To give you an idea of the strength
and devastation associated with these storms, below
is a listing of some of the most memorable hurricanes since pre-colonial times.
While the number of casualties from these storms have gone down over the years,
the cost from the damage caused by these storms have risen tremendously. That
has resulted from more building along the coastline, and more expensive homes
and businesses.
- Hurricane of July, 1502--Was a storm
that the great explorer and discoverer of American, Christopher Columbus,
predicted would strike the island of Hispanola. He used his prediction to
warn the Governor of Hispanola, Nicholas de Ovando, who had 30 ships in
his fleet set sail back to Spain. However, the governor ignored him, and
refused Columbus' request to stay in port at Santo Domingo. Within two days
the storm struck in the Mona Passage between Hispanola and Puerto Rico,
and sank 21 of the 30 ships, and killed approximately 500 sailors.
- Tempest of 1609--At the time that the first ever colony in the United States was being developed, a strong hurricane menaced the Western Atlantic in the weeks following the departure of a fleet with 500 colonists left Great Britain for the New World. The ships then met with the maelstrom head on, and scattering all the vessels. Most were able to survive the onslaught of Mother Nature except for the flagship of the fleet, the Sea Venture, which was deposited in the infamous "Isle of Devils." Nevertheless, those who were on the ship still managed to reach shore, and received a much better fate than those, who had already situated themselves in the colony. The story of the Sea Venture was the basis of William Shakespeare's play, The Tempest.
- Colonial Hurricane of 1635--Was a
powerful New England hurricane that struck the Massachussetts Bay Colony
in 1635 some fifteen years after the Mayflower struck land at Plymouth Rock.
This storm had reminded many of the pilgrims and settlers of past hurricanes
that struck in the West Indies or Caribbean. Many of the pilgrims believed
that this storm was apocalyptic.
- 1667--The Year Of The Hurricane--At
a time when the Mid-Atlantic states of North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland
agreed to temporarily halt production of tobacco, a strong hurricane ripped
through the Mid-Atlantic region on August 27th. While there was no recorded
statistics such as where the storm made landfall, its track, and its forward
speed and intensity. It destroyed 80 percent of the tobacco and corn while
destroying some 15,000 homes in Virginia and Maryland.
- Accomack Storm of October 1693--This storm was captured by Mr. Scarburgh at his residence in Virginia's Eastern Shore. Described by many weather record keepers as a very powerful storm, the Accomack Storm "cut inlets as far north as Fire Island, near New York City."
- The Great Gust of 1724--According to Rick Schwartz's book, "Hurricanes and the Mid-Atlantic States," two hurricanes brought significant wind and rain to the Mid-Atlantic region in 1724. The first storm moved through the area around August 12th, and caused torrential rains and devastating winds. Less than a week later, another violent storm system came through on August 17th, 18th, and 19th with violent winds and rain. These two systems are among the most significant tropical storms to affect the Mid-Atlantic during the colonial period of the late 1600s and 1700s.
- Hurricane of October, 1743--A storm
that affected what would become the Northeastern United States and New England,
brought gusty winds and rainy conditions as far as Philadelphia, and produced
flooding in Boston. Central barometric pressure of the storm was measured
to be 29.35 inches of Hg in Boston. This storm, which wasn't particularly
powerful, was memorable because it garnered the interest of future patriot
and one of the founders of the United States, Benjamin Franklin, who believed
the storm was coming in from Boston. However, it was going to Boston. Nevertheless,
it began the long educational journey, which would be our understanding
of hurricanes.
- Hurricane of October, 1749--The storm was perhaps one of the strongest storm ever in the Mid-Atlantic. According to Rick Schwartz, the hurricane produced a huge tidal surge of 15 feet. Based upon that observation, many experts believe that this system was a Category Four on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. It was responsible for creating Willoughby Spit, a small area of land near Norfolk that was inside the Chesapeake Bay.
- The Great Chesapeake Bay Hurricane of 1769--This hurricane plagued the Mid-Atlantic coast from North Carolina up into the Chesapeake over the two days of September 7-8, 1769, and was probably one of the strongest storms in the Mid-Atlantic during the 18th Century. It made landfall near New Bern, North Carolina, and laid that town in ruin as tides rose 12 feet above normal. Most notably, it caused widespread damage to the Stratford Hall plantation, which belonged to the family of famous confederate General Robert E. Lee.
- The Independence Hurricane of 1775--With the winds of revolution blowing about in the fledgling 13 colonies, Mother Nature had a wind that temporarily put a halt to those rebellious thoughts. A hurricane roared up the East Coast, and triggered one of the early Revolutionary War skirmishes in the biggest colony of Virginia. It came close to impacting Georgia and South Carolina on September 2nd before moving ashore over North Carolina. The storm then picked up steam through Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. One of the more notable casualties of the storm was the roof of the Maryland State House, which was replaced by a wind resistant dome.
- Great Hurricane of 1780--This storm
was one of several that year, which was one of the worst hurricane seasons
in the era prior to record taking. Winds were estimated to be Category Four
strength at 135 mph. This storm, which affected the Southern Windward Islands
including Barbados, St. Vincent, Grenada, Martinique, St. Eustatius, and
near Puerto Rico and Grand Turk Island, is believed to have killed approximately
22,000 people. Of that total, between 4,000 and 5,000 people were killed
on St. Eustatius. Martinique had an estimated 9,000 people killed including
1,000 in St. Pierre, which had all of its homes destroyed.
- The Great Coastal Hurricane of 1785--Hurricanes
that occur within weeks of each other usually take parallel tracks. Take
a look at hurricanes Katrina and Rita
from 2005 for instance. The Atlantic Hurricane season
of 1785 was a very busy one. One hurricane in early September of that year
wrecked the ship called the Faithful Steward. Weeks later, another storm
developed, and brushed the Delmarva Peninsula. The storm's legacy was the
creation of the "long-sought" lighthouse at Cape Henry, which
was opened seven years later in 1792. Lighthouses were essential in preventing
shipwrecks like the Faithful Steward, and another immigrant ship guided
by shipmaster, Captain Smith.
- George Washington's Hurricane of 1788--This hurricane, which began its drive toward landfall after nearing Bermuda on July 19th, proceeded on a west-northwest course into the Outer Banks of North Carolina, and then into Virginia. The Chesapeake Bay region absorbed the worst that the storm had to offer. Most notably though, this storm is remembered for the way it was described by the father of the United States, and first president, George Washington. By the time the storm reached Washington's home in Mount Vernon, it was likely to have been a moderate tropical storm with winds about 50 mph.
- Hurricanes of 1795--Two hurricanes assaulted Virginia in August 1795, and destroyed the crops of another hero of the American Revolution, Thomas Jefferson. The two storms, which were ten days apart, caused the Appomattox River to crest more than 12 feet above flood stage at the city of Petersburg, which was the highest level reached in 70 years. Jefferson, who kept a perfect record of regular weather observations for 40 years between 1776 and 1816, recorded the devastation that the two storms left behind, especially the heavy losses that he suffered at his plantation, the famous Monticello.
