New York Weather Bureau. 77 



High IV, 30.9 inches, moving from the Central States over New 

 York on the 7th. Considerably colder, fair until the 9th. 



Low IV, 29.5 inches, passing from the central valleys to our 

 northern border on the 9th and 10th. Much warmer, southeast 

 gales, general rain, maximum in the north and west. . 



High V, 30.1 inches, developed on the central coast, moving 

 slowly northward on 11th and 12th. Fair and mild on the 11th. 



Low V, 29.3 inches, a severe cyclone, moving from the southwest 

 to the Upper Lakes and over Canada on the 12th and 13th. Gales, 

 velocity of 76 miles per hour at Buffalo. Snow in extreme north, 

 moderate rain elsewhere. 



High VI, 30.3 inches, spreading eastward from a general high 

 area in the northwest. Fair, much colder, on the 13th. 



Low VI, 29.5 inches, originating in the Southwestern States. 

 Passed eastward near the lakes and Northern New York on the 

 14th. Continued gales with a moderate snowfall, maximum in 

 eastern and northern sections. 



High Yll, 30.8 inches, spread from Gulf States to central coast 

 on the 15th, and, with VI, covered the Northeastern States until the 

 18th. Generally fair cold weather, followed by a warm wave on 

 the 18th. 



Low VII, an eneigetic cyclone over the Upper Lakes on the 

 20th, diminishing to 29.7 inches and spreading over Canada on the 

 21st. Continued warm weather and scattering showers. 



Low VIII, 29.3 inches, moved northeast to the Ohio Valley on 

 the 22d, spreading and increasing over the Northeastern States on 

 the 2-l:th and 25th, general rains on the 23d and 24th, heaviest 

 in central New York. Also moderate snows on the plateaus, lakes 

 and coast on the 25th. 



High VIII, 30.4 inches, covered the Northern-central States on 

 the 27th, afterward lingering over the coast States until the end of 



