Home

 › 

Uncategorized

 › 

The 10 Most Devastating Winter Storms to Hit the U.S.

The 10 Most Devastating Winter Storms to Hit the U.S.

The 10 Most Devastating Winter Storms to Hit the U.S.

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Great Blizzard of 1888, Northeast US

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Great Blizzard of 1899, Eastern and Southern US

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Armistice Day Blizzard, Midwest US, 1940

Weather.gov

Great Appalachian Storm, Eastern US, 1950

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Blizzard of 1978, New England and the Midwest

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Superstorm of 1993, Eastern US, 1993

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

North American Blizzard, Eastern US, 1996

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

Snowmageddon, Mid Atlantic US, 2010

thisisbossi / BY-SA 2.0

Winter Storm Jonas, Eastern US, 2016

The National Guard / BY 2.0

Christmas Blizzard, Nationwide US, 2022

Internet Archive / Creative Commons

The 10 Most Devastating Winter Storms to Hit the U.S.
Great Blizzard of 1888, Northeast US
Great Blizzard of 1899, Eastern and Southern US
Armistice Day Blizzard, Midwest US, 1940
Great Appalachian Storm, Eastern US, 1950
Blizzard of 1978, New England and the Midwest
Superstorm of 1993, Eastern US, 1993
North American Blizzard, Eastern US, 1996
Snowmageddon, Mid Atlantic US, 2010
Winter Storm Jonas, Eastern US, 2016
Christmas Blizzard, Nationwide US, 2022

The 10 Most Devastating Winter Storms to Hit the U.S.

Winter storms have shaped American history in ways that go far beyond snow totals and closed roads. From the early days of the republic to the modern era of satellite forecasting, massive blizzards have halted economies, reshaped cities, and exposed how vulnerable even the most advanced societies can be to extreme cold. These storms did not just disrupt daily life. They altered infrastructure planning, emergency response systems, and public understanding of weather risk.

Some of the most powerful winter storms in U.S. history struck with little warning, trapping travelers, collapsing roofs, and cutting off entire regions for days or even weeks. In earlier eras, limited forecasting meant exposure and starvation were common causes of death. In more recent decades, power failures, traffic accidents, and carbon monoxide poisoning have become leading dangers. Damage estimates now routinely climb into the billions, reflecting both the intensity of storms and the concentration of people and infrastructure in their paths.

With the upcoming winter storms slated to hit Tennessee and New York, this list looks back at ten of the biggest winter storms ever to hit the United States, focusing only on true winter events such as blizzards, snowstorms, and Arctic outbreaks. Each storm is remembered not only for snowfall totals or wind speeds, but for the lives lost, the economic toll, and the human stories that emerged when communities were pushed to their limits by snow, ice, and cold.

To top