Great Blizzard of 1978


The Great Blizzard of 1978, also known as the Cleveland Superbomb, was a historic winter storm that struck the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes regions of the United States as well as Southern Ontario in Canada from Wednesday, January 25 through Friday, January 27, 1978. It is often cited as one of the most severe blizzards in US history. The third lowest non-tropical atmospheric pressure ever recorded in the mainland United States occurred as the storm passed over Mount Clemens, Michigan, where barometer readings fell to on January 26.

Meteorological synopsis

Late on Tuesday, January 24, 1978, surface maps revealed a moisture-laden Gulf low-pressure system developing over the southern United States, while a separate and unrelated low-pressure system was present over the Upper Midwest. A powerful Arctic jet stream surged straight south through the Northern Great Plains while a powerful subtropical jet moved south through Arizona, both during the time a huge upper ridge of high pressure forced the Pacific jet north into Northern Canada. These Arctic and subtropical jet streams merged which led the deepening Gulf low-pressure system, which had moved over Alabama and Georgia, to undergo explosive cyclogenesis and move rapidly northward towards West Virginia during the evening of January 25. To be classified as undergoing explosive cyclogenesis, a storm's central pressure must drop at least 24 millibars, or an average of 1 millibar per hour, over a 24-hour period; the Great Blizzard dropped by a remarkable 40 millibars in that 24 hours.
The storm initially began as rain, but quickly changed to heavy snow during the predawn hours, leading to frequent whiteouts and zero visibility during the day on January 26. As the storm headed for Ohio, it was "of unprecedented magnitude", according to the National Weather Service, which categorized it as a rare severe blizzard, the severest grade of winter storm. Particularly hard hit were Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and southeastern Wisconsin. Muskegon, Michigan, had up to 52 inches of snow in four days due to heavy lake-effect snow squalls after the blizzard began. Winds gusting up to caused drifts that nearly buried some homes. Wind chill values reached across much of Ohio, where 51 of the at least 90 storm-related deaths occurred.
In Canada, the storm caused blizzard conditions across southwestern Ontario. In London, Ontario, of snow fell; the maximum wind-speed was.

Barometric pressure

On January 26, the third-lowest atmospheric pressure recorded in the mainland United States, apart from a tropical system, occurred as the storm passed over Mount Clemens, Michigan. There, barometer readings fell to. In Detroit, air pressure fell to. At around the same time, the absolute low pressure was measured at Sarnia, in Southwestern Ontario, Canada, where barometer readings decreased to. Toronto pressure fell to 28.40 inches, breaking its record by 0.17.
The barometric pressure measurement recorded in Mount Clemens, Michigan, was the third-lowest non-tropical atmospheric pressure recorded in the mainland United States and the lowest in the Central United States. The lowest confirmed pressure for a non-tropical system in the continental United States had been set by a January 1913 Atlantic coast storm. The lowest central pressure for the 1978 blizzard was measured in Sarnia, Ontario. On rare occasions, extra-tropical cyclones with central pressures below 28 inches of mercury or about 95 kPa have been recorded in Wiscasset, Maine and Newfoundland. In addition, the blizzard is the highest-ranking winter storm on the Regional Snowfall Index, with a maximum value of 39.07, and one of only 26 storms to reach Category 5 on the scale.

Impact

The blizzard was the worst in Ohio history; 51 people died as a result of the storm. Over 5,000 members of the Ohio National Guard were called in to make numerous rescues. Police asked citizens with four-wheel-drive vehicles or snowmobiles to transport doctors and nurses to the hospital. From January 26 to 27, the entire Ohio Turnpike was shut down for the first time ever. The total effect on transportation in Ohio was described by Major General James C. Clem of the Ohio National Guard as comparable to a nuclear attack.
Michigan Governor William Milliken declared a state of emergency and called out the Michigan National Guard to aid stranded motorists and road crews. The Michigan State Police pronounced Traverse City, Michigan, "unofficially closed" and warned area residents to stay home. WTCM radio staffer Marty Spaulding, who closed the bayfront location station the previous night at 11pm, was called to reopen it the next day at 6am as regular staffers could not get there due to impassable roads. Upon arriving after a 45-minute walk in waist-deep snow from his home 10 city blocks away, he had to dig down "a foot" to put the key in the front door.
In Indiana on day two, half an hour after the front passed through the area, the Indianapolis International Airport was closed due to whiteout conditions. At 3am, the blizzard produced peak winds of. Temperatures dropped to that morning. Wind chills remained at nearly all day. Governor Otis Bowen declared a snow emergency for the entire state the morning of the 26th. Snow drifts of made travel virtually impossible, stranding an Amtrak train and thousands of vehicles and travelers. During the afternoon of the 26th, the Indiana State Police considered all Indiana roads closed.
Classes at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, and the University of Notre Dame in Notre Dame, Indiana, were canceled for the first time in the history of those universities; at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, where of snow fell, for the third time in its history; and, at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, for the first time since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. An inch or more, usually much more, of snow remained on much of that area for nearly two months. In Indiana, schools were closed for as much as three weeks, and the historic Indiana High School Boys Basketball Tournament was postponed for 17 days. The storm did much damage to the Ohio Valley and the Great Lakes.
Northwest of Toronto in Brampton, Ontario, on Thursday afternoon, school buses could not get through deep snow to the then-rural campus of Sheridan College to take students home. Neither could any other vehicles, so some community college students had to stay on campus overnight.

Quotes

C. R. Snider, National Weather Service Meteorologist in Ann Arbor, Michigan, said on January 30, 1978:

Snowfall totals

The following table displays selected U.S. snowfall totals during January 25–29, 1978:
''Note: * = Total data for a 24-hour period.''

Lake Ontario and Lake Erie snow belts

The combination of persistent lake effect and cyclonic snowfalls in January 1978 resulted in several all-time monthly record snowfall totals to the lee shores of the lower Great Lakes. The cooperative observer station at the Bennetts Bridge power plant, near Altmar, New York, established an official all-time New York State monthly snowfall record with of snowfall in January 1978.
Long-term New York weather stations that established all-time monthly snowfall records in January 1978 include: