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The January 2014 Gulf Coast winter storm was a somewhat rare winter storm that impacted the eastern and southeastern United States, as well as Mexico, most notably the Gulf Coast region, which rarely receives frozen precipitation, in late January 2014.
January 2–4, 2014 North American blizzard – brought a large swath of heavy snow across the Ohio Valley and the Northeastern United States at the start of 2014, and was followed by extremely cold temperatures in its wake. January 20–22, 2014 North American blizzard – focused itself on the Interstate 95 corridor and brought over a foot of ...
Storm — 2014 December 30 – January 6: 23.8 inches (60 cm) 936 hPa (27.6 inHg) Storm Category 2 ... Storm Category 2 January 28–30: 30.4 inches (77 cm)
New York City has averaged 8.8 inches in January and 10.1 Inches in February. But there's more to January's Northeast snowfall history than those simple averages.
The snowiest January dates back to 1977 when 21 inches fell during a brutally cold month and the warmest? A June-like 73 degrees over 100 years ago
Snowfall forecast for January 28–29, 2014, predicting over 1 inch of snow in northwest Florida January 28–29, 2014: A major winter storm event resulted in a mixture of freezing rain (with ice accumulation), sleet, and snow across most of the Panhandle between the afternoon of the 28th and morning of the 29th.
More than 4.6 million people in the region were under winter storm warnings and about 42,000 had blizzard warnings on Friday. Tens of thousands of people were impacted by power outages in New ...
2014 began on an active note, with another major winter storm affecting much of the United States on January 6–7, days after the previous blizzard. Between 6 and 12 inches (150 and 300 mm) of snow fell with this system across a wide area spreading from central Missouri across Illinois and Indiana to Lower Michigan.