America braces for its coldest Christmas Eve EVER! Bomb cyclone set to bring record low temperatures
America braces for its coldest Christmas Eve EVER! Bomb cyclone is set to bring record low temperatures to Florida, Georgia and Pennsylvania: Montana National Park thermometer breaks because it’s too cold
- Millions of Americans were shivering as the country entered the Christmas weekend, with record lows being reported and forecast
- It will be the coldest Christmas Eve ever in Tallahassee, Atlanta, Pittsburg and Philadelphia, forecasters predict
- As of Friday evening, 5,000 flights had been cancelled – with Seattle, Chicago, New York and Detroit airports all hit hard
- Travel was treacherous, with a 50-car pile-up in Ohio leaving four dead, and 100 cars reported to have crashed near the Canadian city of London
- Blackouts were affecting millions, with outages reported in Tennessee and parts of Brooklyn and Queens, as well as from Maine to North Carolina
Tens of millions of Americans are bracing for the coldest Christmas in living memory, with cities in Florida, Georgia and Pennsylvania expecting record-breaking lows.
At least ten people died this week in vehicle crashes that authorities said were likely related to the storm in Kentucky, Kansas, Ohio and Oklahoma, with a 50-car pile-up in Ohio and 100 crashes reported just north of the Canadian border, near London, Ontario.
One Ontario Provincial Police officer described the corridor as ‘one of the worst traffic scenes’ he’s ever witnessed.
More flights were cancelled on Friday – 5,259, as of 7:30pm – than on any other day of the year, with Seattle airport the worst affected.
Chicago O’Hare, New York’s LaGuardia and Detroit’s airport were also hard-hit.
A family is seen running to their car in Flint, Michigan, on Friday amid blizzard conditions
A car is seen in Seattle on Friday having skidded off the road in wintry conditions
The Weather Prediction Center was forecasting the temperatures would continue to plummet
Elle Magruder, 20, takes a rest while waiting on her delayed flight home to Dallas, at Ontario International Airport in California on Friday
Travelers on Friday are seen heading through Miami airport, as thousands of flights are canceled
Passengers are seen at New York City’s JFK airport on one of the busiest travel days of the year – blighted by 5,000 flight cancellations
Hundreds of suitcases are seen at San Francisco International Airport, with bags stuck due to airline cancellations
And millions of people were without power, as the grid was knocked out in cities across the country.
Nashville recorded below-zero temperatures for the first time in 25 years, and thousands were without power for swathes of Friday afternoon.
The Tennessee Valley Authority, which provides power for 10 million people, tweeted guidance on how to save power during the shortages caused by the storms.
‘Today’s been unprecedented, with historic cold temperatures affecting the entire country and driving power demand to record levels in the region,’ they tweeted, recommending putting off tasks that can wait such as laundry, and lowering the thermostat by a degree or two.
Blackouts were reported from Brooklyn to Maine, and down to North Carolina.
The ten deaths since Wednesday include three killed in car crashes in Kansas.
In Kentucky, three people died due to the storm – two in vehicle crashes and the other a homeless person in Louisville, Governor Andy Beshear said.
And in Ohio, four people have died ‘as a result of weather-related auto accidents’ and several others have been injured, according to Gov. Mike DeWine.
Some of the coldest areas remained the midwest, with Wyoming, Colorado and the Dakotas all experiencing intense, life-threatening cold.
A 50-car pile-up was reported in Ohio, causing at least three fatalities
Jack-knifed trucks crunched cars, and vehicles skidded into each other as the chaos unfolded
One truck, towards the rear of the photo, can be seen forced up into the air in the pile-up
The crash was reported on Ohio Turnpike 106 on Friday, amid blizzard conditions
The roof of a building in Lincoln, New Hampshire was sheered off on Friday morning
Rubble from the shredded roof can be seen lying across the parking lot on Friday
In Oklahoma, a woman took a photo of water freezing straight from her tap
In McAlester, Oklahoma, water froze as soon as it came from the tap.
Angela Smith, who filmed the footage, said it was inside a building where she normally trained dogs.
In Montana, the temperature dropped so rapidly on December 21 that the thermometer could not keep up and stopped working.
Christmas will cap a week of intense cold in the state: on December 21, Elk Park, north of Butte, recorded 50 below; Lincoln 49 below; Potomac 49 below; and Polebridge 46 below.
In Bozeman, a new daily record of 44-below was recorded early Thursday morning, just two degrees warmer than the city’s all-time cold weather record.
In New Hampshire, the roof of a Travelodge by Wyndham hotel swimming pool was blown off and crashed into a car on Friday morning. No one was injured.
New York City saw high winds, and flooding in some areas. Parts of Brooklyn and Queens were experiencing blackouts.
Near Rockaway Beach, chunks of a dead sperm whale that washed up on the shore were driven onto the streets.
Lake Erie is seen with frozen trees and massive waves as the storm buffeted Ohio and upstate New York
Vehicles involved in multiple collisions are seen along the HWY 401 and HWY 402 corridor near London, Ontario
Fragments of vehicles are seen along the highway in London, Ontario on Friday
One local police officer in Canada said the traveling conditions were the worst he had ever experienced
‘In one of those ‘Only in Rockaway’ scenarios, it appears parts of the sperm whale that was necropsied last week, is now on Rockaway Beach Blvd and Beach 116th Street,’ tweeted one local.
‘Can’t make this up.’
The 32-foot female whale washed up on December 13 and surfers and local authorities tried to return her to the ocean, but she died before she reached the open water.
Her carcass was chopped up for transportation, but slabs of whale meat were blown onto the streets on Friday by the wind and waves.
Lake Erie in Pennsylvania and Upstate New York had reports of 37-ft waves, and the banks were pure ice and frozen snow.
Particularly hard-hit was Buffalo, New York, where weatherman Dan Russell shared terrifying footage of the blizzard.
‘Conditions in downtown #Buffalo,’ he said.
‘I’ve covered many winter weather storms through the years. This is about, if not the worst I’ve ever seen!
‘A true #Blizzard with no letting up anytime soon.’
Winds as high as 70 miles per hour are expected at times on Saturday, and areas of blowing snow will produce zero visibility, according to forecasters.
There were 96,000 electric customers without power across New York State on Friday evening, according to PowerOutage.us.
New York City will experience its coldest Christmas Eve since 1906, and Washington DC the second-coldest ever, only beaten by 1989.
Chicago is expecting temperatures to rebound above zero, but the city will still experience its coldest Christmas Eve since 1983.
Many parts of Florida will experience the peak of their cold on Christmas Day.
It will be the coldest December 25 since 1983 for Miami, Tampa, Orlando and West Palm Beach, according to the weather service.
Tallahassee will have its coldest Christmas Eve ever, as will Atlanta, Georgia, and in Pennsylvania the cities of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
The temperatures will begin to rise early next week, but New York and Washington, DC, will each experience their coldest Christmas Day since 2000.