- Great Coastal Hurricane of 1806--The first major hurricane of the 19th Century made landfall south of the city of Wilmington on the southern shores of North Carolina on August 21st, and then proceeded on a gradual northeasterly drift for about 250 miles over the subsequent 36 hours. Constant gale force winds produced tremendous beach erosion, and "firmly established" the sandbar of Willoughby Spit at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay near Norfolk. It was also responsible for the loss of the ship, Rose-in-Bloom, which founded near Barnegat, New Jersey.
- Great September Gale of 1815--Was
the last hurricane to strike New England before the Long Island Express
of 1938. The storm struck on September 23, 1815, and brought an 11 foot
storm surge to Providence, which was the highest storm surge in the Rhode
Island captial prior to the Great Hurricane of 1938, which had a 17.6 foot
storm surge. This storm was the first hurricane to strike New England in
exactly 180 years.
- Cape May
Hurricane of 1821--The last major hurricane to make a direct landfall
in the Garden State of New Jersey. This storm, which was a Category Four Hurricane,
struck Cape May, New Jersey on September 3, 1821, and had hurricane force
winds go as far west as Philadelphia while folks in New Jersey experienced
wind gusts of up to 200 mph. The storm cut a path of destruction that is similar
to that of the Garden State Parkway. More detailed information on this hurricane
is at Greg Hoffman's Real Lousy
Weather Page.
- The Hurricane of 1846--Referred to
as "The Great", used its northeast quadrant that caused havoc on the Delaware
all the way up to Camden, New Jersey. This storm revealed the fact that
Delaware Bay is open to southeast winds in the right quadrant, and water
in the Bay would go upriver into cities such as Wilmington, Philadelphia,
and Camden.
- Hurricane of September, 1874--Struck
the Carolinas around the end of September, 1874. This storm is remembered
for being the first such hurricane to be shown on a weather map by the Weather
Bureau. At the time it was shown, the hurricane was located off the Southeast
Coast between Jacksonville, Florida and Savannah, Georgia.
- Hurricane of September, 1875--Was
an intense hurricane that struck the Southern Coast of Cuba as predicted
by Father Benito Vines, who began to develop a tremendous reputation for
accurately predicting when and where a hurricane would strike. His studies
of tropical storms and hurricanes during the latter portion of the 19th
Century made the Cuban forecasters some of the best hurricane forecasters
in the world at the time.
- Indianola Hurricane of 1886--Destroyed
what had been the leading port city in Texas at the time on August 19-20,
1886. Indianola, which was located in Matagorda Bay, was hit by this storm,
and another one a bit more than a month later. As a result, business that
previously came into that port, moved up the coast to Galveston, which became
the prominent port city in the Lone Star State until it was devastated by
the Great Hurricane of 1900.
- Atlantic Hurricane of 1893--Was a
strong Category One Hurricane that struck New York City with 90 mph winds
on August 24th of that year. Barometric pressure was only 29.23 inches of
Hg, but it leved some one hundred trees in Central Park. The beach and piers
on Coney Island was devastated. However, it wasn't as bad as Hog Island,
a sand spit off Rockaway Beach that was wiped off the map.
- Sea Islands Hurricane of 1893--A
major hurricane of Category Three strength that made landfall in Savannah,
Georgia on August 27th, but its northeast quadrant hammered Sea Islands
in Beaufort County, South Carolina. As a result, approximately 2,000 to
2,500 people were killed and upwards of 30,000 people were left homeless.
- Galveston Hurricane of 1900--The
deadliest natural disaster in United States History, this Category Four
Hurricane moved through Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico before slamming ashore
in Galveston, Texas on September 8, 1900 killing 6,000 people.
- The "Hurricane" of 1903--The storm
was indicated to be a hurricane by many in the media at the time, but it
was in fact, a tropical storm with 70 mph winds along the coast. It was
the first such tropical storm or hurricane to impact the Jersey shore in
one hundred years. It was also called the "Vagabond Hurricane"
since it caused such a stir in media outlets such as Philadelphia and New
York, which had people covering the storm for the various newspapers in
those cities.
- Miami
Hurricane of 1926--This storm hit at the worst possible time for
the fledgling city. Incoporated in 1896 following the extension of the Florida
East Coast Railway by Henry Flagler, the city of Miami was at the end of
its first boom period early in 1926. The storm also served as a lesson for
those wishing to go outside during the eye's passage. Forming a few hundred
miles to the East of the Lesser Antilles on September 12th, the storm passed
to the north of Puerto Rico on September 15th. Accompanied by a late issued
hurricane warning, the storm arrived in Miami on the morning of September
18th. Winds peaked at 128 mph, and the pressure in Miami fell to 27.61 inches
of Hg, or 935 millibars. The storm surge ranged from eight to fifteen feet,
and caused $150 million dollars in damage then, or $1.7 billion today. If
a similar storm hit the Miami area today, it would cause an astronomical
$87 billion in damage.
- Lake Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928--Carved
a path of destruction throughout the Atlantic, and over the north shore
of Lake Okeechobee during the period from September 6th to September 20th,
1928. This particular hurricane, which had a central pressure of 27.43 inches,
was fifth all time to strike the United States in terms of intensity. It
was responsible for an estimated 2,500 deaths, and some $25 million dollars
in damage (equivalent to $300 million 1990 U.S. dollars). Now ranks behind
Galveston as the second deadliest natural disaster in United States History.
- Chesapeake Bay Hurricane of 1933--A
powerful Cape Verde Storm that reached Category Four strength at one point
before weakening to Category Two strength. The storm ended up striking on
August 23, 1933 causing 79 million dollars in damage according to 1969 estimates,
and left some 18 people dead. It also knocked out service to about 79,000
telephones as well as uprooted some 600 trees in Virginia Beach. The storm
also set a record for storm surge with one that was 9.8 feet above normal
in spots.
- Major Hurricane of September, 1933--1933
was a very active year for tropical storms and hurricanes with 21 named
storms, and 10 of them becoming hurricanes. In addition to the Great Chesapeake
Hurricane of 1933, the Mid-Atlantic was hit by another hurricane almost
exactly a month to the day later when a Category Three storm emerged from
a disturbance in the Bahamas, and came up the coast to make landfall at
Cape Lookout, North Carolina. The storm ended up causing about a fraction
of the damage caused by the Chesapeake Bay storm. Only about 2,000 telephones
were knocked out by the storm, and only two people died in Virginia.
- Labor Day
Hurricane of 1935--The most powerful hurricane to make landfall
in the United States. A very small storm, this Category Five Hurricane tore
through the Florida Keys with 180 mph winds, and a low pressure of 26.35
inches of Hg.
- Long Island
Express of 1938--A classic east coast hurricane, this Category Three
storm moved rapidly from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina into New England
in a matter of just six hours killing 600 people.
- Great Hurricane of September, 1944--Is
perhaps a forgotten storm in light of the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935, and
the Long Island Express of 1938. However, this was a memorable storm in
its own right. Cape Henry in Virginia was hit with sustained winds of 134
mph, and gusts up to 150 mph. Meanwhile, in Norfolk, winds reached close
to hurricane force while gusts went up to 90 mph. The powerful storm caused
tremendous damage along the coast from North Carolina to New England with
some 41,000 buildings damaged, and a death toll of 390 people. The storm
cost some $100 million dollars in damage including $25 million in New Jersey
alone, where some 300 homes were destroyed on Long Beach Island. More detailed
information on this hurricane is at Greg
Hoffman's Real Lousy Weather Page.
