Forget the record books. Boston's biggest storms have made it into our regional lore. Here are a few we're still talking ...
The Blizzard of '78 slammed New England 47 years ago this week. What was your experience? Or did you hear a lot about it growing up?
A winter storm hit the Boston area Thursday, projected to bring 2 to 4 inches of snow. But, 47 years ago, the region ground ...
The infamous Blizzard of 1978 first hit the Northeast on Feb. 6, 1978, and stretched into the next day. Snow fell at a rate of 4 inches per hour, and wind gusts reached 83 mph during the storm, ...
Understanding these storm types helps forecasters provide accurate predictions, allowing communities to prepare for dangerous winter conditions before they arrive.
The winds were even higher – reaching well beyond hurricane force – along the mountain peaks ... As much as 18-24 inches of snow will combine with winds gusting up to 85 mph will cause blizzard-like ...
Hurricane Charley underwent rapid intensification ... sparing Florida entirely. In 2015, a forecasted blizzard of epic proportions failed to materialise in New York City. In what is now an infamous ...
The winds were even higher – reaching well beyond hurricane force – along the mountain peaks ... As much as 18-24 inches of snow will combine with winds gusting up to 85 mph will cause blizzard-like ...
The National Weather Service called it a “severe blizzard.” Others referred to it as the “White Hurricane.” For those who lived through it, it is known quite simply as “The Great ...
But a parade of snowstorms since Christmas 1976 left over 30 inches of snow on the ground and large snowdrifts in Buffalo before the blizzard began. That impressive snowpack also extended over ...
It is the snowstorm by which all other snowstorms will be measured. The National Weather Service called it a “severe blizzard.” Others referred to it as the “White Hurricane.” For those who lived ...