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Vista is a hamlet located within the town of Lewisboro, New York, United States, on the border with New Canaan and Wilton, Connecticut. Vista contains a small commercial center home to multiple stores and restaurants. [1] Vista is one of six hamlets within the town of Lewisboro. [2] Vista is also served by its own volunteer fire department. [3]
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey was also forced to cancel over 1,100 buses. [14] New Jersey Transit was forced to suspend service on multiple commuter rail lines, due to damage to overhead wires. [15] This was considered by some as one of New York City's worst commutes, as some were over ten hours, and New Jersey reported 555 car ...
The storm and its aftermath were covered extensively by local newspapers such as The Keene Sentinel and the Monadnock Ledger-Transcript in New Hampshire. Books detailing the storm's toll include The Weight of the Ice by David Eisenstadter, [21] Black Ice compiled from various New Hampshire authors, [22] and Ice by the staff of The Keene ...
Here's how we compiled the list: We pored through 30-year average snowfall statistics of hundreds of locations in the U.S. from 1991 through 2020. We considered only those towns and cities with a ...
Authorities initially said the 11-year-old girl was critically injured after she and a 12-year-old boy fell through the ice in Washington Park Lake on Saturday, Dec. 7. The boy was ultimately ...
Waterfront homes in the aptly named Crystal Beach on the shore of Lake Erie in Fort Erie, in the state of Ontario, Canada, were encased in ice after a blizzard that pummeled the area on the ...
The December 2013 North American storm complex was a significant storm complex that included many different types of severe weather, including a winter storm, a severe ice storm and a tornado outbreak that impacted the central and eastern portions of Canada, parts of the Central Great Plains, the Southern United States, and the northeastern United States from 20 to 23 December 2013.
It is estimated New York City consumed 285,000 tons of ice per year, most of it purchased from Rockland Lake, resulting in the nickname the “Icehouse of New York City”. [5] Not only did the Knickerbocker Ice Company own ice houses on Rockland Lake, its success as a company and diverse means of transportation allowed it to purchase more ...