Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Official storm totals include 89.5" at Mallory, Oswego County, 84" at Bennetts Bridge, Oswego County, and 80.7" at Camden, Oneida County. [1] 50 inches (130 cm) of snow were recorded at Camden, New York on January 31. This is the official largest single day snowfall in New York history. [7]
The Port of Oswego is the main waterfront area of the City of Oswego in Oswego County, New York. Over the course of its history, the Port of Oswego has been the focus of military conflict and conquest, a site of record trade revenue, and a significant part in the History of American expansion and industrialism. Today the Port of Oswego is a ...
Providence County, Rhode Island, was the hardest hit by the blizzard; the towns of Lincoln, Smithfield, Woonsocket, and North Smithfield all reported totals of at least 40 inches (100 cm) snow. [3] In New York City, it was one of the rare times that a snowstorm closed the schools; the New York City Board of Education closed schools for snow ...
Snow forecast map: See snowfall projections by day. The map below shows the probability that an area could receive more than 4 inches of snow in the U.S. See New York projections. Use the slider ...
Snow drifts made travel difficult in parts of New York (February 7, 1977) A house almost completely buried in snow in Tonawanda, New York (January 30, 1977). The blizzard of 1977 hit Western New York, Central NY, Northern NY, and Southern Ontario from January 28 to February 1 of that year.
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 ...
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 ...
Courthouses across New Jersey also closed for the day due to the storm. [12] The heaviest totals in the state were focused across a region stretching from Philadelphia to New York City, with many locations receiving over a foot of snow, the highest being 15.2 inches (39 cm) in the town of Manalapan. [13] [14]