Thursday marks the 47th anniversary of the Blizzard of '78. Roads were shut down. People were stuck inside with no electricity. But it wasn’t all bad. “It was a fantastic time. People were ...
This week marks 47 years since the incredible Blizzard of '78, the benchmark by which all ... as an extra-tropical low system off the coast of South Carolina, and as it wandered north, it combined ...
We haven’t seen much snow this year, but 47 years ago New England was rocked by the Blizzard of ’78. That storm dropped more than 27 inches of snow over the course of 30 hours — no one ...
the South Shore and beyond. By the end of the storm, which lasted over 30 hours, the region had received more than two feet of snow. The snowstorm, later dubbed the Blizzard of ’78, crippled the ...
The snowstorm, later dubbed the Blizzard of ’78, crippled the East Coast for a week, killing 29 people — including a Scituate girl and Mansfield man — in Massachusetts, destroying 2,000 ...
It was 1978 and the event most closely associated with that year was the fabled Blizzard of 1978. And yet the biggest storm ... the Cape and near the ocean on the North and South shores. The ...
We were practically swimming in snowflakes. As we remember the anniversary of that fateful day, it's worth noting that our forecast over the next 10 days isn't calling for any significant snowfall in ...
One of the most striking aspects of the Blizzard of ’78 was the powerful wind gusts that accompanied the snowfall. Wind speeds reached up to 80 miles per hour, creating monstrous snowdrifts that ...
It happened over *** generation ago, so why are we still talking about the blizzard of '78 today? Easy. Simply put, this was *** crazy wild storm. No, those aren't meteorological terms ...