North American blizzard of 1996
{{Short description|Severe nor'easter in January 1996}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox winter storm
|name=North American blizzard of 1996
|image location=Blizzard_of_1996_satellite.png
|image name=Satellite image of the storm system on January 7, 1996
|stormtype={{ubl|Winter storm|Blizzard}}
|date formed=January 6, 1996
|date dissipated=January 10, 1996
|RSI=26.37
|pressure=980 mb (28.94 inHg) at 7:00 am EST on January 8th{{cite web|title=Service Assessment – Blizzard of '96|url=http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/assessments/pdfs/bz-mrg.pdf|website=NOAA|access-date=November 18, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160826045414/http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/assessments/pdfs/bz-mrg.pdf|archive-date=August 26, 2016|date=December 1996|url-status=dead}}
|maximum amount={{convert|48|in|cm}}, Pocahontas County, West Virginia
|total damages (USD)={{circa}} US$3 billion
|casualties=154 fatalities total (another 33 took place during flooding after the storm)
|areas affected=Continental United States; especially the Northeastern United States
}}
File:Baltimore Maryland Blizzard of 1996.png
The North American blizzard of 1996 was a severe nor'easter that paralyzed the United States East Coast with up to {{convert|4|ft|m}} of wind-driven snow from January 6 to January 8, 1996. The City University of New York reported that the storm "dropped 20 inches of snow, had wind gusts of 50 mph and snow drifts up to 8 feet high."{{cite news|url= https://www.baruch.cuny.edu/nycdata/disasters/blizzards-1996.html|title=Disasters New York City (NYC) The Blizzard of 1996|website=NYC Data Baruch College of the City University of New York|language=en-US|access-date=2023-02-20}}
This storm was a classic example of a nor'easter, but the storm would not have been as historically significant without the presence of the arctic high pressure system located to the north of New York.{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/post/one-wild-storm-a-look-back-at-the-blizzard-of-96/2013/01/07/89a1242c-5875-11e2-9fa9-5fbdc9530eb9_blog.html|title=One wild storm: A look back at the 'Blizzard of '96'|last=Lipman|first=Don|date=2013-01-07|newspaper=Washington Post|language=en-US|access-date=2017-12-19}} It was followed by another storm, an Alberta Clipper, on January 12,{{cite web|url=http://wjla.com/weather/remembering-the-blizzard-of-96-14186|title=Remembering the Blizzard of '96 |author=Chad Merrill|date=2012-01-08}} then unusually warm weather and torrential rain which caused rapid melting and river flooding in the Northeast Floods later that month.{{Cite web |last=NOAA, National Weather Service, Office of Hydrology |date=March 1998 |title=Service Assessment: Northeast Floods of January 1996 |url=https://www.weather.gov/media/publications/assessments/Flood_Northeast_1996.pdf }} Along with the March Superstorm of 1993 and the January 2016 United States blizzard, it is one of only three snowstorms to receive the top rating of 5, or "Extreme", on the Northeast Snowfall Impact Scale (NESIS).{{cite web|url=http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/snow-and-ice/rsi/nesis|title=Regional Snowfall Index (RSI)|author=Enloe|work=noaa.gov}}
Impact
=Virginia=
File:Blizzard-1996.jpg snowfall map depicting accumulation in Virginia, after the North American blizzard of 1996. Most of the Shenandoah Valley received {{convert|2|to|3|ft|cm|spell=in}} of snow. ]]
Most of Virginia was impacted by the more central and western parts receiving {{convert|1|to|3|ft|cm|spell=in}} of snow.{{cite news|last1=Springston|first1=Rex|title=From the archive: Who remembers the snowstorm of '96?|url=http://www.richmond.com/weather/article_838db9da-b55e-11e5-a168-b70417c88288.html|access-date=3 March 2016|agency=Richmond Times dispatch|date=January 8, 1996 }} Roanoke got a record-breaking {{convert|23|in|cm}}. The heaviest snow fell in Page County, with around {{convert|37|in|cm}}. Snowfall reached {{convert|3|ft|cm|spell=in}} in the Shenandoah Valley and exceeded {{convert|2|ft|cm|spell=in}} in much of the Virginia mountain and Piedmont areas. Gov. George Allen declared a state of emergency as power lines went down, people were trapped in their houses, and at least eight weather-related deaths occurred. High winds that accompanied the blizzard caused white out conditions and drifts of up to {{convert|10|ft|cm}} in Patrick County.
