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15 years ago, Snowmageddon crushed Western Pa. | TribLIVE.com
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15 years ago, Snowmageddon crushed Western Pa.

Chris Pastrick
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Even days after Snowmageddon hit, Nicholson Street in Squirrel Hill was still covered on Feb. 10, 2010.
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Nick Senella of Greensburg waits for the light to change at the intersection of Pennsylvania Avenue and Pittsburgh Street on his snowmobile on a snow-covered tour of downtown Greensburg on Feb. 6, 2010.
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Snow-covered mailboxes bend under the weight of the heavy load along Autumn Leaves Road in Ligonier Township on Feb. 8, 2010.
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Andrew Halasz, 42, digs his car out of its parking space on Murray Avenue on Feb. 10, 2010.
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A Greensburg Parks and Recreation dump truck drops off another load of snow from the downtown streets on Feb. 9, 2010. The city dumped much of its overflow snow at Lynch Field.
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Rachel Walker, 21, of the South Side digs her car out in Oakmont on Feb. 6, 2010.
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New Kensington firefighters Ray Collins and Tom Kotoff from Station 565 clean snow from a hydrant along Broadlawn Street in New Kensington on Feb. 9, 2010.
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From left: Seth Uncapher, 12, Kevin Uncapher, 17, Matt Zemba, 16, and Tyler “Turtle” Harris, 17, sculpt the ceiling of an igloo they built out of snow in Lower Burrell on Feb. 9, 2010.
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Anthony Paluzzi, 19, of Greensburg, an employee of Arnold Palmer Motors in Latrobe, works to clear off snow from the some 100-plus cars on the lot Feb. 8, 2010.
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Postal carrier Jeff Ewing, who works out of the New Kensington Post Office, delivers mail along the snow-lined sidewalks on Riverview Drive in New Kensington on Feb. 8, 2010. Carriers were unable to deliver mail two days earlier because the postal trucks from Pittsburgh never arrived with the local mail.
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Amanda Leonard works to remove snow and free her car in front of her residence on East Cedar Street in South Connellsville on Feb. 8, 2010.
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A man rides his tractor down Hulton Road in Oakmont on Feb. 6, 2010. Many found travel nearly impossible after the record winter storm that blanketed the region in snow.
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Nikki Navta wields a chainsaw as she and Gary Lilly cut a fallen tree branch away from a neighbor’s car on Resaca Place in the Mexican War Streets on Feb. 6, 2010.
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Barbara Talerico looks up at the snow-covered branches of the trees lining Resaca Place in the Mexican War Streets as she carries a bag with coffee and treats to a friend’s house on Feb. 6, 2010.
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Tom Svezeny begins the task of clearing 21 inches of snow to free his vehicle on Franklin Avenue in Vandergrift on Feb. 6, 2010.
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A snow plow from Hempfield Township clears the snow on Buckingham Drive on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2010.
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A snowbound motorist headed for the Parkway East gets push from a group of Squirrel Hill pedestrians on Feb. 6, 2010.
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The covers of the Tribune-Review and Valley News Dispatch — on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010, detailed Snowmageddon.

Two days before what came to be known as Snowmageddon, the National Weather Service forecast the Western Pennsylvania region could expect about “6 to 8 inches of snow.”

The following day, the forecast was revised: Winter storm warnings were calling for a heavy snowfall beginning Friday afternoon — Feb. 5, 2010.

Pennsylvania State Police in Greensburg, Indiana and Somerset were urging residents to refrain from calling with travel-related questions.

As flights were being canceled, residents flooded grocery stores to stock up on essentials. (Milk, bread and toilet paper, of course.)

It all turned out to be the fourth-largest snowstorm on record in Pittsburgh — according to the National Weather Service — with 21.1 inches on Feb. 5 and 6. Another 8 inches fell over the following week, and snowpacks ranged from 12 to 28 inches.

Virtually none of it melted quickly.

In the days and weeks afterward, public works crews all over Western Pennsylvania worked to clear the snow-choked roadways. Residents — many of whom lost power — were forced to dig out their vehicles while backloaders and bulldozers helped out.

Happily for the kids, schools were canceled for days, some even up to a week. This was in the days before remote learning was an option.

The region’s largest snowstorm, by the way, happened Nov. 24-26, 1950, when 27.4 inches of snow fell.

Chris Pastrick is a TribLive digital producer. An Allegheny County native, he began working for the Valley News Dispatch in 1993 and joined the Trib in 1997. He can be reached at cpastrick@triblive.com.

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