April 19-20, 1907: 14.8"
December 1-5, 1913: 34.5" (Multi-day event) (Denver's largest snowstorm of all time.)
March 21-22, 1944: 12.5"
April 1-3, 1945: 13.9"
April 13-17, 1945: 20.2" (Multi-day event)
November 2-5, 1946: 14.6"
April 9-12, 1953: 18.7"
March 14-15, 1956: 16.5"
April 7-11, 1959: 17.0"
January 8, 1962: 13.0"
March 29-31, 1970: 21.4"
January 2-3, 1971: 18.2"
November 2-4, 1973: 18.7"
May 5-6, 1978: 27.5"
November 20-21, 1979: 22.0"
December 27-28, 1979: 16.6"
March 26-29, 1980: 12.7" (Multi-day event)
December 8-10, 1985: 18.8"
March 30 - April 1, 1988: 19.5"
March 6-8, 1990: 17.0"
March 8-9, 1992: 16.7"
November 20-24, 1992: 17.0" (This may be considered the combination of two storms)
October 24-25, 1997: 17.5"
March 16-18, 2003: 32.2" (Liquid equivalent of snow was 4.9". Largest ever liquid equivalent of snow.)
December 20-21, 2006: 19.9"
December 28-29, 2006: 8.5" (special mention, this brought the 9-day snow total to 28.4")
October 26-28, 2009: 21.7"
April 15-17, 2013: 22.4" (This was a three day event, and it might be considered as three different storms)
May 1, 2013: 12.8"
February 1-2, 2016: 13.7" (The four-day snow total, starting from January 30, was 14.9")
The purpose is to provide high quality information on historical storms
and provide links to weather information. The "Toledo Snowstorms" web page includes my own research of many snowstorms.