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		 "Heavy snow tonight,tapering off tomorrow" 
 
That's what the weather page of The Providence Journal said on Monday morning, Feb. 6, 1978.  
 
 Blizzard of '78: Storm statistics  
 
Official snowfall: 28.6 inches at T.F. Green Airport, the National Weather Service measuring station. During the most intense 24 hours, 27.6 inches fell, a record dating to 1905. 
 
Deepest Weather Service-listed unofficial snowfall: 54 inches, Woonsocket. 
 
Least unofficial snowfall: 10 inches, Block Island. 
 
Most intense snowfall: 3 inches/hour Feb. 6, 7 to 8 p.m. 
 
Biggest wind gust: 58 knots, or 67 mph, Feb. 6, 8 p.m. 
 
Duration: Began Feb. 6 at 10:10 a.m.; ended Feb. 7 at 10:44 p.m. 
 
Deaths attributed to Blizzard: 21 (in Rhode Island). 
 
Cars abandoned on Routes 95, 195 and 146: 1,950. 
 
Abandoned cars towed from Providence streets: 3,000. 
 
Drivers who spent first night in cars: 1,000. 
 
Motorists rescued by Rhode Island National Guard: 2,968. 
 
Children stranded overnight in schools: 900. 
 
Shelters opened: 66. 
 
Persons sheltered: 9,150. 
 
Trips by National Guard ferrying doctors, nurses, medicine: 3,527. 
 
Home, businesses losing electric power: 11,800. 
 
U.S. military rescue force: 478 soldiers, 178 vehicles. 
 
Pieces of equipment rented from Buffalo, N.Y.: 100. 
 
City's initial estimate of snow-clearing force: 100 pieces. 
 
City's later estimate of snow-clearing force: 8 pieces. 
 
State of emergency declared: Feb. 6 at 5 p.m. 
 
Providence reopened to business: Feb. 13 
 
Cost to state: $6.6 million, expenses and lost taxes. 
 
Total federal disaster assistance: $14,841,484. 
 
Federal snow-removal aid: $4,272,116. 
 
Food stamps: $7,665,768 to an estimated 90,000 people. 
 
Lost wages, private sector: $30 million. 
 
Workers who lost wages: 152,000. 
 
Unemployment benefits paid: $8 million. 
 
Homes damaged: 30. 
 
Looting suspects charged: 25. 
		
		
		
		
		
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