- Hurricane Easy--Developing in September,
1950, Easy was perhaps one of the worst storms to hit Cedar Key since the
late 1800s. This storm, which did a loop around the West Coast of Florida
twice, had maximum sustained winds of 125 mph, a minimum pressure of 28.30
inches of Hg, and brought an amazing 38.7 inches of rain over two days to
Yankeetown, Florida.
- Hurricane King--Another powerful
storm in 1950, this particular hurricane affected the Miami area in October
of that year. It was a compact, but very powerful hurricane much like Hurricane
Andrew. It only carved a path of destruction some 7 to 10 miles wide,
but had wind gusts as high as 150 mph, minimum pressure of 28.20 inches
of Hg., and a storm surge of 19.3 feet.
- Hurricane Barbara--Opened up a decade
of powerful storms to ravage the Carolinas in August, 1953. It struck the
North Carolina coast between Morehead City and Ocracoke Island on August
13th, 1953 as a Category One Hurricane with gusts up to 90 mph, and left
one dead and damages over $1 million in 1953 U.S. dollars.
- Hurricane Carol--Opened up a very
busy hurricane season for North Carolina in 1954 with a near miss of Cape
Hatteras. Winds at Hatteras were between 90 and 100 mph, but minor damage
estimated at $250,000 1953 U.S. dollars was left in the storm's wake.
- Hurricane Edna--Edna followed on
the heels of Carol, and had a very similar track to Carol's as it passed
the Carolinas offshore on September 10, 1954. While the storm left minor
damage and beach erosion for North Carolina, Edna ended up doing much more
damage in New England after making landfall in Long Island. Damage estimates
exceeded $40 million 1953 U.S. dollars, and 21 people were killed.
- Hurricane Hazel--A Category Four
Hurricane that came ashore in North Carolina in October, 1954, and then
brought hurricane force winds as far inland as Canada. Passing 95 miles
to the East of Charleston, South Carolina, Hazel made landfall very near
the North Carolina and South Carolina border, and brought a record 18 foot
storm surge at Calabash, North Carolina. Wind gusts of 150 mph were felt
in Holden Beach, Calabash, and Little River Inlet 100 mph gusts were felt
farther inland at Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey,
and New York. Hazel carved a path of destruction that left over 600 dead,
and damages exceeded $350 million 1953 U.S. dollars.
- Hurricane Connie--Was the first of
three hurricanes to make landfall in the Carolinas in 1955. Some ten months
after Hazel devastated the Tar Heel state, Connie made landfall over Cape
Lookout, North Carolina on August 12, 1955. The storm produced heavy rains,
tornadoes, and wind gusts up to 100 mph. The storm headed northward, and
brought heavy rains in excess of 9 inches in Eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware,
and New Jersey while dumping over 12 inches in portions of New York City.
- Hurricane Diane--First billion dollar
hurricane. Made landfall along the Outer Banks of North Carolina, and caused
havoc from the Carolinas to New England in August 1955. Just five days after
Connie, Diane came ashore on August 17th over Carolina Beach. At its peak,
Diane produced winds of 125 mph, but at landfall winds were down 50 mph
in Cape Hatteras while Wilmington had a gust of minimal hurricane force.
Its flooding rains proved more devastating as they killed two hundred while
establishing a new benchmark for damage. The havoc wreaked by Diane brought
out Presidential Commission on Storm Modification that eventually led to
Project Stormfury.
- Hurricane Ione--Struck a month after
Connie and Diane in September, 1955. The storm struck just west of Atlantic
Beach along the North Carolina coast. This was another storm that made landfall
well after it had peaked in intensity with 125 mph winds and a minimum central
pressure of 27.70 inches. Nevertheless, it brought 16 inches of rainfall
to parts of the Tar Heel state, and left six dead as well as $90 million
in damages before curving out to sea.
- Hurricane Helene--Perhaps one of
the most powerful hurricanes during the 1950s not to make landfall in the
Carolinas although it came very close. Helene came within 20 miles of the
coast at Cape Fear on September 27, 1958. Winds still reached 135 mph at
Wilmington while Southport, North Carolina had winds sustained at 125 mph
with gusts between 150 and 160 mph, and a minimum central pressure of 27.75
inches.
- Hurricane Donna--Had a very erratic
path in the summer of 1960 that started in the Caribbean, then went to the
Florida Keys, then into the Gulf of Mexico, where it would make a turn to
the north and make a second landfall over Florida at Fort Myers. It continued
northeastward across the Florida Peninsula, and moved back out into the
Atlantic near Daytona Beach. Not done yet, Donna headed up the East Coast,
and made another landfall at Topsail Island, North Carolina. It then finished
its trip by heading into New England, and a final landfall across Long Island.
At its peak, Donna had wind gusts ranging between 175 and 200 mph, a minimum
central pressure of 27.46 inches, and a 13 foot storm surge. Its total damage
cost was over one billion 1960 United States dollars while Donna left 50
people dead.
- Hurricane
Carla--Struck between the Port O'Connor and Port Lavaca area of
Texas back in September, 1961. It was the most powerful storm to hit the
Texas Coast in about 40 years. It winds were in excess of 150 mph, and gusts
went up to 170 mph. Tides near Port Lavaca were 18.5 feet above normal,
and the barometric pressure was 27.62 inches of Hg. Estimated damage from
the storm was $408 million dollars while the death toll hit 43. Today, the
cost would have been far greater.
- Hurricane
Hattie--Struck the then coastal capital of Belize, Belize City on
Halloween in 1961. Hattie was the second or two Category Five Hurricanes
from that season. Leaving some 275 people dead and some $60 million dollars
in damage, Hattie devastated the Belize capital forcing government officials
to move government offices and buildings inland to the city of Belmopan.
- Hurricane Cleo--The first hurricane
to strike the Miami area since Hurricane King in 1950, this 1964 storm produced
wind gusts of 138 mph, and knee-deep water that produced some $125 million
dollars in damage ($600 million 1990 U.S. dollars).
- Hurricane Dora--Within a few weeks
after Cleo in September, 1964, this hurricane hit the Northeastern coast
of Florida at a right angle. It was the first storm ever to do this since
the Great Hurricane of 1880. Dora had winds of 125 mph at St. Augustine,
and produced a 12 foot storm surge.
- Hurricane Betsy--A Category Three
Hurricane that struck South Florida and Louisiana in September, 1965. It
would be the last major hurricane to affect South Florida until Hurricane
Andrew in 1992.
- Hurricane Inez--Known as "The
Crazy One," Inez carved an erratic path of death and destruction from
the Caribbean to Florida, and to Mexico in October, 1966. It left some 1,500
people dead, and produced millions of dollars in damage with top winds of
approximately 190 mph. Minimum central pressure with Inez was recorded at
27.38 inches of Hg, which according to the Saffir-Simpson
scale that came out into 1970, was equivalent to a Category Four Hurricane.
- Hurricane Audrey--A rare early season
major hurricane, this storm struck in Texas and Louisiana in June, 1957.
It was the most powerful hurricane ever in the month of June, and it rapidly
intensified over the Gulf of Mexico before making landfall leaving many
caught off guard.
