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The storm system caused blizzard conditions over much of the eastern seaboard. It brought thundersnow from Texas through Pennsylvania with some white out conditions. The system was responsible for 300 deaths and power outages to over 10 million customers.
On March 1214, 1993, a massive storm system bore down on nearly half of the U.S. population. Causing approximately $5.5 billion in damages ($11.5 billion in 2022 dollars), Americas Storm of the Century, as it would become known, swept from the Deep South all the way up the East Coast.
Images on this page can be magnified (enlarged) by left clicking on them, and resized back to original size with a second click. The March 1993 Storm of the Century struck the gulf coast of Florida late on Friday March 12, 1993 and continued slamming Florida and states to the north on Saturday.
An estimated 40 percent of the countrys population experienced the effects of the storm and it led to a total of 208 fatalities. In all, the storm resulted in 318 deaths, and caused $5.5 billion (1993 USD) in damages.
No Name Storm may refer to: 1991 Perfect Storm, a noreaster that transitioned into a tropical storm and ultimately strengthened into an unnamed hurricane off the Atlantic coast of the United States.
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The storm dumped nearly 20 inches of snow across the Northeast, with some parts of upstate New York recording over 40 inches.
The most intense hurricane, Emily, was a Category 3 on the SaffirSimpson Hurricane Scale that paralleled close to the North Carolina coastline causing minor damage and a few deaths before moving out to sea.
You may be familiar with this bit of weather folklore about March: If March comes in like a lion, it will go out like a lamb.

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