1960 Atlantic hurricane season
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Infobox tropical cyclone season The 1960 Atlantic hurricane season marked the beginning of the satellite era in hurricane tracking with the launch of TIROS-1, the first satellite with the sole purpose of detecting cloud formations, but was the least active season since 1952.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The season officially began on June 15,<ref name="opening">Template:Cite news</ref> and lasted until November 15.<ref name="closing">Template:Cite news Template:Free access</ref> These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin. The first system, an unnamed storm, developed in the Bay of Campeche on June 22. It brought severe local flooding to southeastern Texas and was considered the worst disaster in some towns since a Hurricane in 1945. The unnamed storm moved across the United States for almost a week before dissipating on June 29. In July, Hurricane Abby resulted in minor damage in the Leeward Islands, before impacting a few Central American counties — the remnants of the storm would go on to form Hurricane Celeste in the East Pacific. Later that month, Tropical Storm Brenda caused flooding across much of the East Coast of the United States. The next storm, Hurricane Cleo, caused no known impact, despite its close proximity to land.
The most significant storm of the season was Hurricane Donna, which at the time was among the ten costliest United States hurricanes. After the precursor caused a deadly plane crash in Senegal, the storm itself brought severe flooding and wind impacts to the Lesser Antilles and Florida, where Donna made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane. It moved northeast and struck North Carolina and Long Island, New York, while still at hurricane intensity. Donna caused at least 428 fatalities and $980 million (1960 USD) in damage. Hurricane Ethel reached Category 3 intensity, but rapidly weakened before making landfall in Mississippi, resulting in only 1 fatality and $1.5 million in losses. The final storm, Florence, developed on September 17. It remained weakened and moved erratically over Cuba and Florida. Only minor flooding was reported. Collectively, the tropical cyclones in 1960 caused at least 454 deaths and about $990.74 million in damage.
Season summary
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The Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 15, 1960.<ref name="opening"/> It was a below-average season in which seven tropical depressions formed. All seven of the depressions attained tropical storm status, which was below the 1950–2000 average of 9.6 named storms. Four of these reached hurricane status, also falling short of the 1950–2000 average of 5.9. Furthermore, two storms reached major hurricane status, which is Category 3 or higher on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale. Two hurricane and four tropical storms made landfall during the season and caused 454 deaths and $410.74 million (1960 USD) in damage.<ref>
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Season activity began on June 23, with the development of an unnamed tropical storm. Tropical cyclogenesis resumed in July with Hurricane Abby between July 10 and July 16, followed by Tropical Storm Brenda from July 28 to July 31. In mid-August, Hurricane Cleo developed and had an uneventful duration. At the end of that month, Hurricane Donna formed and lasted into mid-September; it was the strongest tropical cyclone of the season, peaking as a Category 4 hurricane. There was a Category 3 hurricane in September, Ethel, which briefly existed in the Gulf of Mexico. The last storm of the season, Tropical Storm Florence, dissipated on September 25, over a month before the official end of the season on November 15.<ref name="closing"/><ref name="mwr">Template:Cite report</ref>
The season's activity was reflected with an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) rating of 73 units, the lowest value since 1956. ACE is, broadly speaking, a measure of the power of the hurricane multiplied by the length of time it existed, so storms that last a long time, as well as particularly strong hurricanes, have high ACEs. It is only calculated for full advisories on tropical systems at or exceeding Template:Convert or tropical storm strength.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref>
Systems
June tropical storm
Template:Infobox hurricane small Template:Main Observations from a reconnaissance flight on June 22 indicated that a large area of showers and thunderstorms in the Gulf of Mexico was producing winds up to Template:Convert. Because no circulation was reported, it was operationally classified as a tropical low, though radar stations along the Gulf Coast of Mexico indicated a circulation. Thus, the system became a tropical depression at 0600 UTC on June 22, while located in the Bay of Campeche. The depression strengthened and was estimated to have become a tropical storm on June 23. By early on the following day, the storm peaked with winds of Template:Convert. Later that day, it made landfall near Corpus Christi, Texas at the same intensity. The storm weakened slowly and moved across the Central United States, before dissipating over Illinois on June 28.<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="meta"/>
In Texas, the storm dropped up to Template:Convert of precipitation in Port Lavaca.<ref name="unnamedrain">Template:Cite report</ref> Thus considerable flooding occurred in some areas of south and eastern Texas. Throughout the state, more than 150 houses sustained flood damage in several counties. In addition, numerous major highways were closed, including portions of U.S. Routes 59, 87, 90, and 185, and Texas State Highways 35 and 71.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref><ref>Template:Cite report</ref> In Arkansas, a few buildings in Hot Springs were damaged from high winds. Elsewhere, light to moderate rainfall was recorded in at least 11 other states, though damage was minimal.<ref name="unnamedrain"/> The storm was the wettest tropical cyclone on record in the state of Kentucky, dropping Template:Convert in Dunmor.Template:US States Tropical Cyclone Point Maxima Overall, the storm was attributed to 15 fatalities and $3.6 million in damage.<ref name="mwr"/> Template:Clear
