![]() ![]() ![]() Residents took to cross-country skiing to get to the store for supplies, even as Denver worked hard to restore power to over 135,000 of its residents. Club Vinyl’s roof collapsed, the snow tore a hole in DIA’s white tent, and heavy loads of white stuff took down branches and sheds and committed acts of frigid violence all over the metro area before finally winding down. This was a big one: 31.8 inches of wet, heavy snow fell over a few spring days and just refused to stop. Old-timers in town will tell you that this snow was one of the clearest memories of their childhood: The world was fresh and new, and the only fighting left to do was done with snowballs. World War II had just come to a close, the post-war economy was just beginning to swing upward, and Denver got 30.4 inches of snow, covering the streets and preventing the town's streetcars - then at the height of their use as methods of mass transit - from taking anyone pretty much anywhere. The Queen City of the Plains essentially became The Shining’s Overlook Hotel, only for real, minus the ax-wielding Jack Nicholson. Over four days in 1906, 22.7 inches of snow fell along the Front Range, and newspapers on the coasts reported that the monster storm had taken down telegraph lines and completely isolated cities like Denver. This, of course, was nearly twenty years before the Westin Hotel opened, so marooned would-be travelers did the best they could, sleeping where they could find space, with purses for pillows and coats for blankets and a list of rightful complaints a mile long. Still-shiny-new Denver International Airport got hit hard by the October 1997 snowstorm, when the all-weather airport was completely shut down, stranding over 4,000 passengers with 21.9 inches of snowfall. Ah, 1983: When Alaska came to Denver for Turkey Day and refused to leave. What’s worse (and rare for Denver!) was that the snow stuck around for more than two months, refusing to fully melt. On Thanksgiving, you’re supposed to go over the river and through the wood to grandmother’s house, right? The only way you were going to do that on Thanksgiving 1983 was if you actually had a sleigh, because the 21.5 inches that fell kept you from traveling in almost anything else. But the main problem was the tangle at DIA, and not for the last time. Hundreds of motorists had to be rescued from roadsides around the metro area, and drifting became an issue. The snowfall measured 20.7 inches, and completely screwed holiday travelers not only here in Colorado, but across the country, as the domino effect of airline cancellations kicked in. Wednesday: Alamosa: 2.8 inches Arvada: 5.8 inches Aspen: 8 inches Avondale: 9 inches Aurora: 3.5. The most recent date on the list of the top ten Denver snowstorms was the pre-Christmas 2006 blizzard. Here is a look at the preliminary snowfall totals from the National Weather Service as of 7 p.m. It’s a pretty good bet that a footand a half of snow was tougher to handle back then. This particular record was set only 25 years after Denver was founded, and only weeks after Thomas Edison installed the first electric lighting system in New Jersey. This is the earliest date in the top ten, though that probably has something to do with when people began keeping records. Livermore (9.The first month of 1883 went out in a white blur here in Denver, with 19.3 inches falling over a few very cold days. The miles and direction indicate location of reporting sites. Here are snowfall totals reported as of various times on Wednesday from the National Weather Service and the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail & Snow Network. How much snow did Fort Collins get compared to the rest of Colorado? Fort Collins, Windsor and Loveland were on accident alert and many roads were closed on the Eastern Plains on Thursday, including Interstate 70. Still, the forecast prompted the closure of area schools, including Poudre School District and CSU, and closed or delayed the opening of governmental offices. Fort Collins snow shoveling: What to know about shoveling snow in Fort Collins following a storm ![]()
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