Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The January 25–27, 2011 North American blizzard was a major Mid-Atlantic nor'easter and winter storm, and a New England blizzard that affected portions of the northeastern United States and Canada. This storm came just two weeks after a previous major blizzard had already affected most of these same areas earlier on the same month of January ...
Although the storm was expected to intensify to become a blizzard, New York City was spared from the worst. The city's public schools remained open. By Wednesday morning, Central Park had received 9.1 inches of snow; however, a lot of the areas in central and eastern Long Island had seen 15 to 20 inches of snow before it all ended.
January 31, 2011: Dissipated: February 3, 2011 ... Cleveland, New York City, New York's Capital District, and Boston. ... Snowfall amounts of 20 to 28 inches (51 to ...
An early-season nor'easter unloaded more than a foot of snow over parts of the Northeast on Oct. 29, 2011. (NASA Worldview) Carving pumpkins is a Halloween tradition for many families, but the ...
It dumped snow on a portion of the Mid Atlantic and New England and was officially classified as a blizzard in New York City. [8] North Carolina saw snowfall totals as high as 12 inches (30 cm). Philadelphia received 12.2 inches (31 cm) of snow and nearby Trenton, New Jersey saw upwards of 20 in (51 cm) snowfall totals.
Since records began in 1869, the latest first measurable snowfall in New York City was recor. No white Christmas to set a festive mood in Rockefeller Center. No snow to greet New Year's Eve ...
On Tuesday, 3.2 inches fell in New York City, the highest single-day snowfall in the city since 7.3 inches accumulated in Central Park on Jan. 29, 2022. ... The snow was not as heavy in downtown ...
In fact, this was New York City's 3rd October snowfall on record. [29] Hartford, Connecticut's state capital, observed a record 12.3 in (31 cm), [25] and the highest total in the state was 24.0 in (61 cm) in Farmington southwest of Hartford; this, too, broke the state record for an October snowfall. [30]