- Hurricane Beulah--Hurricane Beulah
was a Category Four Hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale that Texas in
1967, and produced some 150 tornadoes after making landfall. The most ever
produced on record by a tropical system. Hurricane Frances in 2004 spawned
half that number, which is still quite a bit in its own right.
- Hurricane Camille--Was the last Category
Five Hurricane to make landfall over the United States before Hurricane
Andrew did in August, 1992. Hurricane Camille landfall over Gulfport, Mississippi
on August 18, 1969 with winds of 180 mph, and a record storm surge of 24.3
feet. It left about 250 people dead from Louisiana to Virginia, and was
responsible for approximately $1.421 billion dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Celia--A powerful Category
Three Hurricane that came ashore in the Corpus Christi area during the 1970
season. Sustained winds were 130 mph, which made it a strong Category Three
Hurricane. Winds gusted as high as 161 mph, and ended up being the costliest
storm at the time. Some other areas received wind gusts as high as 180 mph.
Celia became the third major hurricane to strike the Texas Gulf Coast behind
Hurricane Carla (1961) and Hurricane Beulah (1967). Today, it still ranks
quite high as the National Hurricane Center places it 24th on the all time
list with $453 billion dollars in damage. The silver lining in all of this
was the fact that only 11 people died from the storm even though 466 people
were injured, 9,000 homes were destroyed, 14,000 homes were significantly
damaged, and another 41,000 suffered minor damage.
- Hurricane Agnes--A minimal Category
One Hurricane upon landfall in Apalachicola, Florida in June, 1972, it proceeded
to cause devastating floods in Northeastern Pennsylvania as it combined
with another low pressure system to dump heavy rains over the area. Damage
from this storm was estimated to be about $2.1 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Eloise--A powerful hurricane
that formed in September, 1975, Eloise was a Category Three Hurricane with
sustained winds of 125 mph, and gusts of up to 156 mph. It produced a 12
to 16 foot storm surge along the Florida Coast from Ft. Walton Beach to
Panama City, Florida. With a minimum central pressure of 28.20 inches, Eloise
was the first major hurricane to make a direct hit on this area in the 20th
century, and caused some $1 billion dollars in damage as well as 21 deaths.
- Hurricane Belle--A
Category Three Hurricane at one point with 120 mph winds, Belle was the
second named storm of the 1976 Atlantic Hurricane Season. The storm would
eventually weaken though to just a tropical storm by the time it came ashore
on Long Island. Shortly afterward, it became extratropical.
- Hurricane David--A powerful Category
Five Hurricane that ripped through the Caribbean with winds of over 155
mph, it struck the coast of Georgia as a Category One Hurricane on September
4, 1979. It then came up the coast, and hit the Northeast as a Tropical
Storm with winds that knocked down tree branches, and even spawned some
tornadoes on Long Island. Damage estimated from this storm was $320 million
dollars.
- Hurricane Frederick--A major hurricane
that slammed into Mobile Bay in Alabama with 125 mph after struggling to
maintain itself over the rugged terrain of Hispanola and Cuba. The storm
caused some $2.3 billion dollars in damage to portions of the Gulf Coast.
- Hurricane
Allen--The first named storm of the 1980 Atlantic Hurricane
Season, Allen became a Category Five hurricane on three separate occasions,
and is ranked as one of the strongest storms ever recorded in the Atlantic.
Allen's eye didn't touch land from the time it crossed the Windward Islands
including St. Lucia until it came ashore near Port Mansfield, Texas.
- Hurricane Alicia--A strong Category
Three Hurricane with winds of 125 mph, Alicia was the last hurricane to
make landfall in the Galveston, Texas area back in August, 1983. Estimated
damage from this storm was $2 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Elena--A
very fickle storm, Elena stayed away from land in the Gulf of Mexico for
about a week as upper level winds broke down above the storm. As a result,
it grew from a Category One to a Category Three Hurricane with 125 mph as
it came ashore in Biloxi, Mississippi in September, 1985. Estimated damage
as a result of this storm was $1.25 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Gloria--Termed
the
Storm Of The Century
at one point in its life. This Category
Three Hurricane made landfall over the outer banks of North Carolina, and
then moved up the East Coast of the United States on September 27, 1985.
Estimated damage from this storm was $900 million dollars.
- Hurricane Kate--An unusually strong
late season hurricane, Kate was a Category Two Hurricane that struck the
Port St. Joe area of the Florida Panhandle in November, 1985. It was the
latest hurricane ever recorded in a season to strike that far north in Florida.
It ended up causing some $300 million dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Gilbert--The
most powerful storm ever recorded in the Atlantic with winds of 200 mph,
and a central pressure of 26.28 inches of Hg, Gilbert came ashore in the
Yucatan, and then proceeded into the Gulf of Mexico before hitting the Northern
Mexican town of Matamoros with only 120 mph winds.
- Hurricane Hugo--This
Category Four Hurricane at landfall, carved a path from the Leeward Islands
in the Caribbean to Charleston, South Carolina in September, 1989. At one
point in its lifetime, Hugo reached Category Five intensity with 160 mph
winds, and a minimum central pressure of 27.11 inches of Hg. Rapidly intensifying
over the Gulf Stream, it came ashore in South Carolina with 135 mph winds.
This storm ranks currently second all time in terms of estimated damage
at $7 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Bob--This
Category Two Hurricane was one of the more memorable storms of 1991 besides
the "perfect" Halloween Gale later that year. It moved up the East Coast
before making landfall in New England. Believe it or not, as of 2000, this
storm was ranked 10th all time in terms of estimated damage with $1.5 billion
dollars.
- Hurricane Grace--Contrary
to what was said in the movie, The Perfect Storm, Grace was only
a Category Two Hurricane, but it would combine with a mid-latitude cyclone
to form what would be known as the "Perfect Storm" in Meteorological
terms during the final days of October, 1991.
- Hurricane Andrew--This
is probably the most recent memorable hurricanes in modern history. After
struggling to develop in the Atlantic, this Category Five Hurricane rapidly
developed over the Gulf Stream, and devastated South Florida with 165 mph
winds on August 24, 1992. It was the costliest natural disaster on record
with some $30 billion dollars in damage.
- Tropical Storm Alberto--Was a strong
tropical storm at landfall in early July, 1994, but it would end up being
one of the most memorable tropical storms as it proceeded to meander over
Northwest Florida and Southern Georgia, and dump a tonnage of rain there.
When it was all said and done, it left 31 people dead, and caused some $500
million dollars in damage.
- Tropical Storm Beryl--Was practically
a carbon copy of Alberto except for the fact that it occurred a month and
a half later in August, 1994. Slightly weaker than Alberto was, Beryl had
60 mph winds, and a minimum central pressure of 29.50. Nevertheless, it
dumped another 9 inches of rain on already waterlogged Tallahassee, and
another 10.7 inches on Apalachicola.
- Hurricane Gordon--One of the most
erratic moving hurricanes, and still one of the most deadly in the last
20 years. Starting out in the Western Caribbean off the coast of Honduras
and Nicaragua, Gordon weaved his way through the Caribbean and Florida before
making its first landfall along the Outer Banks of North Carolina. It then
turned southwestward again, and moved over Florida, where it finally dissipated.