Hurricane Abby
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A tropical wave developed into a tropical depression near the Windward Islands on July 10. That day, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Abby, striking Saint Lucia with winds of Template:Convert. Abby tracked westward across the Caribbean Sea with little change in intensity. The storm brushed the northern coast of Honduras before intensifying into a hurricane on July 15, striking the offshore Roatán island with peak winds of Template:Convert. Later that day, Hurricane Abby made landfall in southern British Honduras (present day Belize). Abby quickly weakened inland, moving across Guatemala and coastal Mexico. On July 17, Abby dissipated over the Mexican state of Veracruz.<ref name="meta" /> However, the remnants later redeveloped into Hurricane Celeste in the eastern Pacific.<ref name="mwr" />
Abby produced tropical storm force winds and up to Template:Convert of precipitation in St. Lucia. Six people died when a roof of a house collapsed. Damage in St. Lucia reached $435,000, most of which was incurred to banana and coconut crops. In Martinique, wind gusts of Template:Convert and about Template:Convert of rain damaged 33% of banana and sugar cane crops. The resultant landslides from the precipitation extensively impacted roads and bridges.<ref name="mwr"/> In Dominica, light winds and precipitation up to Template:Convert with damages reaching $65,000, entirely to roads and communications.<ref name="page2">Template:Cite report</ref> Offshore islands of Honduras reported winds up to Template:Convert and light rainfall.<ref name="OS-B">Template:Cite news</ref> Damage in British Honduras was light, with about $40,500 in losses, mostly to agriculture.<ref name="geppert">Template:Cite report</ref> Template:Clear
Tropical Storm Brenda
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A weak low-pressure area in the Gulf of Mexico developed on July 26, organizing into Tropical Storm Brenda a day later. The minimal tropical storm moved ashore near Cross City, Florida on July 29, and moved northeastward along the east coast of the United States, gradually intensifying despite being largely over land. Later that day, the storm briefly moved offshore before striking southern North Carolina with peak winds of Template:Convert. After moving through the Mid-Atlantic states and New England, Brenda transitioned into an extratropical cyclone on July 31 over Maine. The remnants of Brenda interacted with another extratropical storm over eastern Canada before absorbing it. For about a week, the remnants of Brenda drifted and executed a large loop over northern Quebec, Labrador, and adjacent waters, eventually dissipating on August 7.<ref name="meta"/>
Brenda was considered the worst storm to strike West Central Florida since Hurricane Easy in 1950.<ref name="butson">Template:Cite report</ref> It brought wind gusts up to Template:Convert and rainfall amounts reaching Template:Convert at the Tampa International Airport. While no casualties are directly blamed on the storm, at least one traffic-related death took place.<ref name="mwr"/> According to an American Red Cross Disaster Service report encompassing eight Florida counties, 11 houses sustained significant damage, while 567 suffered more minor damage. Around 590 families were affected overall. Total monetary damage in Florida is placed at nearly $5 million.<ref name="butson"/> Further north, other states reported strong winds and locally heavy rainfall,Template:Tropical Cyclone Rainfall in the Southeastern United States though no significant damage occurred.<ref name="mwr"/> Template:Clear
Hurricane Cleo
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A strong tropical wave produced rainfall and gusty winds in The Bahamas and the Greater Antilles in mid-August. The wave was closely monitored for possible tropical cyclogenesis and special bulletins were issued by the United States Weather Bureau.<ref name="ctcr1">Template:Cite report</ref> At 1800 UTC on August 17, Tropical Storm Cleo developed near Cat Island in The Bahamas. The storm headed northeastward and immediately began to intensify.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track Operationally, the United States Weather Bureau at the hurricane warning center in Miami did not initiate advisories on Cleo until 1500 UTC on August 18. Sustained winds were already Template:Convert at the time, as recorded by a reconnaissance aircraft flight.<ref name="ctcr2">Template:Cite report</ref> By 1800 UTC on August 18, Cleo strengthened into a hurricane.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track
Throughout its duration, Cleo remained a relatively small tropical cyclone. Because the storm posed a significant threat to New England, a "hurricane watch" was issued for southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island on August 19. Various gale warnings were also put into effect from Block Island, Rhode Island, to Portland, Maine. However, this was unnecessary because Cleo remained well offshore.<ref name="ctcr2"/> On August 19, Cleo peaked with winds of Template:Convert, but it weakened to a tropical storm the next day. Cleo curved east-northeastward on August 20, remaining south of Nova Scotia, until it dissipated a day later.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track Template:Clear
Hurricane Donna
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A tropical wave in west Africa, blamed for 63 deaths in a plane crash in Senegal,<ref name="Thegreatdr">Template:Cite report</ref> developed into a tropical depression south of Cape Verde late on August 29. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Donna by the following day. Donna moved west-northwestward at roughly Template:Convert and by August 31, it reached hurricane status. Significant deepening occurred during the next 30 hours, with Donna being a moderate Category 4 hurricane by late on September 2. Thereafter, it weakened some and brushed the Lesser Antilles later that day.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track On Saint Maarten, the storm left a quarter of the island homeless and killed 7 people. An additional 5 deaths were reported in Anguilla and there were 7 other deaths throughout the Virgin Islands. In Puerto Rico, severe flash flooding led to 107 fatalities, 85 of them in Humacao alone.<ref name="mwr"/> Donna further weakened to a Category 3 hurricane late on September 5, but eventually became a Category 4 hurricane again.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track While passing through The Bahamas, several small island communities in the central regions of the country were leveled, but no damage total or fatalities were reported.<ref name="mwr"/>
