St. Louis recorded 9.8 inches of snow by 7 a.m. ET, with more than a foot of snow measured in other parts of Missouri.
The snow will shift later Saturday to the East Coast, with 4 to 6 inches predicted for Washington and 2 to 3 inches for Baltimore, forecasters said.
"We have a strong snowstorm that's stretching 1,400 miles from Kansas to the East Coast," CNN meteorologist Haley Brink said. "St. Louis is seeing its worse snowstorm in five years. We're going to see a significant snow event for the mid-Atlantic to start the year for 2019."
More than 65 million people are under a winter storm advisory, watch or warning.
St. Louis blues
St. Louis could get as much as 1 foot of snow by late Saturday, the National Weather Service said. It would be the most snow a single storm has dumped on the city since 2014, when a January blizzard left 10.8 inches. If St. Louis gets 15 inches or more of snow -- there's about a 10% chance -- it would be the city's No. 2 greatest snowstorm of all time.
In Kansas City, "we are up to 7.2 inches of snow so far with this storm," the local National Weather Service office said at 7 a.m. ET.
The snow is due to taper off by 4:35 p.m. ET, when the Kansas City Chiefs host the Indianapolis Colts on Saturday afternoon in an NFL playoff game, Brink said.
"So, by that time, most of the snow will have already fallen, but there will still be flurries through the beginning of the game," she said.
The Missouri Department of Transportation warned residents not to travel in the storm if it isn't necessary. As early Friday evening, 50 accidents had been reported, Jefferson County Sheriff Dave Marshak said on Twitter.
At St. Louis Lambert International Airport, "a winter storm has forced dozens of cancellations across all airlines at STL. More cancellations are likely on Saturday and Sunday," airport officials said.
The University of Missouri men's basketball game at the University of South Carolina was also canceled Saturday because of weather-related travel problems, the team tweeted.
Storm heads east
Along with Washington and Baltimore, Philadelphia is predicted to get 1 to 2 inches of snow, and there is a possibility of light accumulation in New York, along the storm's northern edge.
The Appalachians will pick up ice and snow in the mountains of Virginia and North Carolina, forecasters said. One-half inch of ice and 3 to 5 inches of snow are predicted.
There is a small chance the southern Appalachians get enough freezing rain and sleet to turn into an ice event Saturday into Sunday.
More heavy rain also will fall on the already-saturated South. The Southeast has seen abundant precipitation in December and January, and the additional rain could put a strain on high rivers.
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