It was more snow than Baltimore saw in the famed "Knickerbocker" storm of 1922. More than the blizzards of '83, and '96, and '03. It even surpassed the back-to-back "Snowmageddon" storms of 2010 – individually, not combined.

The preliminary measurement of 29.2 inches of snow at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport from Friday night through 7 p.m. Saturday should make this weekend's storm No. 1 in the record books.

And with the historic snowfall comes an arduous cleanup.

It could take days to clear, officials warned, with plows and snowblowers not expected to start getting ahead of the more than 2 feet of drifting snow until Sunday.

The storm that delivered on forecasts to become a classic and powerful nor'easter, enhanced by El Niño moisture, buried parts of Virginia and West Virginia with as much as 40 inches of snow. It was potentially one of the five biggest storms to hit the Interstate 95 corridor from Washington to New York, and blamed for at least...read more at The Baltimore Sun