The last time Houston saw measurable snow was in Feb. 2021. This week's snowfall could have a place in the record books. The most snow ever measured in Houston was when the city saw 20 inches in 1895.
Southeast Texas was included in the first ever Blizzard Warning issued by the National Weather Service Lake Charles.
Houston woke up to a coating of fresh snow Tuesday morning. How does Tuesday's snowfall stack up against the city's other rare snowfalls?
20 inches on Valentine's Day The mother of all snows came on Valentine's Day in 1895. Houston was hit with 20 inches of snow on Feb. 14 and 15. The snow didn't just fall in Houston. It was a ...
There were unofficial reports of 10 inches (26 centimeters) of snow in New Orleans in 1895, NWS meteorologist Christopher Bannan said. For Houston, the winter blast marks the latest dramatic ...
If the forecast comes to fruition, it would be the most snow the city has seen since 1960 and possibly one of its heaviest snowfall events ever recorded. On Feb. 14, 1895, Houston received 20 ...
The snowstorm currently lashing the Gulf Coast is being described as a once in a generation weather event, the National Weather Service said Monday.
The Houston area looked more like a snow globe on Tuesday morning than it has in the last half-century, with snowfall from Winter Storm Enzo totaling over six inches in the most wintry ...
Houston is unaccustomed to freezing temperatures and snow accumulation ... The most significant snowfall occurred on February 14, 1895, when the city received a record-breaking 20 inches ...
Snow totals in Louisiana have broken records. Parts of Florida, Texas and Georgia have also accumulated several inches of ...
Snow is rare in Texas’ largest city. In February 1895, a two-day storm dropped a record 20 inches on metropolitan Houston. Officials said one person has died from hypothermia in Georgia.