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Pensacola saw 7.6 inches of snow between midnight Jan. 21 to midnight Jan. 22, Chace said. Snow started falling at 12:30 p.m. Jan. 21 and ended about 9 p.m. The Milton and Jay areas got nine to 10 ...
Pensacola is set to break its 24-hour snowfall record set more than 100 years ago as it awoke to subfreezing temperatures for the second day in a row. A "significant" winter storm began to roll ...
Visitors, residents capture snow on the beach in Florida Pensacola, Florida experienced record-breaking snowfall A "significant" winter storm began to roll into the Pensacola area on Tuesday, Jan. 21.
The all-time greatest snowfall in the Sunshine State was 4″ in Milton, outside of Pensacola, on March 6, 1954, which was eclipsed on Tuesday by tallies around Pensacola. “I don’t have to ...
Northwest Florida, including Pensacola, is expected to see between 4 to 6 inches of snow as early as 9 a.m. Tuesday morning and continuing until the evening, according to the National Weather Service.
The Pensacola area has also had more snowfall than New York, New York (5.8 inches), Sioux Falls, South Dakota (4.3 inches) and Des Moines, Iowa (4.3 inches). Pensacola, Escambia, Santa Rosa county ...
Pensacola destroyed its old record for snowfall Tuesday, Jan. 21. The official total from the National Weather Service Mobile was 7.6 inches of snow, according to Jessica Chace, warning ...
The Sunshine State's all-time greatest snowfall was 4 inches in Milton, outside of Pensacola, on March 6, 1954, which was eclipsed on Tuesday by the measurements around Pensacola.
"This storm has the potential to be historic for portions of the forecast area," the NWS wrote in its 11 a.m. update. "Mobile's 24-hour snowfall record being 6 inches, set in 1895, and Pensacola's ...
Pensacola saw 7.6 inches of snow between midnight Jan. 21 to midnight Jan. 22, Chace said. Snow started falling at 12:30 p.m. Jan. 21 and ended about 9 p.m.
The Sunshine State's all-time greatest snowfall was 4 inches in Milton, outside of Pensacola, on March 6, 1954, which was eclipsed on Tuesday by the measurements around Pensacola.
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