Never before in 121 years of weather records dating back to 1885 has as much snow fallen as EARLY in a new snow season as it did Thursday. That was true not only in Chicago, but in DeKalb and Rockford as well. Across the lake, Grand Rapids, Michigan, the 1.4" of snow which had accumulated by midday was the heaviest so early in the season. On only 6 occasions in all the years since official snow measurements began in Chicago back in 1885, has snow fallen (including "traces" of snow—i.e. less than 0.1") as early or earlier, underscoring the uniqueness of Thursday's snow event.
Our National Weather Service colleagues at the Chicago Forecast Office report the first flakes of snow fell for 23 minutes at O'Hare between 1:17 am and 1:40 a.m. Thursday morning. Midway Airport didn't report snow until just after 9 a.m. For periods of 15-30 minutes, visibilities across sections of the metropolitan area dropped under 1/4 mile, lending the snowfall a truly wintry appearance---especially once it began to stick. That the snow DID stick is rather remarkable all by itself, considering ground temperatures immediately below the surface were reported at 54-degrees as recently as Wednesday evening.
The scenes produced by these rare nearly season snow accumulations—a cover of snow on autumn leaves which have only reached their peak color over the past week or two and which have only
begun to fall—can only be described as surreal—but surreal AND beautiful at the same time! Warm ground temperatures have rendered the day's accumulations fleeting, to say the least. But, before melting, 0.3" was measured officially at both Midway and O'Hare, according to veteran weather historian and climatologist Frank Wachowski. Other preliminary area accumulations which our viewers and readers have shared with us include:
1" Algonquin
1" Crystal Lake
0.5" DeKalb at Northern Illinois University
1.2" Mundelein
0.4" OakBrook
0.1" WGN studios, Chicago's northwest side
Before Thursday's snowfall, the earliest measurable snow here occurred in two different years at O'Hare International on October 18—approximately one week earlier than today's date (October 12). The first was the 0.7" which fell on October 18, 1989 and the second was a 0.2" accumulation in 1972. With southern Lake Michigan's water temperatures still averaging 60-degrees, it took the day's strong west winds to assure that lake-generated warmth wasn't a factor in lakeshore areas in deterring Thursday's snow from accumulating.
Matt Hoelter sent us these images of Thursday's unusual snowfall in McHenry County. He reports the snow showers there were dramatic in appearance as they hit but that, as in other sections of the Chicago area, they were comparatively brief. Matt reports 0.5" accumulated before melting in his backyard. Thanks for the great photos Matt!
-Tom Skilling, WGN-TV chief meteorologist



PHOTO COURTESY: Matt Hoelter