White Christmas

A white Christmas means that at least an inch of snow has fallen on Christmas Morning. This is more common in some countries than in others.

For example, in the United Kingdom, there are not a lot of White Christmases; but in Canada, there is almost always a White Christmas. Ireland's last "official" White Christmas was in 2004.[1]

White Christmases in Canada

City Chance of a White Christmas[2]
Vancouver11%
Calgary59%
Edmonton88%
Saskatoon98%
Regina91%
Winnipeg98%
Sudbury100%
Windsor41%
Toronto57%
Ottawa83%
Montreal80%
Quebec City100%
Halifax59%
St. John's65%
Whitehorse100%
Yellowknife100%

White Christmases in the United States

City Chance of a White Christmas[3]
Anchorage, Alaska100%
Annette Island, Alaska (Alaska Panhandle)17%
Fairbanks, Alaska100%
Phoenix, Arizona1%
Little Rock, Arkansas3%
Los Angeles, California1%
San Francisco, California1%
Denver, Colorado50%
Hartford, Connecticut57%
Wilmington, Delaware13%
Washington, DC13%
Savannah, Georgia3%
Boise, Idaho30%
Chicago, Illinois40%
Indianapolis, Indiana30%
Des Moines, Iowa50%
Topeka, Kansas23%
Louisville, Kentucky13%
Portland, Maine83%
Boston, Massachusetts23%
Detroit, Michigan50%
Marquette, Michigan (Upper Peninsula)90%
Duluth, Minnesota97%
Minneapolis, Minnesota73%
St. Louis, Missouri23%
Helena, Montana67%
Omaha, Nebraska44%
Reno, Nevada20%
Concord, New Hampshire87%
Newark, New Jersey23%
Albuquerque, New Mexico3%
Massena, New York77%
New York, New York10%
Charlotte, North Carolina1%
Fargo, North Dakota83%
Cleveland, Ohio60%
Akron, Ohio60%
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma3%
Portland, Oregon1%
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania10%
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania33%
Providence, Rhode Island37%
Charleston, South Carolina3%
Rapid City, South Dakota47%
Nashville, Tennessee13%
Amarillo, Texas7%
Dallas, Texas8%
Salt Lake City, Utah53%
Richmond, Virginia7%
Seattle, Washington8%
Spokane, Washington70%
Charleston, West Virginia30%
Huntington, West Virginia23%
Milwaukee, Wisconsin60%
Casper, Wyoming47%

Since the 1950's, there are less White Christmases in the USA.[4]

White Christmases in the United Kingdom

Location Chance of a White Christmas[5]
London13%
Birmingham14%
Aberporth9%
Glasgow13%
Aberdeen25%
Belfast16%
Lerwick32%
Bradford7%
St Mawgan7%

References

  1. "Chances of white Christmas begin to drift". Archived from the original on 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  2. Canada, Environment and Climate Change; Canada, Environment and Climate Change (9 September 2011). "Historical Christmas snowfall data". aem.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2008-12-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Dye, Lee. Study: White Christmases Have Become Rare. ABC News. December 18, 2003.
  5. "White Christmases" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-08. Retrieved 2012-04-26.

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