It Was So Cold In Kentucky In 1994, Temperatures Stayed Below Zero Degrees For Days
By Sarah McCosham|Published December 13, 2022
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Sarah McCosham
Author
I write like it's my job - because it is! I have a Master's in English and love words: crossword puzzles, Scrabble games, Wordle, and, of course, good, old-fashioned books.
I'm a writer and editor at OnlyInYourState, and a contributing writer at Cincinnati Magazine. I love the Great Outdoors and am endlessly awestruck by this beautiful country of ours. Coffee keeps me going, yoga keeps me sane, my kids keep me grounded, and my writing keeps me inspired.
Winter in Kentucky can be wildly unpredictable, with some seasons bringing lots of ice and “wintry mixes” (Kentuckians get it), and some passing from fall to spring with relatively no precipitation or chilly temps. But not the winter of 1994. The coldest temperatures in Kentucky happened during the winter of 1994, when an Arctic blast ushered in record-breaking, sub-zero conditions.
Winter in Kentucky typically doesn't look like this.
If we have a cold spell, it's maybe a few days of below-freezing temperatures before the mercury bounces and chilly -- yet bearably mild -- temps return.
But the winter of 1994 was anything but ordinary. January 18-20 slammed the Bluegrass State with sub-zero temperatures that came on top of a massive snowstorm in the days prior.
In the days leading up to the cold snap, roughly 15 inches and as many as 26 inches fell across Kentucky, including a new record of 15.9 inches in Louisville. Snow drifts of up to 10 feet were reported, too.
Because of the thick snow pack, the cold temperatures essentially put Kentucky into a deep freeze. There were 67 minimum temperature records set across the country on January 19, including a Kentucky record of negative 37 Fahrenheit in Shelbyville.
In eastern Kentucky, some towns were completely cut off due to the snow and were only accessible by helicopter. The blizzard had prompted then-Gov. Brereton Jones to order five interstate highways in Kentucky to be shut down for five days, with hundreds of cars stranded on the roads.
Nearly 30 years later, these records still stand, and folks still talk about the winter of 1994 in Kentucky, the coldest and snowiest in recent history.