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 making snow angels with my wife (who was my girlfriend at the time) on the FDR Drive. The whole thing was shut down. I also remember seeing people skiing down 3rd Ave on the Upper East Side. It was wild. I was born and raised in NYC and don’t recall one being that bad. I seem to remember a pretty bad one in the early 80’s that closed the schools, but that’s about it.
I’m from Long Island, and this was THE blizzard of my childhood, I’ve never forgotten it. It was so magical to me-I remember carving out an igloo from the feet of snow my dad had shoveled to the side of our driveway.
From north Jersey and same here. Was 7 years old, my friends and I built a multi-room igloo in the pile of snow that was left after my dad shoveled the driveway.
I was 9, also on LI and I can’t recall this one. Not sure why.
I got snowed in at my boyfriends apartment on LI . My boss sent an email that people still worked during snowstorms….and my mother freaked out and expected me to drive home – to Westchester County! Nope, roads were closed. Barely made it home when I finally left.,
I was 10 when this happened and living in the Bronx. I remember we also made igloos in the park. The snow was almost like ice, you could pick it up perfectly in large chunks. By the afternoon there were several more igloos. I can’t see that happening these days, everyone would just stay inside on their devices.
17 year-old me love this what a memory…. I really wish my kids could experience something like this. It was magical the sheer amount of snow.
Why does that theater have messages in stead of movie names on it’s boards?
I’m pretty sure the texts are by the artist Jenny Holzer.
Was this in reference to a show?
No: that was her artwork. The movie marquees were a temporary thing — Times Square, as I recall — but all her work is text-based.
This was the last year NYC dumped excess snow into the rivers. Environmental concerns. There was more than just snow being emptied into the waterways. Now they dump the snow in large areas and have snow melters that empty into specific sewer drains.
The trash piling up was worse than pictured. NYC Dept of Sanitation cant do both jobs at once. Until roadways are drivable, no collection pickups.
I remember the blizzard in Virginia. First and last time I’ve been able to build an igloo. So much fun for a high schooler, probably not as much for an adult