Northerly winds sustained at 25 to 35 mph, with gusts around 50 mph were common immediately behind the front. The strong winds quickly carried in much colder air, with temperatures dropping from the 60s and 70s into the 40s in the matter of 10s of minutes, as the above graph illustrates. The gusty northerly winds continued through the night with temperatures gradually dropping into the 20s for all of the South Plains and Rolling Plains by dawn on Tuesday. This dramatic cool off brought the first widespread hard freeze of the fall season.
Sunny skies following the front Tuesday did allow temperatures to recover into the lower 40s, but readings then dipped into the teens and lower 20s early Wednesday (Nov. 12th). Lubbock tied its record low for the date when the mercury dipped to 19 degrees. Skies then clouded up and this kept temperatures from climbing much and afternoon highs only climbed into the 20s and lower 30s. Lubbock reached 27 degrees which was the coldest high temperature for the date, breaking the previous record of 32 degrees (set in 1916). More frigid readings followed into Thursday morning with lows again in the teens and lower 20s. In addition, a few spots on the Caprock also saw some snow flurries through much of the night. A few areas even managed to pick up some trace amounts of snow on rooftops and grassy surfaces.
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