The storm left some $400 million dollars in damage, and 1145 people dead
in November, 1994.
- Hurricane Erin--Was one of a number
of tropical storms and hurricanes in 1995. It actually made two landfalls
over Florida. The first occurred on August 2nd at Vero Beach, and the second
a few days later over Pensacola as a strong Category One Hurricane with
90 mph winds. Rain from this system was felt as far north as Illinois, and
the storm caused some $700 million dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Luis--One of the most powerful
hurricanes of the 19 storms from the 1995 Season. Pummeled the Leeward Islands
as well as parts of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands with 150 mph winds
before turning out to sea in September, 1995. Caused approximately $2.5
billion dollars in damage and killed 17 people.
- Hurricane Marilyn--Formed on the
heels of Hurricane Luis in the Western Atlantic back in September, 1995,
and brought Category Three Hurricane force winds to parts of the Leeward
Islands and the Virgin Islands before turning out to sea. Caused approximately
$1.5 billion dollars in damage, and left 8 people dead.
- Hurricane Opal--This late season
storm rapidly developed into a very strong Category Four Hurricane before
weakening to a strong Category Three Hurricane when it came ashore near
Pensacola, Florida in October, 1995. Opal ranks fifth all time in terms
of damage with an estimated $3 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Roxanne--Formed in the
Bay of Campeche region of Mexico in the weeks following Hurricane Opal's
landfall near Panama City, Florida. The storm was a Category Three Hurricane
with sustained winds of 115 mph, and a minimum central pressure of 28.23
inches of Hg. The storm left 14 people dead and some $1.5 billion dollars
in damage.
- Hurricane Bertha--The
earliest hurricane to form in the Eastern Atlantic. Developed just West
of the Cape Verde islands in the last week of June, 1996, and made landfall
as a Category Two Hurricane over Wilimngton, North Carolina on July 12,
1996. Killed 12 people, and caused some $275,000,000 dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Fran--The
most powerful hurricane to make landfall in the United States during the
1996 Hurricane Season. Made landfall over North Carolina with 115 mph winds
in September of that year, and caused some $3.2 billion dollars in damage
at the time. Damage estimates are even higher today.
- Hurricane Hortense--Was
a hurricane that formed during the Labor Day Weekend of the 1996 Hurricane
Season. While the storm didn't make landfall in the United States, it ravaged
parts of the Caribbean including Puerto Rico with torrential rains. Damage
estimates from this storm is approximately $500 million dollars. After that,
it grew in strength to a Category Four Hurricane.
- Hurricane Georges--A Classic Cape
Verde Hurricane that formed in September, 1998, Georges ripped through the
Leeward Islands and Caribbean with as high as 150 mph winds. It then hit
the Florida Keys before making landfall in Mississippi. Left 602 people
dead, and caused about $5.9 billion dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Mitch--A
very powerful late season hurricane, Mitch had winds of 190 mph before making
landfall in Central America. It devastated Honduras with over 75 inches
of rain that spawned devastating floods and mudslides that left about 11,000
people dead in October, 1999.
- Hurricane Floyd--Also
termed
Storm of the Century
at one point, Floyd caused the largest
peacetime evacuation in history that involved 3,000,000 people from South
Florida to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina as it bore down on the Southeast
coast in September, 1999. It later made landfall as a Category Three Hurricane
over North Carolina, and would bring up to 30 inches of rain from North
Carolina to New Jersey spawning terrible floods. Floyd ranks third all time
in damage with an estimated $4.5 billion dollars in damage althogh some
estimates run as high as $6 billion.
- Hurricane Irene--Is an often forgotten
storm from the 1999 Hurricane Season except for those in Florida. Forming
during the middle of October that year, Irene became a Category Two Hurricane
with 100 mph sustained winds, and higher gusts. The storm also produced
some 10 to 20 inches of rain across South Florida while causing 8 deaths
by electrocution, and $800 million dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Lenny--Known by those in
the Caribbean as "El Zorito", or "the Lefty", Lenny
was the first ever storm on record to strike the Lesser Antilles from the
West in November, 1999. It was also the most powerful late-season storm
on record with 150 mph winds. The storm was responsible for approximately
$330 million dollars in damage.
- Hurricane
Keith--Powerful Category Four Hurricane that struck the Central
American country of Belize in the first week of October, 2000. Making landfall
near the area of Belize City, the storm caused some two million dollars
in damage, and left 11 people dead.
- Tropical Storm Leslie--Started out
as a subtropical depression in the Florida Straits, and brought some 15
to 20 inches of rain to parts of South Florida. Caused about 1,000,000 dollars
in damage, and killed two people. After flooding South Florida, it gained
more tropical characteristics, and became a minimal tropical storm in October,
2000.
- Hurricane Michael--Formed in the
Western Atlantic in the last weeks of October, 2000, and eventually headed
northward into the Canadian Maritimes, where it brought 100 mph winds to
parts of Newfoundland in Canada.
- Tropical Storm
Allison--Became the first tropical storm to get its name retired.
Also was the costliest tropical storm on record as it caused some $4 to
$5 billion dollars in damage. Heavy rains from the storm produced tremendous
flooding in the Houston, Texas area in the first weeks of June, 2001.
- Hurricane Iris--A
very small and narrow hurricane that brought 145 mph winds to the central
portion of Belize in October, 2001. The storm left some 28 people dead including
tourists from Virginia, and caused millions of dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Michelle--A
powerful late season hurricane, Michelle brought 135 mph winds to portions
of Western Cuba and the Isle of Youth before turning east and avoiding South
Florida by going out to sea in November, 2001.
- Hurricane Isidore--A
powerful Category Three Hurricane that originally developed in the Caribbean,
Isidore made landfall over the Yucatan Peninsula with 125 mph, but only
made landfall over Louisiana as a tropical storm in September, 2002.
- Hurricane Lili--Another
powerful hurricane that formed in the Caribbean on the heels of Isidore,
Lili grew to Category Four Strength with 140 mph winds. Threatening Louisiana
as a major hurricane, Lili encountered hostile upper level conditions just
before landfall, and weakened to just a Category Two Hurricane when it came
ashore over Louisiana in October, 2002.
- Tropical Storm Ana--Usually
nothing much would be said about a minimal strength tropical storm that
emerges from a subtropical depression, but Ana, which formed over Easter
Weekend in 2003, was an exception since it became the first ever recorded
storm to form in April.
- Hurricane Fabian--A
hurricane that last for about a week, and a tropical system that lasted
for nearly two weeks, Fabian was a Category Four Hurricane at one point
with winds of 145 mph in September, 2003. Responsible for eight deaths and
$300 million dollars in damage, Fabian went down as the worst hurricane
to strike the tiny resort island of Bermuda since 1926.
- Hurricane Isabel--A
very rare and powerful Category Five Hurricane, Isabel underwent rapid intensification
and was able to stay at the highest level a hurricane can reach for over
30 hours, which made it one of the longest lasting Category Five Storms
on record. Maximum sustained winds recorded were 160 mph, but gusts were
as high as 234 mph. Although it eventually weakened, Isabel came ashore
along the Outer Banks of North Carolina as a Category Two Hurricane, and
was responsible for 16 deaths and $3.37 billion dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Juan--Was
the first hurricane to make landfall near Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada
in over a century. A Category Two Hurricane, Juan was responsible for four
deaths, numerous power outages, tree damage, and went down as the most damaging
hurricane in the history of Halifax.
