The National Weather Service (NWS) put out its official snowfall totals Wednesday afternoon, giving Jacksonville an official total of 0.1 inches. While the total doesn't sound impressive, it's officially the city's fifth-most snow accumulation all-time since records began in 1871. Here's how that breaks down:
With snow expectations likely out of the picture despite records statewide, folks are not nearly out of the woods just yet in the Jacksonville area.
With most local schools and city and county offices shutting down Wednesday for dangerous winter conditions, the Jacksonville area is hunkering down.
Well, no snow in Jacksonville. No worries though because there was in Nassau County and plenty more across the state — historic snowfall in fact.
For the first time in more than a third of a century, Jacksonville International Airport recorded measurable snow on Wednesday.
For the second consecutive day, Nassau County reported snow on Thursday as winter weather came back for another round in Northeast Florida.
“North winds 25 to 30 knots with gusts up to 45 knots. Seas 7 to 10 feet, occasionally to 13 feet,” the NWS marine forecast from Fernandina Beach south to St. Augustine said. “Intracoastal waters very rough. Showers. Freezing rain after midnight.”
The locally based Weather Service office that covers Northeast Florida ... According to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather data, it snowed in Jacksonville this week on the ...
From Pensacola to Jacksonville, snowfall was reported ranging from inches-deep to a light dusting. A whopping 9.8 inches was recorded in Milton, Fla. a city about 23 miles northeast of Pensacola. In nearby Molino, 9.5 inches of snow was recorded.
Florida is experiencing snow, a rare event for the Sunshine State. Learn more about the areas in Florida that witnessed snowfall.
Florida snowfall records shattered this week, with Pensacola receiving 8.9 inches, per the National Weather Service, easily topping the four inches that fell in 1954. As North Florida defrosts, schools,