The remnants of Hurricane Beryl made its last stand in New England, dropping over a half foot of rain in several communities across Vermont. As expected, there was a sharp cutoff in rain totals heading into central and southern New England, where only scattered, light showers fell.
Across the northern tier of New England, this much resulted in severe flash flooding. Some communities were hit as hard as they were in the historic July 2023 floods. This was truly a flash flood event, as flood waters and rivers rose extremely rapidly. As of Thursday evening, the Lamoille, Winooski and Passumpsic rivers remained in major flood stage.Â
VERMONT
Walden 7.25 inches
Mechanicsville 6.91 inches
Hinesburg 6.76
Monkton 6.41 inches
St. Johnsbury 6.4 inches
Moretown 6 inches
Starksboro 5.89 inches
Richmond 5.79 inches
Charlotte 5.39 inches
Stannard 5.27 inches
Vergennes 5.26 inches
Bristol 5.18 inches
Wheelock 5.15 inches
Barnet 5.15 inches
Danville 5.12 inches
East Charlesto 5.02 inches
Barre 4.7 inches
Morgan 4.58 inches
Plainfield 4.57 inches
Ferrisburgh 4.54 inches
Montpelier 4.46 inches
Stowe 4.17 inches
Orange 4.13 inches
Lunenburg 3.55 inches
Killington 2.23 inches
Middlebury 2.08 inches
Bridgewater 1.6 inches
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Jefferson 4.11 inches
Northumberland 3.82 inches
Littleton 3.8 inches
Pittsburg 3.75 inches
Jefferson 3.54 inches
Berlin 2.98 inches
Whitefield 2.82 inches
Lancaster 2.57 inches
Bethlehem 1.91 inches
North Conway 1.58 inches
Gilford 1.27 inches
Clarksville 1.16 inches
MAINE
Rangeley 4.27 inches
Kingfield 3.95 inches
Moscow 3.55 inches
Carrabassett 3.34 inches
Wilton 3.25 inches
Lake Moxie 3.22 inches
Salem 3.09 inches
Temple 3.07 inches
Albany Township 3.07 inches
Farmington 3.06 inches
Weld 2.85 inches
Stratton 2.71 inches
Rumford 1.98 inches
Bethel 1.86 inches
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