- Hurricane Alex--Was
the first hurricane of the 2004 Atlantic Hurricane Season, and even became
the season's first major hurricane as well. Alex brushed the Outer Banks
of North Carolina before turning out to sea in early August, 2004. With
winds of 120 mph, it was a solid Category Three Hurricane.
- Hurricane Charley--When
it was all said and done, Hurricane Charley went down as the most devastating
hurricane to hit anywhere in Florida since Hurricane Andrew in August, 1992.
It also ended up being the second costliest hurricane in U.S. History behind
Andrew. Charley fooled forecasters by not only rapidly intensifiying, but
also making a turn to the north and east much sooner than anticipated, which
spared the city of Tampa, but devastated the Port Charlotte area on August
13, 2004. Winds were as high as 145 mph, and the storm left at least 35
people dead, and $14 billion dollars in damage.
- Hurricane Frances--Not
as devastating as Charley, but still a very destructive storm due to its
slow motion. Moving between 5 to 10 mph across the Florida Peninsula, Frances
pounded just about all of the Sunshine state with Tropical Storm and Hurricane
force winds for at least 24 hours on the Labor Day Weekend of 2004. Prior
to that, the third major hurricane of the 2004 season rolled through the
Bahamas with 145 mph winds. The storm left some 49 dead there while forcing
the evacuation of 2.8 million people in Florida as well as knocking out
power to about 6 million there as well. Frances was also responsible for
producing 75 tornadoes. Final damage estimate is $9 billion dollars for
the storm.
- Hurricane Ivan--A
classic Cape Verde storm that formed at unusually low latitude, Ivan rapidly
developed into a Category Four Hurricane during the Labor Day Weekend of
2004 before briefly weakening to a Category Two for a period. However, as
it moved through the extreme Southern Windward Islands of Barbados and Grenada,
the storm strengthened back to major hurricane status, and destroyed 75
to 90 percent of all buildings on the island of Grenada. The storm then
continued to re-energize, and reach Category Five status. It was the second
Category Five storm in as many years after almost a five year drought following
Mitch in October, 1998. It would eventually weaken somewhat, but it still
made landfall near Gulf Shores, Alabama as a strong Category Three Hurricane
with 130 mph winds. Moving farther inland, Ivan's remains sparked torrential
rains, flooding, and 123 tornadoes, which is second to Hurricane Beulah's
150 in 1967. Ivan was responsible for some 124 deaths throughout the Caribbean
and the Eastern United States. Final damage estimate from not only the U.S.,
but also the Caribbean totals $14.2 billion dollars.
- Hurricane Jeanne--Originally
not a powerful storm, Jeanne carved a path of death and destruction from
Puerto Rico into Hispanola with 80 mph winds and heavy rains in September,
2004. The torrential rainfall produced floods and mudslides in Haiti, which
left an estimated 1500 people dead in addition to 31 that were killed in
Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. The storm has also been known for
its erratic motion taking an eastward turn away from the United States after
going through the Bahamas, and then turning southward, and westward back
toward land. Jeanne finally made landfall in the United States along the
South Central Coast of Florida near Stuart with winds of 120 mph. It was
the fifth storm, fourth hurricane, and third major hurricane to impact the
Sunshine State in 2004. After impacting Florida, the storm spread northward
into the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast, where it produced flooding
rains and tornadoes. Total death toll was estimated to be over 3,000, and
the final damage total is estimated to be $6.9 billion.
- Hurricane Dennis--Was
a rare powerful July hurricane that formed in the Southeastern Caribbean
a few hundred miles to the West-Northwest of Grenada on the evening of July
4th, 2005. Gradually strengthening in the days that followed, Dennis brought
heavy rains to Jamaica, the Caymans, and Hispanola, but bore the brunt of
its assault on Cienfuegos, Cuba with 150 mph winds. The coastal Cuban community
was devastated as telephone poles and wires were knocked down. Just missing
Category Five strength on the Saffir-Simpson Scale, Dennis cross the narrow,
but rugged terrain of Cuba, and re-emerged in the Gulf of Mexico as a Category
One storm before rapidly intensifying to a Category Four Hurricane in the
early morning hours of July 10th, 2005. Dennis eventually made landfall
near Pensacola, Florida on the afternoon of July 10th. So far, the death
toll from the storm stands at 32, and inital damage estimates range from
$1 billion to $2.5 billion.
- Hurricane Emily--Was
another rare powerful July hurricane that formed in the Atlantic on the
heels of Hurricane Dennis during the week of July 10th, 2005. The storm
became the most powerful hurricane ever recorded in the month of July after
its winds reached a peak speed of 160 mph, and its minimum central pressure
dropped to 929 mb, or 27.43 inches of Hg. This just surpassed the levels
previously established by Dennis, and made it the first Category Five Hurricane
of the 2005 season. Three more Cat Fives would follow. Although Emily ransacked
the island of Grenada, which was still recovering from Hurricane Ivan's
impact in September, 2004, the storm mercifully spared the islands of Jamaica
and the Caymans as well as weakened before making landfall in the Yucatan.
The storm did regain some steam after losing its punch over the plateau
of the Yucatan Peninsula, and made a final landfall as a major hurricane
in Northeastern Mexico with winds of 125 mph. The storm was responsible
for 64 deaths, and initially $300,000,000 dollars in damage. It also contributed
to the rise in oil prices by forcing the evacuation of employees of Mexico's
primary oil company, PEMEX, from their offshore rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Hurricane Katrina--Started
out modestly on August 23rd, 2005 in the Bahamas as a tropical wave that
emerged from the remnants of a tropical depression that had been in the
Caribbean. It gradually grew into the season's eleventh named
storm and fourth hurricane prior to making
landfall in South Florida as a minimal hurricane with maximum sustained
winds of 80 mph, and gusts up to 95 mph. After quickly crossing Southern
Florida, Katrina emerged again over water in the Southeastern Gulf of Mexico
near the Florida Keys, and strengthened to the 2005 season's third major
hurricane before reorganizing into the most powerful storm in the Central
Gulf since Hurricane Camille, and fourth Category Five
Hurricane in three years with winds as high as 175 mph, and a minimum
central pressure of 902 mb, or 26.64 inches of Hg. It became the fourth
most powerful hurricane of all time ahead
of Camille and behind Hurricane Gilbert (1988),
the Labor Day of Hurricane of 1935, and Hurricane Allen
(1980). After coming ashore as a Category One Hurricane in South Florida,
Katrina struck two more times along the Gulf Coast. First in Buras, Louisiana
with 140 mph winds, and then near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi with 135 mph
winds. It created a 27 foot storm surge in Gulfport, Mississippi and a 22
foot storm surge in Bay St. Louis. Winds as high as 90 mph were felt as
far east as Mobile, Alabama, which experienced its worst flooding in 90
years. To make matters worse, part of an oil rig broke away in Mobile Bay
and hit a nearby causway possibly causing damage there. Waves as high as
48 feet happened offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. Some 50 people were killed
in coastal Mississippi including 30 in an apartment complex in Biloxi. Katrina
even ripped off part of the roof of the Louisiana Superdome, where 10,000
people were staying in the facility, which was being used as a shelter of
last resort. Extensive flooding occurred in New Orleans, which was actually
spared the brunt of the storm. The 9th ward in the Crescent City was underwater
as well as 80 percent of the city. People fled to their attics to escape
drowning and some were rescued by helicopters and boats. So far, the latest
death toll is at 1,833 (Louisiana-1582, Mississippi-170, Florida-30, Alabama-48,
Georgia-2, Tennessee-1 with damage estimates now are up to $81 billion.
