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Syracuse, New York received a record snowfall of 42.3 inches (107 cm) which remained their heaviest storm on record, until the Blizzard of 1993. [8] At Oswego, the storm lasted from January 27 to January 31, 1966, a total of 4½ days. The daily snowfall totals for Southwest Oswego, as measured by Professor Robert Sykes Jr, are as follows.
This storm was an actual blizzard due to the high winds, blowing snow and cold. 26.1" of snow was measured at Syracuse N.Y. and drifts reached 20 feet in Oswego County. (See Thirtieth Publication of the Oswego County Historical Society, (1969) and The Climate and Snow Climatology of Oswego N.Y., (1971)
The first trace of snow of the winter at the Buffalo NWS weather station in Cheektowaga, New York, occurred on October 9, while the first accumulating snow was on October 21. [11] Elsewhere in western New York, lake effect snow was observed in two periods, with up to 4 in (10 cm) on October 17–18 and up to 12 in (30 cm) on October 21–22 (O ...
Oswego, Jefferson, Lewis: 3 to 4 feet of snow. The greatest snow accumulations are expected across the northern Tug Hill region to areas just south and east of Watertown. ... Winter storm warnings ...
Heavy, narrow bands of lake-effect snow were impacting Oswego and Lewis counties in northern New York on Sunday morning, January 23, with between 3 and 5 inches expected to fall by 1 pm, the ...
The Great Blizzard of 1978 was a historic winter storm that ... Indiana, where 25 inches (64 cm) of snow fell, for the third time in its history; ... Oswego 120.3 ...
Snowfall continued in Oswego, New York, on Sunday, November 20, as the National Weather Service alerted another band of lake-effect snow.NWS also alerted winds of up to 45 miles an hour and ...
The February 2007 North American blizzard was a massive winter storm that affected most of the eastern half of North America, starting on February 12, 2007, and peaking on Valentine's Day, February 14.