Power crews were working Saturday to restore power to almost 1 million customers across the Great Lakes, South and mid-Atlantic states after a powerful winter storm made its way across the U.S.

Hundreds of thousands remained without power in Kentucky, Tennessee and Michigan on Saturday morning, according to poweroutage.us. Tens of thousands more were without power in Alabama, West Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York as the storm moved east.

Wet, heavy snow and high winds left many without power in southeastern Michigan. Detroit-based DTE warned customers that tree limbs, already weakened by last week’s freezing rain and ice storm, could hit power lines and bring them down. 

The National Weather Service in Louisville called the storm, which brought heavy rains and powerful winds Friday, “powerful and historic” with peak wind gusts of 60-80 mph.

US weather updates:10 reported dead after severe weather outbreak; millions warned of winter weather

Snow in Hawaii?:Up to 8 inches predicted on Big Island mountains.

High winds in the Nashville area resulted in 52 broken power poles, Nashville Electric Service posted on Twitter Saturday morning. Tennessee had wind gusts of 50-75 mph buffeting the region with Nashville reporting its strongest gust of 79 mph.

Power outage map

Kentucky Utilities said more than 190,000 of its 1 million customers were without power Saturday morning.

In Tennessee, over 90,000 customers were without power, according to PowerOutage.us. Nashville Electric Service crews “worked through the night and restored power 73,000 customers,” the company said Saturday.