=Washington, D.C., and Baltimore=
File:WMATA Shady Grove accident - Final positions.jpg accident at Shady Grove station during the blizzard, which resulted in the death of a Metro operator.]]
Snow began falling on Washington, D.C., and Baltimore during the early afternoon of January 6, and continued at a consistent rate until mid-afternoon the next day. At that time, the metro area received {{convert|13|to|17|in|cm}}, and after a few hours of sleet and then a complete stop for several hours, it seemed the worst was over. But overnight, as the storm slowly crawled northward, extremely heavy bands of snow came in from the east. These bands created whiteout conditions as winds gusted past {{convert|40|mph|km/h}}, along with thunder and lightning.
By the morning of January 8, the bands tapered off, and the metro area was left with a blanket of {{convert|15|to|25|in|cm}} of snow. Baltimore received {{convert|22.5|in|cm}} and Washington Dulles International Airport received {{convert|24.6|in|cm}}. Many areas north and west in Maryland and West Virginia received well over {{convert|2|ft|cm}} with a few locations in the mountains of West Virginia and Virginia receiving up to {{convert|4|ft|m}}.
In DC, it was known as the "Blizzard of '96" or the "Great Furlough Storm," because it occurred just after the 1996 federal government shutdown and since the Federal government was closed due to the storm, lengthened the time federal employees were away from their jobs in the DC area. Because of unseasonably warm weather in mid-January and a warm rain exceeding {{one2a|{{convert|1|in|cm|spell=in}}}} on Monday, January 15, the snow melted quickly and caused the worst winter flooding in decades for river and stream valleys from Southwest Virginia to New York.{{cite news|last1=Montgomery|first1=David|title=Flood Waters Leave Widespread Ruin in Their Wake|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1996/01/23/flood-waters-leave-widespread-ruin-in-their-wake/0aace815-bcd3-49c7-8128-6ec1357ec472/|newspaper=The Washington Post|access-date=November 18, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211118155651/https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1996/01/23/flood-waters-leave-widespread-ruin-in-their-wake/0aace815-bcd3-49c7-8128-6ec1357ec472/|archive-date=November 18, 2021|date=January 23, 1996|url-status=live}}
=Philadelphia and Pennsylvania=
{{convert|30.7|in|cm}} of snow fell in Philadelphia (as measured at the official city observation location, Philadelphia International Airport), the most of any major city in the storm's path. It remains the city's all-time greatest snowstorm, compared to its previous greatest snowstorm which was a "mere" {{convert|21.3|in|cm}}.{{cite web|url=http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/onward/50724-now-you-know-about-philadelphias-biggest-snowstorms|title=Now you know about Philadelphia's biggest snowstorms|author=Zack Seward|date=8 February 2013|work=Newsworks.org}} Most of those {{convert|30.7|in|cm}}, {{convert|27.6|in|cm|abbr=values}}, fell in just 24 hours, a new record for the city for the most snow in 24 hours. The mayor declared a state of emergency, and only police and other emergency workers were permitted to drive on city streets leaving the city to pedestrians.
