Hurricane Hugo
hurricane | |
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Formed | September 9, 1989 |
Dissipated | September 25, 1989 |
Hurricane Hugo was a destructive Category 5 hurricane that struck Puerto Rico, St. Croix, South Carolina and North Carolina in September of the 1989 Atlantic hurricane season, killing at least 70 people. The storm caused billions of US dollars in damages (mostly in South Carolina), and is still one of the costliest hurricanes in history.
Storm history
A group of thunderstorms moved off of Cape Verde, Africa, on September 9, 1989. Moving westward, it formed into Tropical Storm Hugo on September 11, and became a hurricane on the 13th. Hugo briefly reached Category 5 intensity while well out in the Atlantic. It reached the Caribbean as a Category 4 hurricane where it passed over Guadeloupe, the Leeward Islands, St. Croix, and the eastern tip of Puerto Rico.
Hugo weakened after leaving the warm waters of the Caribbean, but quickly restrengthened when it passed over the Gulf Stream. The storm made landfall in South Carolina on the evening of September 21 as a Category 4 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. Hugo was forecast to move toward Savannah, Georgia but instead turned north toward Charleston, South Carolina. The eye of the hurricane passed just northeast of Charleston.
The storm moved rapidly, with the center passing over Moncks Corner and close to Sumter. After landfall, Hugo weakened into a tropical storm while passing near Charlotte, North Carolina. The storm continued north as an extratropical low, moving over the eastern Great Lakes and parts of eastern Canada.
Preparations
Savannah was evacuated in anticipation of Hugo, but saw no effects of the storm. Had Hugo hit Savannah, it would have been the first major hurricane to make landfall in Georgia since the Template:Tcseason.
Impact
Hugo caused $7 billion (1989 USD) in damage in the mainland United States[1]. At the time it was the costliest hurricane in U.S. history, but was exceeded in 1992 by Hurricane Andrew, and by three other storms since then. It remains the fifth costliest hurricane in U.S. history. An additional $3 billion of damages was reported throughout the Caribbean. Total damages from the storm were $10 billion (1989 USD).
Rank | Hurricane | Season | Damage |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 3 Katrina | 2005 | $125 billion |
4 Harvey | 2017 | ||
3 | 4 Ian | 2022 | $113 billion |
4 | 4 Maria | 2017 | $90 billion |
5 | 4 Ida | 2021 | $75 billion |
6 | ET Sandy | 2012 | $65 billion |
7 | 4 Irma | 2017 | $52.1 billion |
8 | 2 Ike | 2008 | $30 billion |
9 | 5 Andrew | 1992 | $27 billion |
10 | 5 Michael | 2018 | $25 billion |
Sources differ on the number of people killed by Hugo, with some citing the American Meteorological Society's figure of 49, and others claiming 56 deaths [4]. Some government agency sources claim only 32 deaths in the United States.
Caribbean
Severe damage was reported throughout the islands of the Caribbean. The storm killed six people in Puerto Rico and St. Croix. $3 billion (1989 US dollars) in damages was estimated in the Caribbean (including $1 billion in Puerto Rico and the USVI [1]).
The death toll on St. Croix is the subject of some debate, as several mass graves were dug in the aftermath. Most sources agree that these were dug for people who were already dead when the storm hit, and who could no longer be kept in morgues and funeral homes due to the lack of refrigeration; however, as is common with such disasters, rumors persist that unaccounted-for victims of the storm were also burried in this manner.
South Carolina
While downtown Charleston, South Carolina suffered extensive damage, the greatest damage was reported in the northern suburbs of Mount Pleasant, Sullivan's Island, and Isle of Palms. Both islands were cut off from the mainland by destruction of their bridges. Along the coast Hugo destroyed many houses and the storm surge piled boats on top of each other.
The storm's most intense wind and storm surge came ashore still further north between the small towns of Awendaw and McClellanville. An extraordinary 20-foot storm surge was reported between Cape Romain and Bulls Bay. Most mature trees in the Francis Marion National Forest were killed. In McClellanville, a small fishing town, residents took refuge in Lincoln High School, and were surprised by the sudden tidal surge which flooded the school. With water pouring into the rooms, the refugees helped one another in pitch darkness to climb into the space in the hanging ceiling above the rooms. All survived.
According to Governor Carroll Campbell, there were about 3,000 tornadoes embedded within the hurricane, which accounts for extensive damage in some areas not within the path of the eyewall.
