NJ Weather: Updated statewide snowfall totals, with 25 inches already on the ground in some cities

Those New Jersey snow accumulation numbers continue to skyrocket, with several cities now reporting up to 25 inches on the ground – and a city with a 30-inch measurement at 7:20 pm on Monday.

All that snow and the monstrous winter storm still have a long way to go before it subsides.

The total snowfall on Monday morning was 20 to 25 centimeters, but during the afternoon hours, when the storm intensified, the accumulations reached 2 feet in some parts of the Garden State. The great leader so far is Mendham, in Morris County, with an impressive 30 centimeters of snow reported by the National Weather Service on Monday night.

This is just 4 inches away from New Jersey’s all-time 34-inch snowstorm record – a record that has been maintained for almost 122 years. The evasive record was set during a snowstorm that lasted from February 11 to February 14, 1899, in Cape May, said New Jersey state climatologist David Robinson.

Among the other huge snow totals reported on Monday night, were 28 inches in Sparta in Sussex County, 26 inches in Ledgewood and Long Valley in Morris County, and 25.8 inches in Randolph, also in Morris.

Here is a summary of the latest snow accumulations in each county, reported by the regional weather forecast offices of the National Weather Service in New Jersey and the regional office in New York, along with the Community Cooperative Rain, Hail & Snow Network, starting at 4 pm Monday.

MORE: Monitor snowfall projections for your city with the new interactive map

(Note: most of the totals listed below are from early afternoon and mid afternoon, but some are measurements that were taken on Monday morning and have not yet been updated. Additional updates will be posted Monday evening.)

Atlantic County

  • Mays Landing: 3.0 inches
  • Pomona: 2.5 inches
  • Egg Harbor City: 1.8 inches
  • Hammonton: 1.6 inches
  • Egg Harbor Twp: 1.3 inches
  • Somers Point: 1.0 inch

Bergen County

  • Dumont: 13.0 inches
  • Ridgewood: 12.6 inches
  • Westwood: 11.5 inches
  • Ramsey: 11.0 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 9.7 inches
  • Fair Lawn: 9.0 inches
  • Hillsdale: 8.5 inches
  • Ho-Ho-Kus: 8.3 inches
  • Palisades Park: 7.0 inches
  • Glen Rock: 6.5 inches
  • Tenafly: 5.3 inches
  • New Milford: 4.8 inches
  • Washington Twp: 4.2 inches

Burlington County

  • Florence: 6.3 inches
  • Westampton: 6.1 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 5.6 inches
  • Lumberton: 5.5. inches
  • Columbus: 5.1 inches
  • Bordentown: 4.8 inches
  • Cooperstown: 4.1 inches
  • Moorestown: 3.8 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 3.7 inches
  • Southampton: 3.0 inches
  • Marlton: 2.8 inches
  • South Jersey Regional Airport: 2.8 inches

Camden County

  • Blackwood: 5.5 inches
  • Gloucester City: 5.1 inches
  • Haddon Heights: 5.1 inches
  • Springdale: 4.2 inches
  • Lindenwold: 4.0 inches

Cape May County

  • Goshen: 1.0 inch
  • Villas: 0.8 inches
  • Seaville: 0.5 inches

Cumberland County

  • Hopewell Twp.: 4.0 inches
Winter storm Orlena buries Essex County in the snow

Montclair’s Karen Lamberton cleans snow off her sidewalk while frozen white material continues to accumulate due to the great winter storm on Monday, February 1, 2021.Steve Hockstein | For NJ Advance Media

Essex County

  • Newark Liberty Airport: 13.0 inches (new daily record for February 1st)
  • Millburn: 12.5 inches
  • Southern Orange: 12.5 inches
  • Caldwell Airport: 12.1 inches
  • Maplewood: 9.2 inches
  • Belleville: 8.7 inches
  • Ridge: 7.5 inches
  • Livingston: 7.0 inches
  • North Caldwell: 6.2 inches

Gloucester County

  • Greenwich Twp: 4.3 inches
  • Mantua Twp: 4.2 inches
  • Sewell: 3.0 inches
  • Westville: 3.0 inches
  • Malaga: 3.0 inches
  • Washington Twp: 2.8 inches
  • Woodbury: 2.8 inches
  • Williamstown: 2.0 inches
  • Glassboro: 2.0 inches
  • Pitman: 1.4 inches

Hudson County

  • Harrison: 12.0 inches
  • Hoboken: 11.5 inches
Winter storm hits Hudson County, February 1, 2021

Snow covers cars parked on East 12th Street in Bayonne during a winter storm on Monday, February 1, 2021.

