1,015 first-hand accounts of flood events in New Jersey, ranked by impact. Each is a NOAA-written narrative of the moment.
An inverted trough that brought freezing rain in the morning acted as a conduit to bring heavy rain into the region from the mid morning into the mid afternoon of the 18th. The rain itself ended during the early evening on the 18th.
Read the full account →An inverted trough that brought freezing rain in the morning acted as a conduit to bring heavy rain into the region from the mid morning into the mid afternoon of the 18th. The rain itself ended during the early evening on the 18th.
Read the full account →An inverted trough that brought freezing rain in the morning acted as a conduit to bring heavy rain into the region from the mid morning into the mid afternoon of the 18th. The rain itself ended during the early evening on the 18th.
Read the full account →An inverted trough that brought freezing rain in the morning acted as a conduit to bring heavy rain into the region from the mid morning into the mid afternoon of the 18th. The rain itself ended during the early evening on the 18th.
Read the full account →A warm front pushed northward into the region during the evening of March 10th, followed by a cold frontal passage through the region on the morning of March 11th.||Rain showers accompanied the frontal boundaries and 0.50-1.00 inches were recorded across the area.
Read the full account →A warm front pushed northward into the region during the evening of March 10th, followed by a cold frontal passage through the region on the morning of March 11th.||Rain showers accompanied the frontal boundaries and 0.50-1.00 inches were recorded across the area.
Read the full account →Double barrel cold fronts helped trigger a series of showers and thunderstorms across southern New Jersey during the morning of the 15th. Thunderstorms that were accompanied by very heavy rain caused flash flooding in parts of Salem, Gloucester, Atlantic and Ocean Counties.
Read the full account →