For three days, city trucks loaded with plowed snow dumped their contents into the Schuylkill and Delaware rivers eventually causing major problems with the natural flow of the rivers. It is a rare occurrence for trucks to "dispose of snow" in the Philadelphia area, since the snowfall amounts typically do not warrant it. However the snow was so extensive, that plowing would cause massive snow piles. City officials had no choice but to resort to hauling the snow to nearby rivers. Disposal of snow became a major issue but temperatures quickly returned to normal and began to quickly clear the snow. This resulted in flooding, when on January 19, a jet stream disturbance from the Gulf of Mexico caused a rapid melt, followed by thunderstorms, which both brought {{convert|3|in|mm|spell=in}} of rain, and caused the snow to melt {{convert|20|in|cm}} in one day; or equivalent to {{convert|2|in|cm|0}} of rain. Philadelphia saw its worst flooding in twenty years. Damages were estimated to reach US$1 billion.{{cite web|url=http://www2009.ems.psu.edu/WeatherWorld/summaries/sum1.96.html|title=Weather World Summary for January 1996|work=psu.edu|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090528020241/http://www.ems.psu.edu/WeatherWorld/summaries/sum1.96.html|archive-date=2009-05-28}}
Image:Blizzard of 1996 Reading PA.png.]]
Snowfall accumulations averaged {{convert|20|to|22|in|cm}} in Monroe, Carbon and eastern Schuylkill Counties, around {{convert|2|ft|cm}} in Lehigh and Northampton Counties, {{convert|24|to|33|in|cm}} in Berks County, {{convert|20|to|26|in|cm}} in Chester and Delaware Counties, {{convert|20|to|30|in|cm}} in Montgomery and Bucks Counties. Other individual accumulations included {{convert|33|in|cm}} in Ontelaunee Township (Berks), {{convert|30|in|cm}} in Reading (Berks) and Palm and Souderton (Montgomery), {{convert|28|in|cm}} in Perkasie (Bucks), and {{convert|26|in|cm}} in Glenmoore (Chester).
=New Jersey=
{{unreferenced section|date=January 2016}}
Snow began falling during the predawn hours of January 7 and became heavy at times during the morning. Blizzard conditions developed during the afternoon and evening as strong northeast winds developed around the intensifying low pressure. During the afternoon hours, precipitation in far southern New Jersey changed to sleet and freezing rain as the low brought in warm air at mid-levels, but remained all snow across the rest of the state. During the evening and overnight hours the snow mixed with sleet as far north as central sections of the state as the low center approached the state from the south. A lull developed in the precipitation in the pre-dawn hours of January 8 as the low center was just off the New Jersey coast, but wraparound moisture brought another period of snow to the state as the low pulled away during the later morning and early afternoon hours of January 8.
Accumulations averaged {{convert|24|to|27|in|cm}} in Sussex County, {{convert|20|to|27|in|cm}} in Warren County, {{convert|23|to|28|in|cm}} in Morris County, generally {{convert|20|to|30|in|cm}} in Bergen, Passaic, Union, Hudson, Essex, Hunterdon, Somerset, Mercer, and Monmouth counties, {{convert|19|to|32|in|cm}} in Middlesex County, {{convert|18|to|31|in|cm}} in Burlington County, {{convert|16|to|24|in|cm}} in Salem, Gloucester, and Camden counties, {{convert|24|in|cm}} inland and {{convert|10|to|14|in|cm}} at the coast in Ocean County, and {{convert|10|to|18|in|cm}} in Cumberland, Atlantic, and Cape May counties. In addition to the heavy snow, wind gusts reached hurricane force along the coast during the evening of the 7th, with an {{convert|81|mph|km/h}} gust recorded in Ocean Grove. While accumulations were lighter along the shore, the strong northeasterly flow produced moderate coastal flooding at the time of high tide on the evening of January 7, with tides {{convert|3|to|4|ft|m}} above normal. The tide reached {{convert|7.5|ft|m}} above mean low water in Atlantic County and {{convert|8.5|ft|m}} above mean low water in Cape May County. Fortunately, winds switched to the northwest before worse flooding could occur at high tide on the morning of January 8.
