In 1996, New York City was hit by one of the most severe blizzards. Twenty inches of snow fell during the storm, along with 50 mph winds and drifts as high as 8 feet. The powerful winter storm developed when cold air came from the Gulf of Mexico combined with hot air coming from Canada; it hit NYC on January 6 and lasted for 37 hours, dropping 2 inches of snow per hour on average.
Schools were closed, mail was snarled, food deliveries were delayed, and disrupted travel. Only the police, fire department, and hospital staff reported to work; residents were advised to stay home and await the passing of the storm. The storm intensified, and traffic came to a halt, leaving many people stranded mid-way to their destinations. There was high anxiety and frustration at airports, bus terminals, and rest stops along highways. The grocery stores looked as foreboding and empty as they did in post-apocalyptic films by evening. Con Edison reported a power outage in Gravesend, Brooklyn, affecting 1500 customers, though services would be restored the following night. From Washington to Boston, damages were estimated at a billion dollars, while casualties reached a hundred from Kentucky to Connecticut. People living on the streets of New York were the most affected. Even though the city made every effort to relocate the homeless safely, only 7200 beds in 39 shelters were occupied.
I remember this blizzard. It’s one of those really early childhood memories. I played out in the snow with friends. Don’t think I’ve seen any snow on that level since.
Article says cold air from Mexico and hot air from Canada???
Ah yes…shoveling my mom’s car out from 3 feet of snow was a blast. /s
On the other hand, we had a lot of fun that winter, and a couple years earlier (no one remembers “ice storm of ’94”), building snowmen in inappropriate places, doing donuts on the highway, getting baked and throwing snowballs at cars, and trucks, bumper riding all over town, wandering the streets, drinking stolen Zima, etc.
I was 20 and travelling from Manchester to study in Chicago. I flew into this and got stuck in JFK for two days waiting for a connecting flight. I enjoyed every second of it, a real adventure. I wouldn’t fancy it now.
Similar experience- as a UK student in NJ – this stuff was crazy to me. I remember the snow being piled high on the sidewalks creating little tunnels – remember it snowing pretty much every week from November to early April!!! Damn it was cold too…
Yeah, it was mind blowingly different to the north west of England for me! So glad I got to it experience all. Seems like it happened to a different person now I’m pushing 50.
It’s really weird to remember NYC as cold in the winters. I’m not even very far in my lifetime and I already remember how winters were very often snowy — as opposed to now where maybe you get a day of dusting, maybe you get mostly 50 degree days.
NYC in even the last 20 years is a very apparent demonstration of global warming.
Its already gotten cold here a few times, and we cant even legally say its winter yet. We havent had a crazy blizzard for 6 or 7 years, but it still gets cold here. Last major snow storm I recall was in 2017. They closed all above ground train stations.
Im not denying global warming, just saying that it absolutely gets cold here still.
Yea I’m in the Poconos, and it hasn’t been super bad in awhile. It still gets pretty fucking cold.
We got a few back to back storms in 2021 that left 2-3 feet of snow.