— A winter storm produced measurable snowfall across southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Delaware, with official National Weather Service reports updated through 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Accumulations varied sharply by locality: Cherry Hill, N.J. reported the largest single total at 10.0 inches at 11:30 p.m., while Mount Holly reached 9.5 inches the same night. State and local road crews mobilized overnight; the National Weather Service provided the snowfall tallies used in this roundup.
Key Takeaways
- Cherry Hill, New Jersey recorded the highest listed accumulation at 10.0 inches as of 11:30 p.m. Sunday.
- Mount Holly, N.J. reported 9.5 inches at 11:30 p.m.; Blackwood and Hainesport each reported 9.0 inches earlier in the evening.
- In Delaware, Hockessin reported 7.0 inches (9:30 p.m.), and Dover logged 6.0 inches (9:55 p.m.).
- Pennsylvania highs included Berwyn and Skippack at about 6.5 inches (Berwyn at 9:15 p.m.; Skippack at 11:30 p.m.).
- Several coastal and near-coastal New Jersey communities saw 6–7.6 inches, including Atlantic City (6.0 in., 9:00 p.m.) and Ventnor (7.6 in., 9:33 p.m.).
- Smaller totals under 5 inches were reported across parts of southern and central New Jersey and portions of Pennsylvania, with many observations logged between 6:20 p.m. and 11:30 p.m.
- All figures below derive from the National Weather Service reports compiled by WPVI as of 11:30 p.m. Sunday; accumulations could change with additional measurement or wind redistribution.
Background
The late-February storm developed over the Mid-Atlantic region, producing a band of steady snow during the overnight hours. Meteorologists flagged a combination of cold air at the surface and ample moisture aloft that favored widespread snow rather than mixed precipitation for much of the region. Local National Weather Service offices coordinated observations and public messaging; state departments of transportation pretreated major arteries in advance of the event.
Historically, the Philadelphia metro area and adjacent New Jersey shore have seen variable February storms, with coastal proximity and small shifts in the track creating large differences in totals over short distances. Municipalities, school districts and transit agencies typically weigh overnight totals against road conditions before deciding on closures early Monday. Private observers, cooperative weather stations and spotter networks contributed to the distributed tally reported below.
Main Event
The heaviest reported accumulation in the published list came from Cherry Hill, N.J., at 10.0 inches as measured and timestamped at 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Nearby Mount Holly registered 9.5 inches at the same time, while Blackwood and Hainesport each recorded 9.0 inches earlier in the evening. Observations show a clustering of the highest totals in central and southern New Jersey rather than uniformly across the entire region.
Coastal and near-coastal towns showed mixed results: Atlantic City reported 6.0 inches at 9:00 p.m., Brigantine 7.5 inches at 7:04 p.m., and Ventnor 7.6 inches at 9:33 p.m. In Delaware, Hockessin posted 7.0 inches (9:30 p.m.) and Dover 6.0 inches (9:55 p.m.), while other inland Delaware sites were lower.
Pennsylvania reports were more scattered: Berwyn and Skippack each reported 6.5 inches, while numerous suburban and exurban sites recorded between roughly 3.3 and 6.0 inches. The timing of individual reports ranges from early evening into the late-night hours, reflecting localized variability in storm intensity and reporting cadence.
Analysis & Implications
Snow distribution in this event underscores a common Mid-Atlantic dynamic: tight gradients. A few miles difference in storm track or elevation can shift a location from a moderate accumulation to a near-double amount. That pattern complicates operational decisions for road clearing and transit agencies, which must allocate limited plows and salt resources where they are most needed.
For commuters and motorists, the immediate implication is slower, potentially hazardous travel Monday morning, especially on untreated secondary roads. Agencies typically prioritize interstates and primary routes, leaving residential streets to be cleared later in the day. Local officials will monitor the residual snowpack and drifting, which can enlarge effective travel impacts beyond raw accumulation totals.
Economically, a single overnight storm of this scale commonly prompts short-term business disruption, delayed deliveries and potential school closures. The cost profile is concentrated in snow removal and overtime for municipal crews; longer-lasting impacts depend on how rapidly temperatures rise or if another round of precipitation follows.
Comparison & Data
| Location | State | Snow (in.) | Reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cherry Hill | NJ | 10.0 | 11:30 p.m. |
| Mount Holly | NJ | 9.5 | 11:30 p.m. |
| Blackwood | NJ | 9.0 | 9:49 p.m. |
| Hainesport | NJ | 9.0 | 8:05 p.m. |
| Hockessin | DE | 7.0 | 9:30 p.m. |
| Ventnor | NJ | 7.6 | 9:33 p.m. |
| Dover | DE | 6.0 | 9:55 p.m. |
| Berwyn | PA | 6.5 | 9:15 p.m. |
The table highlights the regional differences: southern New Jersey contains the highest listed totals, while inland Pennsylvania and parts of Delaware generally reported lower to moderate accumulations. These snapshots come from discrete site reports and do not represent continuous grids; radar-derived totals or cooperative station networks can show somewhat different patterns.
Reactions & Quotes
Major NWS office: “Significant snowfall was observed across parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware; totals vary considerably by location.”
National Weather Service (official)
The National Weather Service framed the event as a localized high-impact snow band, urging caution for overnight travel and recommending travelers check the latest advisories before heading out.
State DOT statement: “Crews are out treating and plowing primary routes; municipal crews will address neighborhood streets next.”
State Department of Transportation (official)
Departments of transportation in the affected states confirmed pre-treatment and overnight plowing operations, noting that priorities are interstates and major arterials.
Local resident (community volunteer): “Side streets are narrower and slower to clear; neighbors are helping dig cars out this morning.”
Resident in southern New Jersey (on-the-ground report)
Volunteer and community responses typically follow these events, supplementing municipal efforts particularly in densely populated suburbs where plow access is slower.
Unconfirmed
- Final storm totals for many locations remain provisional until morning rechecks and consolidated NWS reports are issued.
- Localized road closure lists and exact counts of weather-related traffic incidents were still being compiled at the time of the early-morning reports.
- Potential power outage reports in smaller communities had not been verified through utility confirmation when the snowfall table was published.
Bottom Line
The overnight February storm left a patchwork of accumulations across southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Delaware, with pockets of 8–10 inches in parts of central and southern New Jersey and generally lower totals elsewhere. Travelers and employers should expect lingering impacts on secondary roads Monday morning even where reported totals are modest.
Authorities recommend consulting the National Weather Service and state DOTs for updated travel advisories and road condition reports. Finalized storm summaries and post-storm assessments will provide a clearer picture of total impact, costs and response effectiveness over the next 24–48 hours.
Sources
- WPVI-TV article (local broadcast newsroom summary of NWS reports)
- National Weather Service (official forecasts and spot observations)