Much of this is a repeat of a 2017 column in the Beacon Villager (Maynard'd former newspaper)
With all the recent news about hurricanes Helene and Milton, what is the history of hurricanes hitting eastern Massachusetts?
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1938: Trees damaged in Glenwood Cemetery |
1938: The practice of naming Atlantic hurricanes with
women’s names did not begin until 1947; or retiring names of major storms after
1955, or having men’s names rather than only women’s starting in 1979. Thus,
the storm of 1938 came be known as the Great New England Hurricane, also the
Long Island Express. Mistakes in interpreting weather data had led to a
prediction that this storm would dissipate to gale force before making
landfall. Instead, on September 21, 1938, it reached
Long
Island with hurricane force winds and a significant storm surge.
More than 600 people died – mostly in
Rhode
Island. The oldest residents of Maynard and
Stow remember vast
numbers of trees being blown down, blocking streets and damaging buildings.
1954: A double-header! Hurricane Carol also crossed the east
end of Long Island, reaching landfall as a
Category 2 storm. In Boston, high winds
destroyed the steeple of the Old
North Church.
Hurricane Edna crossed Cape Cod as a Category
2 storm just ten days after Carol had tracked a bit farther west. Locally,
rainfall of 5 to 10 inches on ground already saturated by the passage of Carol
flooded basements and rivers. Combined, the storms destroyed much of the peach
and apple crops just weeks before harvest time.
1955: Hurricane Diane waltzed ashore in the Carolinas,
wandered across New Jersey and southern New York, before heading eastward across much of Massachusetts. By this
time it was weak wind-wise, but very, very wet. Much of southern Massachusetts, from its border with New York to the ocean, experienced flooding.
Half of Worcester
was under water. Locally, an estimated 15 inches of rain fell in four days. The
Assabet River crested at 8.93 feet, the highest
it had been since 1927 and the highest since. (The flood of 2010 crested at 7.1
feet.) Main Street
flooded, as did the first floor of the mill building closest to the river. No
bridges were lost.
1991: Hurricane Bob was an August event. It skirted the
coast before making landfall at Newport,
Rhode Island as a Category 2
hurricane. Forecasting was good, so Rhode Island
and Connecticut
were able to declare of emergency before the storm hit. The storm crossed
eastern Massachusetts
fast and relatively dry, so most of the damage was due to high winds and storm
surge along the coast. Provincetown
reported sustained winds exceeding 100 miles per hour. Locally, downed trees
and minor damage to buildings. The name “Bob” was permanently retired, joining
Diane, Edna and Carol as other New England
hurricane names we will never hear again.
An explanation of ‘storm surge’: Coastal flooding can be
severe during hurricanes (and also northeasters). The push of wind across long distances of water for
prolonged periods of time not only generates large waves, but pushes water.
When this reaches shore at times of high tide, the water can be five, ten,
fifteen, even twenty feet above normal high tide. The greatest storm surges are always to the right of the eye of the hurricane. In fact, on the left side, as the hurricane comes ashore, the winds are blowing away from the coast, causing the opposite of a surge. With Milton coming ashore south of Tampa, water was blown out of Tampa Bay, lowering sea level by about five feet. The Galveston,
Texas hurricane of 1900 pushed a storm surge
of 8-12 feet across a city that was mostly less than 10 feet above sea level,
flattening the city and resulting in a loss of an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 lives,
making it the deadliest natural disaster to every strike the United States. See Wikipedia article "1900 Galveston hurricane."
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