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User:E. Brown/Hurricane Hall of Fame

The Hurricane Hall of Fame

Hurricanes are one of nature's most powerful entities. Most tropical cyclones are relatively ordinary. But some cause incredible devastation that echoes through generations. I started this several years ago when I was just getting into tracking storms. To me, it's a stark display of the awesome power of tropical cyclones. I think it stands as proof that nature knows no bounds and the only thing we can expect is the unexpected. Included in this list are the terrible, the awesome, and the downright insane. Only Atlantic and Pacific storms are included at this time, although further expansion is being considered.

For a storm to be considered it has to

  • a) have formed after 1800.
  • b) be at least two seasons old.
  • c) have achieved something historically significant, been so destructive as to have left a lasting physical and psychological impact on those affected, or broken a significant record(s).
  • d) have done so while a tropical cyclone.


The List

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In chronological order, those who have been voted the greatest Atlantic tropical cyclones of all time.

Pre-1900

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This is what New York looked like at the time of the 1893 hurricane.

1900 - 1949

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Few large cities have seen such complete destruction as Galveston saw in 1900.
Galveston was savaged by two destructive hurricanes in just a 15 year period.
Destruction at Miami Beach. Florida was never the same after the 1926 storm.
A relief train derailed by the storm surge of the Labor Day Hurricane.
Moissant Airport in Louisiana under six feet of water after the 1947 hurricane.

1950 - 1969

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Carol rocked New England as a powerful hurriane with sustained winds well over 100 mph and a 15-foot storm surge.
Aerial images of the devastation in Corozal, Mexico. More photos can be found here. You have to scroll down a bit on the second link.
Audrey was the US's worst hurricane between 1938 and 2005, a span of 65 years.
In its time, Flora was the third deadliest Atlantic hurricane since 1800 and it remains in the top 5.
New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward after Betsy. Look familiar?
Hurricane Beulah put parts of south Texas underwater. Here, McAllen, Texas is shown flooded knee deep in standing water.
This used to be a three-story apartment complex. It was left in ruins by Camille. 30 people died here.
A large, antebellum mansion before Camille... and after Camille.
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