Monday’s Blizzard of ’26 dumped more than 3 feet of snow in many portions of Rhode Island, and well over 30 inches in parts of Massachusetts. The National Weather Service has updated the latest snowfall totals since Monday night.
Here are the top snowfall totals for each state and their previous record, where data was available from the National Weather Service:
- Dartmouth: 37 inches
- Somerset/Lakeville/Kingston: 36 inches
- Whitman: 33.7 inches
- Westport/Scituate: 32 inches
- Attleboro: 32 inches
- Norton: 31.8 inches; April 1, 1997: 23.3 inches
- Middleborough: 31.2 inches: Jan. 23, 2005: 30 inches
- Berkley: 31 inches
- New Bedford: 31 inches; Feb. 7, 1979: 26 inches
- West Wareham: 30.1 inches
- T.F. Green Airport/Warwick: 37.9 inches; Blizzard of ‘78: 28.6 inches
- Providence: 36 inches
- North Kingstown: 36 inches
- Warren: 35.5 inches
- Newport: 34 inches; Blizzard of ‘78: 28 inches
- Glocester: 33.7 inches
- Coventry: 33.5 inches; Jan. 30, 2022: 18 inches
- Narragansett: 33 inches
- Exeter: 33 inches
- Pawtucket: 32 inches
Both states recorded a new daily snowfall record: T.F. Green Airport soared to 37.9 inches, and Dartmouth trailed with a whopping 37 inches.
Most of this region, including on Cape Cod and the islands, saw an entire winter season play out during one huge big storm. The nearly 38 inches at T.F. Green Airport is an astounding number considering that on average, the Providence area only sees 34.7 inches during an entire winter season.
The previous Rhode Island record for 24-hour snow totals was in Woonsocket, seeing 30 inches in a single day courtesy of the Blizzard of ‘78. And for Mass., the new records beat out the April Fool’s Day storm of 1997, which dropped 29 inches in Natick, Mass., in 1997.
Ken Mahan can be reached at ken.mahan@globe.com. Follow him on Instagram @kenmahantheweatherman.