Hunterdon County

  • Whitehouse Station: 17.1 inches
  • Raritan Twp.: 15.0 inches
  • Flemington: 14.5 inches
  • Readington: 14 inches
  • Stanton: 13.0 inches
  • Lebanon: 10.2 inches
  • Clinton: 9.0 inches
  • Sand Brook: 8.6 inches

Mercer County

  • East Windsor: 9.5 inches
  • Hamilton: 8.8 inches
  • Princeton: 8.3 inches
  • Robbinsville: 8.2 inches
  • Ewing: 5.8 inches

Middlesex County

  • New Brunswick: 18.0 inches
  • South Plainfield: 17.0 inches
  • Door reading: 16.5 inches
  • Iselin: 16.0 inches
  • East Brunswick: 15.0 inches
  • Perth Amboy: 15.0 inches
  • Woodbridge: 14.3 inches
  • Edison: 14.0 inches
  • Highland Park: 13.5 inches
  • Metuchen: 13.5 inches
  • Milltown: 13.0 inches
  • South River: 13.0 inches
  • North Brunswick: 12.0 inches
  • Carteret: 12.5 inches
  • South Brunswick: 11.5 inches
  • Plainsboro: 11.4 inches
  • Cologne: 11.2 inches
  • Old Bridge: 11.0 inches
  • Hopelawn: 10.5 inches
  • Avenel: 10.0 inches
  • Monroe / Rossmoor: 8.5 inches

Monmouth County

  • Union Beach: 16.0 inches
  • Holmdel: 13.5 inches
  • Belford: 12.0 inches
  • Keyport: 12.0 inches
  • Neck Colts: 11.5 inches
  • Free property: 11.5 inches
  • Cliffwood: 11.0 inches
  • Hazlet: 11.0 inches
  • Manalapan: 9.8 inches
  • Marlboro: 9.5 inches
  • Eatontown: 8.7 inches
  • Keyport: 8.5 inches
  • Howell: 7.9 inches
  • Freehold Twp: 7.7 inches
  • Atlantic Highlands: 6.8 inches
  • Trading: 6.5 inches
  • Long Branch: 6.0 inches
  • Leonardo: 5.0 inches
  • Wall Twp.: 5.0 inches

Morris County

  • Mendham: 30.0 inches (from 7:20 pm)
  • Ledgewood: 26.0 inches
  • Long Valley: 26.0 inches
  • Randolph: 25.8 inches
  • Chester: 24.8 inches
  • Lake Hopatcong: 22.0 inches
  • Chatham: 20.3 inches
  • Green Lagoon: 20.0 inches
  • Netcong: 20.0 inches
  • Morris Twp: 19.0 inches
  • Mendham: 18.5 inches
  • Flanders: 18.0 inches
  • Budd Lake: 17.0 inches
  • Long Hill Twp: 16.0 inches
  • Montville: 15.0 inches
  • Morristown: 14.5 inches
  • Florham Park: 14.4 inches
  • Denville: 12.0 inches
  • Succasunna: 11.5 inches
  • Washington Twp: 7.7 inches
  • Eastern Hanover: 9.6 inches
  • Mountain lakes: 9.5 inches

Ocean County

  • Jackson: 7.3 inches
  • Brick: 5.3 inches
  • Whiting: 5.0 inches
  • Forked River: 4.5 inches
  • Bayville: 4.0 inches
  • Rio Toms: 4.0 inches
  • Point Pleasant: 2.5 inches

Passaic County

  • Passaic: 15.9 inches
  • Bloomingdale: 15.7 inches
  • Totowa: 13.1 inches
  • West Milford: 12.3 inches
  • Wayne: 7.0 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 6.0 inches
  • Little Falls: 5.6 inches
  • Hawthorne: 5.0 inches

Salem County

  • Pennsville: 4.0 inches
  • Pilesgrove: 3.3 inches
  • Woodstown: 2.8 inches
  • Salem: 2.5 inches

Somerset County

  • Warren Twp: 22.0 inches
  • Bridgewater: 20.2 inches
  • Basking Ridge: 19.5 inches
  • Somerville: 19.0 inches
  • Warrenville: 18.5 inches
  • North Plainfield: 17.4 inches
  • Manville: 17.3 inches
  • Branchburg: 17.0 inches
  • Somerset: 17.0 inches
  • Green Brook: 15.0 inches
  • Watchung: 15.0 inches
  • Hillsborough: 11.8 inches

Sussex County

  • Sparta: 28.3 inches
  • Stanhope: 25.3 inches
  • Hopatcong: 24.0 inches
  • Stanhope: 24.0 inches
  • Byram Twp: 22.5 inches
  • Wantage: 15.5 inches
  • Pellettown: 12.5 inches
  • Stockholm: 12.0 inches
  • Vernon: 11.9 inches

Union County

  • Westfield: 13.0 inches
  • Roselle Park: 12.8 inches
  • Plainfield: 12.0 inches
  • Cranford: 10.5 inches
  • Springfield: 10.5 inches
  • Elizabeth: 8.4 inches
  • New Providence: 7.0 inches

Warren County

  • Allamuchy- Panther Valley: 23.0 inches
  • Frelinghuysen: 16.7 inches
  • Hackettstown: 16.0 inches
  • Hope: 16.0 inches
  • Stewartsville: 15.8 inches

Current weather radar

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