The National Weather Service (NWS) put out its official snowfall totals Wednesday afternoon, giving Jacksonville an official total of 0.1 inches. While the total doesn't sound impressive, it's officially the city's fifth-most snow accumulation all-time since records began in 1871. Here's how that breaks down:
Dozens of boats packed into at the Prime Osborn Convention Center for the 77th annual Jacksonville Boat Show kicking off Friday. More than 100 vendors are selling boats and accessories all weekend long.
Mayor Donna Deegan orders City Hall flags to fly at half-staff for Sam Mousa, who died at 72. He left his mark while working for five mayors.
Just how much snow & freezing rain fell in Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia? A look inside the numbers from the Jacksonville-area winter storm.
For the first time in seven years, the National Weather Service issued a Winter Storm Warning for Florida. Here's what that means for Jacksonville.
New Orleans has Super Bowl LIX. But Northeast Florida has Snow Day II. For the second consecutive day, wintry precipitation rolled into the Jacksonville area on Thursday morning with light snow recorded at Fernandina Beach, a formerly-unthinkable double ...
For the first time in more than a third of a century, Jacksonville International Airport recorded measurable snow on Wednesday.
Storm Warning is in effect for the entire Interstate 10 corridor where snow and ice accumulations could reach 4" over the next 24 hours. Pensacola will likely see the most snowfall in the state while greater amounts of ice are anticipated for cities such as Tallahassee and Jacksonville.
Several bridges across Jacksonville were closed in both directions Wednesday morning amid the winter storm causing hazardous icy conditions, according to the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office.
With snow expectations likely out of the picture despite records statewide, folks are not nearly out of the woods just yet in the Jacksonville area.
Jacksonville International Airport (Sleet) 0.1 in The distinction for snow is nuanced by how it forms and this yields several other forms of frozen precipitation. Let’s dive into the differences between snow, sleet, and snow grains, and what makes each unique.