North American blizzard of 2008

Preview warning: The article title was redundantly supplied in |name=. Remove this parameter; the article title is used as the name by default.
North American blizzard of 2008
The storm near Cleveland, Ohio on March 8, 2008
Meteorological history
FormedMarch 6, 2008
DissipatedMarch 10, 2008
Blizzard
Lowest pressure984 millibars (29.1 inHg)
Maximum snowfall or ice accretion28.5 in (720 mm) of snow in Madison, Ohio
Tornado outbreak
Tornadoes13
Maximum ratingEF2 tornado
Overall effects
Fatalitiesat least 13 direct, 4 indirect
Damage$789 million
Areas affectedSouthern and Eastern North America

Part of the 2007–08 North American winter storms and Tornadoes of 2008

The North American blizzard of 2008 was a winter storm that struck most of southern and eastern North America from March 6 to March 10, 2008. The storm was most notable for a major winter storm event from Arkansas to Quebec. It also produced severe weather across the east coast of the United States with heavy rain, damaging winds and tornadoes, causing locally significant damage. The hardest hit areas by the wintry weather were from the Ohio Valley to southern Quebec where up to a half a meter of snow fell locally including the major cities of Columbus, Ohio, Cleveland, Ohio, and Ottawa, Ontario. For many areas across portions of the central United States, Ontario and Quebec, it was the worst winter storm in the past several years. The blizzard and its aftermath caused at least 17 deaths across four US states and three Canadian provinces, while hundreds others were injured mostly in weather-related accidents and tornadoes.