http://www.nyc.gov/html/oem/html/hazards/winter_history.shtml
Storm of the Century 1996
I happened to be in Delaware during this storm. Was suppose to go to Manhattan during this weekend and boom!
Got snowed in.
Because of how cars were situated I was digging 3 feet of snow away from the car, so when the roads became passable I could leave.
I think I ended up there and extra week.
Dumping more than 20 inches of snow in Central Park, the blizzard of Jan. 7-8, 1996, marked the second biggest snowstorm in New York City history. With winds gusting to more than 50 miles an hour, the powerful nor’easter caused widespread power outages, scores of fatalities and $1 billion in damages from Washington, D.C. to Boston.
Thousands of travelers were stranded at City airports, bus terminals, and highway rest stops as transportation ground to a halt. On Jan. 8, New York City public and parochial schools were ordered closed, several Broadway shows canceled performances, and the New York Stock Exchange had a short day.
Dozens of deaths were attributed to the storm, including a Connecticut man and two New Jersey men who suffered heart attacks while shoveling snow.
As 26,528 tons of salt was spread on City roads, snow was hauled to designated vacant lots and parking areas or dumped into the East and Hudson Rivers. By the end of the 1995-1996 winter season, New York City had experienced 16 snowstorms and recorded more than 89 inches of snow.
I remember that winter. I was out-to-here pregnant. It was a hard, hard winter.
Regards,