The state of New Jersey recorded its second-largest snowstorm at Edison, where {{convert|32|in|cm}} fell (the greatest single storm record being {{convert|34|in|cm}} at Cape May in the Great Blizzard of 1899). Elizabeth, New Jersey, also reported {{convert|32|in|cm}} of snow. Newark, the state's largest city, received a record-setting {{convert|27.8|in|cm}}, while Trenton, the capital, received {{convert|24.6|in|cm|1}}.{{Cite web|url=https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datasets/GHCND/stations/GHCND:USC00288880/detail|title=Daily Summaries Station Details: TRENTON STATE COLLEGE, NJ US|website=National Centers for Environmental Information|language=en-US|access-date=2020-10-22}} All roads in the state were closed, including the entire length of the New Jersey Turnpike for the first time in that road's history. Over two-thirds of the state was buried under {{convert|2|ft|cm|0}} of snow, making this storm the state's most paralyzing snowstorm of the 20th century. Places such as Roselle and Linden received around {{convert|30|in|cm}}. New Jersey was, along with other states, put into a state of emergency.
"Two feet of snow was blasted into Greater Trenton by 50 mph winds that created giant drifts, paralyzing the region and the rest of the Northeast for a week, One writer called it the most “sadistic” storm of our century.
The Blizzard of '96 stranded hundreds of people at Trenton's train station; left thousands without electricity and heat for days; closed most schools and government offices for a week; cut off an estimated US$1 billion in Jersey commerce; forced the National Guard into service rescuing state troopers from snowbound police cruisers; and created strife between officials and residents demanding the plowing of their little streets. In the second week of January 1996, it can be said, many locales across the region looked like they did in the old pictures taken of them during the infamous Blizzard of '88: Houses drifted under; snowed-in main streets that looked like ghost towns; no cars or people on the streets."{{Cite web|url=http://www.capitalcentury.com/1996.html|title=1996: Snowfall of the century|website=www.capitalcentury.com}}
=New York City=
{{unreferenced section|date=January 2016}}
File:Blizzard of 96 Snow Drifts.jpg, New York.]]
New York City's Central Park officially recorded {{convert|20.2|in|cm}} for its fourth-largest single snowfall (records going back to 1869), but many locations in the other boroughs and suburbs recorded over {{convert|30|in|cm}} of snow. Schools in New York City's boroughs closed because of snow for the first time since the Blizzard of 1978, 18 years earlier. While most suburban districts in the area close for snow several times each winter, in the city itself they rarely do because of relatively easy access to underground subways whose ability to run is not appreciably affected by snowstorms of moderate to large accumulation; however, in this snowstorm, the transit network was significantly disrupted. Buses were unable to run, and subway service was limited. Lines that ran in open cut and surface routes were shut down for two days.
=New England=
{{unreferenced section|date=January 2016}}
Providence, Rhode Island, received {{convert|24|in|cm}} of snow, while Boston and Hartford, Connecticut, both received {{convert|18.2|in|cm}}. Up to {{convert|33|in|cm}} of snow fell in the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts and the northern hills of Connecticut. While this was a major snow event for southern New England, the Blizzard of 1996 was not as intense as other recent events, notably the Blizzard of 1978 and the March 1993 Superstorm. Snowfall amounts decreased sharply as one moved further north, with northern Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine receiving little more than snow flurries from this event.
Blizzard status
Despite the storm's common name as the "Blizzard of 1996", some of the few observing sites to record true blizzard conditions were Trenton-Mercer Airport near Trenton, New Jersey, and Morristown Municipal Airport located east of Morristown, New Jersey, with Morristown recording wind gusts in excess of {{convert|63|mph|km/h}}. During the afternoon of January 7, the airports recorded the necessary three consecutive hours of frequent wind gusts of at least {{convert|35|mph|km/h}} combined with a prevailing visibility consistently below {{convert|0.25|mi|m}} along with falling and blowing snow, meeting the official NWS standard of a blizzard. This indicates that the sites experienced some of the worst conditions on the entire East Coast. All other New Jersey observing sites, as well as most sites in neighboring states, failed to observe true blizzard conditions, though many stations did observe blizzard conditions for less than the necessary three consecutive hours.
