Nashy you love drama
Fukkin storm was a baby
Fukkin storm was a baby
YEAR | DATE | "NAME" | TOTAL | NESIS3 | COMMENTS |
2011 | January 26th-27th | TBD | 19.0" | 1 | Snowfall rates of over 3 inches per hour; NYC public schools closed |
2010 | December 26th-27th | Blizzard of 2010 | 20.0" | 3 | Massive disruptions to transit systems; wind gusts to 70mph in Suffolk County; over 30" of snow in parts of NJ |
2010 | February 25th-26th | N/A | 20.9" | 3 | Extensive damage & power outages from wet snow North; dry snow South & heavy rains East; 3rd major Eastern snowstorm in February |
2006 | February 11th-12th | Blizzard of 2006 | 26.9" | 3 | Largest snowstorm in NYC history, surpassing Dec. 26-27, 1947 (26.4"); rare thundersnow reported |
2003 | February 16th-17th | Presidents' Day Snowstorm II | 19.8" | 4 | 25.6" of snow recorded at JFK Airport; "Presidents' Day Snowstorm I" brought 12.7" on Feb. 19, 1979 |
1996 | January 7th-8th | Blizzard of '96 | 20.2" | 5 | Areas of more than 30" across portions of New Jersey; NYC schools closed, first time since Blizzard of '78 |
1983 | February 11th-12th | Megalopolitan Snowstorm | 17.6" | 4 | Occurred during one of the strongest El Niño's of the 20th Century |
1978 | February 5th-7th | Blizzard of '78 | 17.7" | 3 | Long Island & New England hardest hit, near hurricane strength winds, thundersnow, 36-hour storm duration |
1969 | February 9th-10th | Lindsay Storm | 15.3" | 2 | Mayor John Lindsay took the heat after sections of NYC remained unplowed for a week |
1967 | February 6th-7th | N/A | 15.2" | 2 | Blizzard conditions produced totals of over 20" in parts of New Jersey |
1961 | February 3rd-4th | N/A | 17.4" | 4 | Storm followed prolonged cold period (16 days of teens and 20's); JFK Airport recorded 24.0" |
1960 | December 11th-12th | N/A | 15.2" | 3 | 20.4" recorded at Newark and 17.0" at The Battery |
1948 | December 19th-20th | N/A | 16.0" | - | 20-hour duration; Widespread totals of 12-18" across the Metropolitan Area |
1947 | December 26th-27th | Big Snow | 26.4" | 2 | The worst blizzard since 1888, and record holder until 2006 |
1941 | March 7th-8th | N/A | 18.1" | - | Quick drop-off towards the coast as parts of New Jersey and Eastern Suffolk reported less than 10" of snow |
1935 | January 22th-24th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Snows from Gulf Coast to Maine |
1920 | February 4th-7th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Parts of Westchester received over 20" of snow |
1899 | February 12th-13th | The Blizzard of 1899 | 16.0" | 4 | Temperatures in the single digits for most of the storm |
1894 | February 25th-27th | N/A | 15.2" | - | Before the storm, temperatures started out around 0°F, before rising to just above freezing. |
1893 | February 17th-18th | N/A | 17.8" | - | Followed a warm spell when temperatures reached as high as 54°F |
1892 | March 16th-18th | St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm | 15.4" | - | Largest snowstorm on record for many areas in the South |
1888 | March 12th-14th | The Blizzard of '88 | 21.0" | 4 | Extreme blizzard conditions left behind over 50" of snow in some areas of Connecticut and the Hudson Valley |
1872 | December 26th | The Great Snow-Storm | ~18" | - | Snow fell from Virginia to Maine and West to Mississippi River |
1836 | January 8th-10th | The Big Snow | ~15" | - | Interior sections saw widepread 30-40" tallies |
1831 | January 14th-16th | The Great Snowstorm | ~15" | - | Rivals Superstorm of 1993 for expansiveness of coverage |
1805 | January 26th-28th | N/A | ~24" | - | 48 hours of continous snow |
1798 | November 19th-21th | The Long Storm | ~18" | - | Snow from Maryland to Maine |
