the month were not far from normal -- making this the 30th coolest September in the last 103 years of records, according to the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University.
"It wasn't much cooler than normal," said Keith Eggleston, climatologist at the center. "It wasn't terrible at all. In the middle of September, we had temperatures slightly warmer than normal and that put the month close to normal."
Eggleston explained that while temperature departures from normal were quite variable across the Northeast, the temperatures averaged only 0.6 degrees below normal on an area-weighted basis.
The largest temperature departures in the Northeast were in West Virginia, extending into the western part of Pennsylvania. West Virginia was 1.8 degrees colder than normal. Maine reported the largest positive temperature departure at 0.6 degrees above normal. Several locations in upstate New York and northern New England reported the region's first widespread fall frost on Sept. 27.
Precipitation for the Northeast was slightly below normal during September. Coastal areas from southern New England through the Delmarva Peninsula received less than half their normal September precipitation amounts. Other parts of the region experienced two major precipitation episodes. The first, on Sept. 11, brought significant amounts of rain -- between two and four inches -- to some locations from the Catskills in New York to the Maryland and West Virginia panhandles.
The month's second major event, on Sept. 28 and 29, scattered heavy similar rainfall amounts farther west, from western New York to northern West Virginia. Overall, the Northeast received 85 percent of the normal precipitation. This was the second driest September in the last nine years. Rhode Island was the driest state with 36 percent of normal. For Connecticut, with 42 percent of normal precipitation, it was the ninth driest September on record. With 103 percent of normal precipitation, New York was the only state to average slightly above normal.
New Weather Records
Minimum Temperature Records
City Date New Previous Baltimore 4th 50¡ 54¡ in 1965 Beckley, W.Va. 4th 42¡ 45¡ in 1967 Bridgeport, Conn. 4th 51¡ 53¡ in 1989 Charleston, W.Va. 4th 44¡ 45¡ in 1946 Elkins, W.Va. 4th 36¡ 37¡ in 1946 Latrobe, Pa. 4th 39¡ 47¡ in 1989 Morgantown, W.Va. 4th 42¡ 45¡ in 1982 Newark, N.J. 4th 52¡ 53¡ in 1975 Parkersburg, W.Va. 4th 42¡ 47¡ in 1908 Philadelphia (tie) 4th 52¡ 52¡ in 1946 Pittsburgh 4th 42¡ 48¡ in 1946 Rochester, N.Y. (tie) 4th 40¡ 40¡ in 1987 Scranton, Pa. 4th 40¡ 42¡ in 1946 Wilmington, Del. 4th 47¡ 50¡ in 1982 Allentown, Pa. 5th 44¡ 47¡ in 1974 Baltimore 5th 47¡ 51¡ in 1897 Beckley, W.Va. 5th 40¡ 42¡ in 1974 Elkins, W.Va. 5th 37¡ 39¡ in 1902 Newark, N.J. 5th 50¡ 53¡ in 1950 Scranton, Pa. (tie) 5th 43¡ 43¡ in 1994 Wilmington, Del. 5th 48¡ 50¡ in 1982 tie: Allentown, N.J. 22nd 36¡ 37¡ in 1962 Atlantic City Apt., N.J.(tie) 22nd 38¡ 38¡ in 1991 Bridgeport, Conn. (tie) 22nd 42¡ 42¡ in 1962 Newark, N.J. (tie) 22nd 44¡ 44¡ in 1962 Wilmington, Del. 25th 37¡ 38¡ in 1963 Binghamton, N.Y. (tie) 28th 31¡ 31¡ in 1965
Maximum Temperature Record
City Date New Previous Atlantic City marina, N.J. 16th 85¡ 84¡ in 1965
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