Snowfall accumulation totals
File:Blizzard of 1996 Jan7b-96.jpg in Sterling, Virginia.)]]
class="wikitable sortable"
|+ ! align="left" style="width:20%; background-color:#999999;"|State ! align="left" style="width:40%; background-color:#999999;"|City/location ! align="left" style="width:20%; background-color:#999999;"|Amount (inches)Source: [http://nsidc.org/snow/blizzard/questions.html National Snow & Ice Data Center] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051004195247/http://nsidc.org/snow/blizzard/questions.html |date=2005-10-04 }} newburgh ny 38.3 ! align="left" style="width:20%; background-color:#999999;"|Amount (cm) ! align="left" style="width:20%; background-color:#999999;"|References | |||
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|VA | Big Meadows | {{convert|47|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|WV | Pocahontas County | {{convert|40 | |
48|in|cm|disp=table}} | |||
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|VA | Stanley | {{convert|42.0|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|PA | York County | {{convert|35 | |
40|in|cm|disp=table}} | |||
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|MD | Takoma Park | {{convert|36|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|PA | Shippensburg | {{convert|35|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|MA | Berkshire County | {{convert|33|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|CT | Litchfield County | {{convert|33|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|VA | Luray | {{convert|33|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|MD | Frostburg | {{convert|32|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|NJ | Edison | {{convert|32|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|VA | Front Royal | {{convert|32|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Bordentown | {{convert|31|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|PA | Philadelphia | {{convert|30.7|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Raritan | {{convert|30|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Whitehouse Station | {{convert|30|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Howell | {{convert|30|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Moorestown | {{convert|30|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Hazlet | {{convert|29.8|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Elizabeth | {{convert|28.8|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Freehold Borough | {{convert|28|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Newark | {{convert|27.8|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | McGuire Air Force Base, Wrightstown | {{convert|27|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NC | Boone | {{convert|26|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Califon | {{convert|26|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|PA | Allentown | {{convert|25.9|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|VA | Dulles International Airport | {{convert|24.6|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Lambertville | {{convert|24.8|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Trenton | {{convert|24.6|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Bound Brook | {{convert|24.5|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Pottersville | {{convert|24|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|RI | Providence | {{convert|24|in|cm|disp=table}} | {{Cite web|url=http://www.nrcc.cornell.edu/snow_records.html|title=Snowfall Totals from the Northeast Regional Climate Center, Cornell University}} |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|NJ | Long Branch | {{convert|24|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Toms River | {{convert|24|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|MD | Baltimore | {{convert|22.5|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|NJ | New Brunswick | {{convert|22.6|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|VA | Roanoke | {{convert|22.2|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Sandy Hook | {{convert|22|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Mount Holly | {{convert|22|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Flemington | {{convert|20.3|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NY | Central Park, New York City | {{convert|20.2|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Plainfield | {{convert|19|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|MA | Boston | {{convert|18.2|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|CT | Hartford | {{convert|18.2|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Willingboro | {{convert|19.4|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Marlton | {{convert|18|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Princeton | {{convert|18|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|VA | National Airport, Arlington | {{convert|17.1|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Hightstown | {{convert|17.1|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|CT | Bridgeport | {{convert|16|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Somerville | {{convert|16|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Indian Mills | {{convert|16|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Beach Haven | {{convert|15|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
align="left" style="width:100%; background-color:#EEEEEE;"
|NC | Hickory | {{convert|14|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|VA | Richmond | {{convert|12|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|NJ | Cape May City | {{convert|10.1|in|cm|disp=table}} | |
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|PA | Pittsburgh | {{convert|9.6|in|cm|disp=table}} |
See also
- Blizzard
- January 2016 United States blizzard – Very similar blizzard that affected almost the same areas with identical snow totals 20 years after this one.
- Nor'easter
References
{{Reflist}}
{{United States winter storms}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:North American Blizzard Of 1996}}
Category:Blizzards in the United States