Experts fear that the total cost for the storm could be $200 billion dollars,
which would make Katrina the costliest hurricane and natural disaster in
United States History.
- Hurricane Rita--The
seventeenth named storm and fifth major hurricane of the 2005 season, Rita
began near the Turks and Caicos Islands as a mere tropical depression on
September 17th, 2005. However, as it passed near the Florida Keys and South
Florida, Rita blossomed into the season's ninth hurricane, and brought sustained
winds of Category Two strength with gusts over 100 mph. Continuing to strengthen,
Hurricane Rita became a major hurricane on September 21st, 2005 as its eye
experienced a 77 millibar drop in just 39 hours. The storm, which followed
a similar track to the devastating Hurricane Katrina,
which struck New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast on August 29th,
2005, became the third Category Five Hurricane
to emerge in 2005 with 175 mph winds, and a minimum central pressure of
897 mb, or 26.49 inches of Hg. Hurricane Hunters also found wind gusts as
high as 235 mph. With those statistics, Rita is not only the most powerful
hurricane of 2005 so far, but it is also now third on the all
time list ahead of Katrina and Hurricane
Allen, and behind only Hurricane Gilbert
(1988) and the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935. The approach of Rita to the
Western Gulf Coast, prompted the evacuation of some 2.7 million people.
Poor planning led to traffic jams and cars running out of gas in Texas.
A usual four hour trip from Houston to Dallas ended up taking as long as
18 hours. Prior to making landfall, the storm had already caused problems
including the deaths
of 107 people trying to flee the storm, flooding in Galveston, and breeches
in the New Orleans levee system that was severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina
a month earlier. Twenty-four of those people that died during evacuation
were in a bus that had a fire and explosion on Interstate 45 south of Dallas,
Texas, Rita finally made landfall in the Sabine Pass area of the Texas/Louisiana
border in the early morning hours of September 24th, 2005 bringing with
it wind gusts as high as 111 mph in Cameron, Louisiana, and heavy damage
in Lake Charles and Vermillion Parish. Approximately 1.1 million people
were initialy without power in Texas and Louisiana. Damage estimates from
the storm are currently $6 billion dollars, and 54
people were directly killed by the storm including five
who lost their lives in an Apartment Complex in Beaumont, Texas, a man,
who lost his life when a tornado struck in Northern Mississippi, and an
East Texas man, who died at the hands of a fallen tree.
- Hurricane Stan--The eighteenth named
storm, and tenth hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season started
out modestly, and only was a Category One Hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson
Scale when it made landfall over Southern Mexico, but the heavy rains it
produced resulted in a deadly toll. Unofficially, as of this time, there
have been up to 1,500 deaths in Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras,
Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Officially, there have been 796 deaths so far
throughout Mexico (71 dead) and Central America including 652 in Guatemala,
and another 71 in El Salvador. In addition, the Mexican Government estimates
that damage from Stan will cost approximately $1.9 billion U.S. Dollars
while crop damage in El Salvador is estimated to be about $10 million. The
death toll reported so far with Hurricane Stan makes this storm among the
most deadly of all time, and may even surpass the tally accumulated by Hurricane
Katrina along the Gulf Coast of the United States. Reasons for the high
death toll is that the heavy rains from the dissipating storm produced severe
flooding and mudslides. Rainfall amounts ranging between 15 to 20 inches
was reported in the region.
- Hurricane Vince--Well...Ok, you probably
think that this storm was nothing special, but it actually was for several
reasons. Forming in the second full week of October, 2005, Vince not only
became the 20th named storm and 11th hurricane of the busy 2005 season,
but it also marked the first time since the naming of storms began in 1950,
that a season reached the "V" named storm. The previous mark was
set in 1995 when that season reached the "T" named storm. It also
set history in a couple more ways as well. Forming in the vicinity of the
Madiera Islands in the Northeastern Atlantic, Hurricane Vince was the first
hurricane on record to form in this region. In addition, Vince became the
first tropical cyclone of any kind to make landfall in Spain as it made
landfall in the Southwestern portion of the Western European country near
Huelva on October 11, 2005 as a tropical depression with 35 mph winds and
a minimum central pressure of 1002 mb, or 29.59 inches.
- Hurricane Wilma--There
is no question about this one being on the list. Wilma started out modestly
as the 24th depression of the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season on Saturday,
October 15th, and battled some ups and downs that weekend, but over time
the storm would become a monster. In a span of 36 hours from Tuesday morning,
October 18th to Wednesday afternoon, October 19th, the barometric pressure
in the storm dropped some 102 mb to an all
time low for pressure in the Atlantic Basin of 882 mb, or 26.05 inches
of Hg. Maximum sustained winds increased to 175 mph. Wilma is now the strongest
storm all time in the Atlantic surpassing the mark set by Hurricane
Gilbert in 1988 (888 mb). It also was the 21st named storm, 12th hurricane,
and 6th major hurricane of 2005, which equaled marks for storms in 1933
and hurricanes in 1969. Wilma was the fourth Category
Five Hurricane to form in the season as well joining Katrina
and Rita, which are also among the five or six strongest storms on record.
After reaching its peak, Wilma gradually decreased in intensity to a strong
Category Four with 140 mph before making its first landfall over Cozumel,
Mexico on Friday, October 21, 2005. Six hours later on Friday night, Wilma
slowly moved over the Yucatan as it made a second landfall in Cancun. After
bringing hurricane force winds to the Yucatan for over 24 hours, the storm
gradually departed, and moved out over the Southern Gulf of Mexico, where
it was picked up by a trough over the Eastern United States, and carried
across Florida. Moving as fast as 25 miles per hour to the Northeast, Wilma
made a third landfall over
Cape Romano, Florida some 22 miles to the south of Naples, and brought
with it winds of Category Three strength at 125 mph. Wilma had a devastating
effect on much of the East Coast of South Florida including Fort Lauderdale,
which experienced its
worst hurricane in 55 years. Nearby in Key Biscayne wind gusts were
as high as 116 mph while they were 95 at Opa Locka Airport outside Miami.
Between three and
six million people were left without power in the hours after the storm.
Waves as high as 45 feet came over the sea wall, and battered the capital
of Havana in Cuba. Swells as high as 50 feet were also reported. The
storm has already killed some 48 people in Florida (31 deaths), Mexico and
throughout the Caribbean including places as far away as Haiti. Initial
damage estimates are said to be $10
billion dollars.
