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January 2000 North American blizzard

2000 in North Carolina2000 in Virginia2000 meteorology2000 natural disasters in the United StatesAll pages needing cleanup
Blizzards in the United StatesJanuary 2000 in North AmericaNatural disasters in North CarolinaNatural disasters in VirginiaUse mdy dates from February 2025Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from November 2013
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Jan2000vortex

The Carolina Crusher was one of the most powerful winter storms on record in parts of North Carolina. The storm hit the Greater Richmond Region on January 25, 2000, causing thousands of power outages within the area leaving 11 in (280 mm) of snow in Richmond, Virginia and 20.3 in (520 mm) in Raleigh-Durham International Airport before moving out to the Atlantic Ocean.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article January 2000 North American blizzard (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

January 2000 North American blizzard
Mike Road, Richmond

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.476 ° E -77.432 °
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Address

Mike Road 3414
23234 Richmond
Virginia, United States
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Nearby Places

Warwick, Virginia (Chesterfield County)

Warwick was an unincorporated town and port in Chesterfield County, Virginia, located on the navigable portion of the James River about 5 miles south of downtown Richmond, Virginia (and east of the Fall Line). Due to a sandbar in the river, although the falls did not begin until the river reached Richmond and Manchester, Warwick was as far upriver as many ships of the day could safely navigate. Regarding navigation on the James River, in his Notes on the State of Virginia, written in 1781–82, then-Governor Thomas Jefferson stated "Vessels of 250 tons may go to Warwick" [1] In 1619, Falling Creek Ironworks was established in the Virginia Colony near the future site of Warwick. The first in what became the United States, the facilities were destroyed and most of the colonists there killed during the Indian Massacre of 1622 on Good Friday, March 22, 1622. Warwick, just west of where a local tributary, Falling Creek, has its confluence with the river, was in existence from 1730 to 1781. It was an important port and manufacturing center. During the American Revolutionary War, Warwick's craftsmen turned out clothing and shoes, and its mills ground flour and meal for the Continental troops stationed at Chesterfield Courthouse. It was also an important center for manufacturing of naval equipment for Virginia's Continental Navy fleet. On April 30, 1781, General Benedict Arnold's British troops burned the town, destroying ships, warehouses, mills, tannery storehouses, and ropewalks. The town of Warwick no longer exists, but its place in history is noted on a Virginia Historical Marker nearby. In modern times, the Port of Richmond's facility known locally as Richmond Deepwater Terminal includes part of the former site of Warwick.