A widespread 2006 winter storm dumped roughly 6 to 20+ inches of heavy, wet snow across the region, with thunder and lightning reported and significant impacts from downed limbs and power lines.
A powerhouse 1983 blizzard buried the region with up to 30 inches of snow, producing thundersnow, deep drifts, and one of the biggest storms on record.
Brutal Arctic air in 1899 held the high to just 4 degrees—the coldest ever recorded—setting the stage for even deeper cold and a historic blizzard to follow.
The 2010 blizzard “Snoverkill” piled onto fresh Snowmageddon totals, boosting seasonal snowfall to a record and leaving a massive 20 to 40+ inch snowpack across the region.
The legendary 2010 “Snowmageddon” began, ultimately burying the region under up to three feet of snow and delivering some of the highest totals ever recorded nearby.
A strong 1886 storm dropped over 9 inches in a day and more than a foot overall, followed by a surge of frigid air that sent temperatures plunging below zero.
Unseasonable warmth in 2002 pushed temperatures to a record 77 degrees, part of a remarkable late-January to early-February stretch with repeated 60-degree days.