- Tropical Storm Alpha--Not too many
tropical storms get mentioned in this list unless they are record breakers,
or what we call storms of the unusual. Alpha does meet this criteria as
it was the 22nd named storm to form in the Tropical
Atlantic during the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane season, which broke the record
previously set in 1933 with 21 storms. It also marked the first time since
names have been used in the Atlantic (since 1950) that a second list of
storm names was used for the same season. There have also been 12 hurricanes
in 2005, which equaled the mark set in 1969, and 6 major hurricanes including
three Category Five storms, which is
also a record. So far, Alpha has been responsible for some 26 deaths in
the Caribbean.
- Hurricane Beta--Like Alpha, Beta
is an historic storm for different reasons. Only a Category One Hurricane
on the Saffir-Simpson Scale on October 28th, 2005,
Beta originally developed in the extreme Southwestern
Caribbean on October 26th, 2005. It became the 23rd named storm of the season,
and then strengthened to the 13th hurricane of the season as well. With
winds of 90 mph, and a minimum central pressure of 28.79 inches of Hg, Beta
became a record breaking hurricane by placing 2005 in the history books
again with the most hurricanes in a season. 2005 broke the previous mark
set in 1969 with 12 hurricanes. On the morning of October 29th, Beta strengthened
to its peak intensity as a major hurricane with 115 mph winds and a minimum
central pressure of 28.35 inches of Hg. making it the seventh major hurricane
of the 2005 season. That tied the season for second all time for most major
hurricanes with 1961, which also had seven major storms. 1950 had the most
major hurricanes with eight. The storm would finally make landfall in Nicaragua
some 50 miles to the north of Bluefields on October 29th.
- Hurricane Dean--The
fourth named storm of the 2007 Atlantic Hurricane
Season not only became the first hurricane, but
also the first major hurricane of that season. Forming in the Eastern Atlantic
on August 13th, it was the first real Cape Verde
storm of 2007. Gradually strengthening, Dean grew to have maximum sustained
winds as high as 165 miles per hour with gusts up to 200 miles per hour,
which classified it as a Category Five Hurricane
on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. Its minimum pressure
dropped as low as 906 millibars, or 26.75 inches of Hg (Mercury), which
was stronger than Hurricane Ivan back in September
2004, and right behind hurricanes Camille (1969) and Mitch
(1998) among the all time most powerful storms
recorded in the Atlantic. Dean also became the third most intense hurricane
to make landfall in the Atlantic Basin behind the Labor Day Hurricane of
1935, and Hurricane Gilbert. Following a similar track to that of both Ivan
in 2004 and Gilbert in
1988, Dean moved through the central portion of the Lesser Antilles including
Dominica and Martinique, then moved south of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands,
and Hispaniola before battering the island nation of Jamaica as its eye
just brushed its southermost point. The storm also bypassed the Cayman Island
chain before coming ashore in the Yucatan Peninsula near the towns of Costa
Maya and Majahual, which is 40 miles to the East-Northeast of Chetumal at
4:30 PM EDT on August 21, 2007. After being over the Yucatan for about twelve
hours, the storm re-emerged in the Bay of Campeche as a minimal hurricane,
but gradually re-strengthened to a Category Two storm with 100 mph winds
when it made a second landfall along the Mexican coastline in the early
afternoon of August 22, 2007 near Gutierrez Zamora some 40 miles South-Southeast
of Tuxpan. The latest death toll has the storm leaving behind forty-five
people dead including twenty-five in Mexico, and twenty throughout the Caribbean
including nine in Haiti, six in the Dominican Republic, two in Dominica,
two in Jamaica, and one in St. Lucia. The storm has so far caused some $2
billion in damage including a battering of the oil fields for the Mexican
national oil company, PEMEX, and shutting down a plant run in Jamaica by
Pittsburgh based Aluminum producer, Alcoa.
- Hurricane Felix--The
fifth named storm of the 2007 Atlantic Hurricane
Season not only became the second hurricane, and
major hurricane of that season, but also the season's second Category
Five Hurricane. Forming over two weeks after Hurricane
Dean in the Eastern Atlantic on August 31st, it was the second Cape
Verde storm of 2007. Rapidly strengthening in the very warm waters of
the Southern Caribbean during the Labor Day Weekend, Felix grew to have
maximum sustained winds as high as 165 miles per hour with gusts up to 200
miles per hour, which classified it as a Category Five Hurricane on the
Saffir-Simpson Scale. After the storm experienced
a fall of 78 millibars in 52 hours, Felix's minimum pressure dropped as
low as 929 millibars, or 27.43 inches of Hg (Mercury) which was stronger
as Hurricane Michelle from late October, 2001
and as strong as Hurricane Emily from July, 2005
among the all time most powerful storms
recorded in the Atlantic. Its pressure drop is second all time to Hurricane
Wilma from October 2005, which was 83 millibars in 12 hours, and ahead
of Hurricane Allen (1980). Following a similar
track to that of both Ivan in 2004 and Emily
in 2005, Felix moved through the southern Windwards including Grenada, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines, and their dependencies, then moved well south
of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Hispaniola before threatening the
usually unscathed ABC islands of Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao in the Nertherlands
Antilles. The storm eventually bypassed Jamaica and the Caymans as well
as the Colombian enclave of Isla de Providencia before coming ashore on
the Northern Coast of Nicaragua near the city of Cabo Gracias A Dios as
a Category Five Hurricane with sustained winds of 160 miles per hour, and
a minimum central pressure of 935 millibars, or 27.61 inches. The storm
then proceeded to cross Central America with heavy rains that produced flooding
and mudslides in interior portions of Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and
the Chiapas region of Southern Mexico. As of now, Felix is responsible for
130 deaths along coastal Nicaragua. Prior to landfall, Felix had reintensified
into a Cat Five storm after weakening to a minimal Category Four storm with
135 mile per hour winds, and 160 mile per hour gusts late Sunday, September
2nd.
- Hurricane Humberto--Putting this
storm on the list is debatable. However, Hurricane Humberto from the 2007
Atlantic Hurricane Season is significant for several reasons. First, it
was a storm that went from depression status to
a Category One Hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale
with 85 mile per hour winds over a span of just 14 hours. In addition, the
storm's formation in the oil platform rich area of the Western Gulf of Mexico
pushed oil prices up to over $80 per barrel. Finally,
and most significantly, Humberto's landfall was the first landfall by an
Atlantic Hurricane along the U.S. coastline since Hurricane
Wilma back in October 2005. The storm crossed
the Texas shoreline near High Point, Texas, and peaked at 85 mile per hour
winds, 105 mile per hour wind gusts, and a barometric pressure as low as
29.12 inches of Hg (Mercury), or 986 millibars. The storm left approximately
$500 million dollars in damage in Texas and Louisiana.
- Hurricane Noel--Like Humberto, it
was a minimal storm, but this Category One Hurricane was the deadliest and
most costly hurricane of the 2007 Atlantic Hurricane Season. The storm,
which formed 185 miles South-Southeast of Port-Au-Prince, Haiti left some
163 people dead as well as 59 missing. In addition, Noel left behind some
$742 million in damages including $500 million on the island of Cuba alone.
Maximum sustained winds were 80 miles per hour with gusts up to 95 miles
per hour. Minimum central pressure dropped to 28.94 inches, or 980 millibars.