Inland, the storm destroyed homes, timber, and the area's cotton crop. Rainfall totals associated with Hugo were slightly below the average for a direct United States strike, likely due to the storm's rapid forward motion. The maximum amount measured was 10.28" at Edisto Island, South Carolina. [5]
North Carolina
By the time it reached Charlotte, North Carolina, Hugo was still a Category 1 hurricane. It was still strong enough to topple many trees across roads and houses leaving many without power, closing schools for as long as two weeks, and spawning several tornadoes. The storm took Charlotte by surprise; the city is 200 miles (320 km) inland and is frequently a stopover for people fleeing from the coast.
North Carolina's coastline also suffered significant damage along its southward-facing beaches, including Brunswick County and the Outer Banks. In all, twenty-nine counties in North Carolina were declared federal disaster areas, with damages in that state alone estimated at $1 billion (1989 US dollars). [6]
Mid-Atlantic
The last death caused by the storm was in East Aurora, New York near Buffalo when the winds toppled a tree onto a motorist, while Hugo was downgraded to a tropical storm (which it would remain until dissipation).
Aftermath
Red Cross response
Extensive relief aid was provided throughout by The Salvation Army, the Red Cross and various churches.
St. Croix
On the island of St. Croix, looting and lawlessness reigned in the aftermath of Hugo. Phone lines, power lines, hospitals, banks, the airport and 90% of all structures were severely damaged or destroyed. Three days after the storm hit, the governor of the Virgin Islands asked United States President George H. W. Bush for federal assistance in restoring order to the island. On September 20, members of the XVIII Airborne "Contingency Corps" were dispatched to the island as part of Operation Hawkeye. Military police patrolled the island for two months, imposing a dusk-to-dawn curfew. Cargo planes brought in food, water, mobile hospital units, and other supplies while offering free evacuation flights for anyone wanting to leave for the mainland.
The social unrest and looting which took place on St. Croix was not typical of the reaction of hurricane victims and would not be seen again until Hurricane Jeanne hit Haiti in the Template:Tcseason and Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in the Template:Tcseason.
Economic impact
After the storm, Governor Carroll Campbell said that the storm destroyed enough timber to frame a home for every family in the state of West Virginia.
FEMA criticism
In South Carolina, which bore the brunt of the storm, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was slow in responding and Senator Fritz Hollings referred to them as "a bunch of bureacratic jackasses." An investigation was launched, which led to some reforms in FEMA procedures that helped the agency do a somewhat better job during Andrew, the next catastrophic hurricane to strike the United States.
Retirement
Due to the extensive damage, the name Hugo was retired following this storm, and will never again be used for an Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced with Humberto in the 1995 season.
Trivia
When the storm hit St. Croix, it destroyed the only Olympic-sized pool in the Virgin Islands. This pool was the training site of Tim Duncan, a 13-year-old swimmer who was one of the top age-group swimmers in the United States. After his training pool was destroyed Duncan switched his focus to basketball and went on to be an NBA star.
See also
- List of notable tropical cyclones
- List of notable Atlantic hurricanes
- List of Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes
External links
- Operation Hawkeye
- NOAA Hugo history
- Another NOAA Hugo history
- NWS Service Assessment
- HPC Tropical Cyclone Rainfall Climatology
Notes
- ^ a b http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastcost.shtml Cite error: The named reference "pastcost" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Costliest U.S. tropical cyclones tables update (PDF) (Report). United States National Hurricane Center. January 12, 2018. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 27, 2018. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
- ^ "Assessing the U.S. Climate in 2018". National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). 2019-02-06. Retrieved 2019-02-09.
- ^ http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastdeadly.shtml NHC list of deadliest hurricanes
- ^ http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/tropical/rain/hugo1989rain.gif
- ^ http://www.csc.noaa.gov/products/nchaz/htm/hugo.htm NHC North Carolina hazards: Hugo
Cite error: There are <ref group=nb>
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- Atlantic hurricanes
- 1989 Atlantic hurricane season
- Category 5 hurricanes
- Retired Atlantic hurricanes
- Hurricanes in Puerto Rico
- Hurricanes in Guadeloupe
- Hurricanes in the United States Virgin Islands
- South Carolina hurricanes
- North Carolina hurricanes
- Historic weather events in the United States
- 1989 meteorology
- 1989
- Charleston, South Carolina