YEAR | DATE | "NAME" | TOTAL | NESIS3 | COMMENTS |
2011 | January 26th-27th | TBD | 19.0" | 1 | Snowfall rates of over 3 inches per hour; NYC public schools closed |
2010 | December 26th-27th | Blizzard of 2010 | 20.0" | 3 | Massive disruptions to transit systems; wind gusts to 70mph in Suffolk County; over 30" of snow in parts of NJ |
2010 | February 25th-26th | N/A | 20.9" | 3 | Extensive damage & power outages from wet snow North; dry snow South & heavy rains East; 3rd major Eastern snowstorm in February |
2006 | February 11th-12th | Blizzard of 2006 | 26.9" | 3 | Largest snowstorm in NYC history, surpassing Dec. 26-27, 1947 (26.4"); rare thundersnow reported |
2003 | February 16th-17th | Presidents' Day Snowstorm II | 19.8" | 4 | 25.6" of snow recorded at JFK Airport; "Presidents' Day Snowstorm I" brought 12.7" on Feb. 19, 1979 |
1996 | January 7th-8th | Blizzard of '96 | 20.2" | 5 | Areas of more than 30" across portions of New Jersey; NYC schools closed, first time since Blizzard of '78 |
1983 | February 11th-12th | Megalopolitan Snowstorm | 17.6" | 4 | Occurred during one of the strongest El Niño's of the 20th Century |
1978 | February 5th-7th | Blizzard of '78 | 17.7" | 3 | Long Island & New England hardest hit, near hurricane strength winds, thundersnow, 36-hour storm duration |
1969 | February 9th-10th | Lindsay Storm | 15.3" | 2 | Mayor John Lindsay took the heat after sections of NYC remained unplowed for a week |
1967 | February 6th-7th | N/A | 15.2" | 2 | Blizzard conditions produced totals of over 20" in parts of New Jersey |
1961 | February 3rd-4th | N/A | 17.4" | 4 | Storm followed prolonged cold period (16 days of teens and 20's); JFK Airport recorded 24.0" |
1960 | December 11th-12th | N/A | 15.2" | 3 | 20.4" recorded at Newark and 17.0" at The Battery |
1948 | December 19th-20th | N/A | 16.0" | - | 20-hour duration; Widespread totals of 12-18" across the Metropolitan Area |
1947 | December 26th-27th | Big Snow | 26.4" | 2 | The worst blizzard since 1888, and record holder until 2006 |
1941 | March 7th-8th | N/A | 18.1" | - | Quick drop-off towards the coast as parts of New Jersey and Eastern Suffolk reported less than 10" of snow |
1935 | January 22th-24th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Snows from Gulf Coast to Maine |
1920 | February 4th-7th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Parts of Westchester received over 20" of snow |
1899 | February 12th-13th | The Blizzard of 1899 | 16.0" | 4 | Temperatures in the single digits for most of the storm |
1894 | February 25th-27th | N/A | 15.2" | - | Before the storm, temperatures started out around 0°F, before rising to just above freezing. |
1893 | February 17th-18th | N/A | 17.8" | - | Followed a warm spell when temperatures reached as high as 54°F |
1892 | March 16th-18th | St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm | 15.4" | - | Largest snowstorm on record for many areas in the South |
1888 | March 12th-14th | The Blizzard of '88 | 21.0" | 4 | Extreme blizzard conditions left behind over 50" of snow in some areas of Connecticut and the Hudson Valley |
1872 | December 26th | The Great Snow-Storm | ~18" | - | Snow fell from Virginia to Maine and West to Mississippi River |
1836 | January 8th-10th | The Big Snow | ~15" | - | Interior sections saw widepread 30-40" tallies |
1831 | January 14th-16th | The Great Snowstorm | ~15" | - | Rivals Superstorm of 1993 for expansiveness of coverage |
1805 | January 26th-28th | N/A | ~24" | - | 48 hours of continous snow |
1798 | November 19th-21th | The Long Storm | ~18" | - | Snow from Maryland to Maine |