Winter Storm Helena dumped a mess of snow and some ice from the South to the East after dumping several feet of snow in the mountain West the first week of January 2017.

Overall, the track of Helena was a bit farther north and west than originally expected in parts of the South and East.

Therefore, areas expecting more snow ended up getting more sleet and ice in the Southeast, while more moderate snow totals crept closer to parts of the I-95 corridor in New York City and Philadelphia.

(NEWS: Helena Cripples Travel in the South | Traffic, Delays in the Northeast )

Here is a breakdown of the storm by region, including a list of the highest and notable snow, sleet and freezing rain accumulations.

Northeast

Heavy snow made its way inland from the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast on the backside of Winter Storm Helena, bringing blizzard conditions to parts of eastern Virginia. Helena moved well east of Cape Cod, but brought heavy snow and gusty winds to the peninsula as it tracked off the Northeast seaboard.

Snow:

Connecticut: 9.6 inches in East Killingly; 3.3 inches at Bradley Int'l Airport in Windsor Locks

Delaware: 13.5 inches in Ocean View; almost 2 inches in 30 minutes fell in Bethany Beach

​Maryland: 12 inches near Ocean Pines; 9 inches in Salisbury

Massachusetts: 19.5 inches in East Bridgewater; 7.2 inches at Boston's Logan Airport

New Hampshire: 3.6 inches near Hudson

New Jersey: 10.0 inches in Port Norris; 6 inches in Atlantic City

New York: 10.8 inches in Yaphank; 5.1 inches at Central Park in New York City

Pennsylvania: 4.5 inches near Ridley Park and Morrisville; 3 inches in Philadelphia

Rhode Island: 15.5 inches in Westerly; 10.7 inches in Providence

Washington D.C. area: 0.4 inches at Reagan National Airport

The heaviest totals were along the south shore of Massachusetts, where ocean-effect snowbands persisted into the early morning hours of January 8 .

Helena was the heaviest snowfall at Boston's Logan Airport in almost two years , since Winter Storm Neptune dumped over 16 inches of snow around Valentine's Day 2015.

South

Light snow spread across parts of the southern Plains and Mid-South from the night of January 5 into January 6.

A heavier swath of snow developed late on January 6, continuing into January 7 from the north Georgia mountains into western and northern North Carolina and southern Virginia.

Mainly sleet or freezing rain fell south of that from parts of Louisiana and Mississippi into central Alabama into Georgia and parts of the Carolinas.

Sleet/Ice:

Alabama: 1.0 inch sleet near Chelsea; 0.20 inch ice in Butler

Arkansas: 0.1 inch sleet near Lake Village

Georgia: Up to 0.3 inch ice in the Atlanta metro

Louisiana: 0.3 inch sleet near Columbia

Mississippi: 0.70 inch sleet near Flowood; 0.30 inch ice in Meridian; 0.25 inch sleet near Vicksburg

North Carolina: 2 inches sleet near Falls Lake; 1 inch sleet, 0.15 inch ice near Raleigh

South Carolina: 1.0 inch sleeet near Mauldin

Tennessee: 1.5 inches sleet near Knoxville



Snow:

Alabama: 2.0 inches near Mentone

Arkansas: 3.5 inches near Searcy; 2 inches in Ft. Smith

Georgia: 6.6 inches near Hiawassee

Mississippi: 3.0 inches in Byhalia; 0.8 inch in Jackson (mixed with sleet)

North Carolina: 12.0 inches in Mt. Airy and near Norlina; 1.1 inches in Charlotte; 0.5 inch in Raleigh

Oklahoma: 5.5 inches near Watonga; 1.7 inches in Oklahoma City

South Carolina: 7 inches in Patterson; 4.3 inches in Greenville/Spartanburg

Tennessee: 7.6 inches in Mountain City; 4 inches in Knoxville

Texas: 5.0 inches in Adrian; 2.2 inches in Amarillo

Virginia: 12.5 inches in Williamsburg; 7.1 inches in Richmond; 5.3 inches in Norfolk

Compounding the mess was a plunge of some of the coldest air of the season behind Helena into the affected areas of the Southeast. Lows the morning of January 8 dipped into the teens well into the Deep South, rendering salt relatively useless for treating areas of ice on roads.

West

California: 56 inches at Boreal and Soda Springs

Colorado: 42.5 inches estimated near Steamboat Springs; around 2 feet in Crested Butte; 4 inches in Denver (DIA)

Idaho: 18 inches in Montpelier; 4.3 inches in Pocatello

Nevada: 30 inches near Incline Village

Oregon: 26 inches in Bly; 20 inches near Bend

​Utah: Up to 24 inches in Providence; up to 8 inches in Logan

Wyoming: 46.8 inches near Encampment at the Old Battle Snotel; 10.1 inches in Cheyenne

Interestingly, a somewhat rarer snow fell all the way to the Oregon coast , including near the Sea Lion Caves.

MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Winter Storm Helena Photos