Early on September 10, Donna made landfall near Marathon, Florida on Vaca Key with winds of Template:Convert, hours before another landfall between Fort Myers and Naples at the same intensity.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track Florida bore the brunt of Hurricane Donna. In the Florida Keys, coastal flooding severely damaged 75% of buildings, destroyed several subdivisions in Marathon. On the mainland, 5,200 houses were impacted, which does not include the 75% of homes damaged at Fort Myers Beach; 50% of buildings were also destroyed in the city of Everglades.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> Crop losses were also extensive. A total of 50% of grapefruit crop was lost, 10% of the orange and tangerine crop was lost, and the avocado crop was almost completely destroyed.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> In the state of Florida alone, there were 13 deaths and $300 million in losses.<ref name="mwr"/> Donna weakened over Florida and was a Category 2 hurricane when it re-emerged into the Atlantic from North Florida. By early on September 12, the storm made landfall near Topsail Beach, North Carolina with winds of Template:Convert.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track Donna brought tornadoes and wind gusts as high as Template:Convert, damaging or destroying several buildings in Eastern North Carolina, while crops were impacted as far as Template:Convert inland. Additionally, storm surge caused significant beach erosion and structural damage Wilmington and Nags Head. There were 8 deaths and over 100 injuries.<ref name="stormdata">Template:Cite report</ref> Later on September 12, Donna reemerged into the Atlantic Ocean and continued to move northeastward. The storm struck Long Island, New York late on September 12 and rapidly weakened inland. On the following day, Donna became extratropical over Maine.Template:Atlantic hurricane best track Template:Clear
September tropical storm
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For several days, a weak low pressure area moved across the tropical Atlantic, which organized into a tropical storm on September 1 to the northeast of the Lesser Antilles. That day, peak winds were estimated at Template:Convert, based on reports from ships and the Hurricane Hunters. The storm moved northward and weakened. On September 3, the system was absorbed by an approaching cold front. The storm was added to the Atlantic hurricane database in 2016.<ref name="meta">Template:Cite report</ref> Template:Clear
Hurricane Ethel
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A trough was located over the Gulf of Mexico on September 8, which interacted with a weakening cold front to produce a low pressure area, and eventually a tropical depression on September 12. On the next day, the system intensified into Tropical Storm Ethel, which began a period of rapid intensification a day later. By late on September 14, Ethel reached peak winds of 115 mph (185 km), presenting a well-defined eye. Operationally, the Hurricane Hunters estimated winds of Template:Convert, making Ethel a Category 5 hurricane, although a reanalysis in 2016 downgraded Ethel to a Category 3. Cooler air caused a period of rapid weakening, and Ethel moved ashore near Pascagoula, Mississippi with sustained winds of Template:Convert. The storm gradually weakened after moving inland, before eventually dissipating over southern Kentucky on September 17.<ref name="meta"/>Template:Atlantic hurricane best track
In Louisiana, the outer bands of the storm produced light rainfall and hurricane-force winds, though no damage was reported in that state.<ref name="PR">Template:Cite report</ref> Offshore Mississippi, rough seas inundated Horn Island and split Ship Island.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> Tropical storm force winds in the southern portion of the state littered broken glass, trees, and signs across streets in Pascagoula, as well as down power lines, which caused some residents to lose power.<ref name="TB1">Template:Cite news</ref> In Alabama, winds damaged beach cottages along the Gulf Coast, and damaged crops in the southern portion of the state.<ref name="stormdata"/> Although large amounts of rain fell in the extreme western portions of Florida, peaking at Template:Convert in Milton, no significant flooding occurred in Florida.<ref name="WPCethel"/> A lightning strike to a power station near Tallahassee caused a brief citywide blackout.<ref name="SPT3">Template:Cite news</ref> The storm spawned four tornadoes in Florida,<ref name="stormdata"/> one of which destroyed 25 homes.<ref name="SPT2">Template:Cite news</ref> Outside the Gulf Coast of the United States, rain fell in eight others states, but no damage is known to have occurred.<ref name="WPCethel">Template:Cite report</ref> Overall, Ethel caused one fatality and $1.5 million in losses.<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="stormdata"/><ref name="TB2">Template:Cite news</ref> Template:Clear
Tropical Storm Florence
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A westward moving tropical wave developed into a tropical depression while located north of Puerto Rico on September 17. By the following day, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Florence. Later on September 18, Florence peaked as a Template:Convert tropical storm as it approached The Bahamas. However, unfavorable conditions weakened the storm back to a tropical depression on September 19. On September 21, Florence lost its surface circulation, and the disturbance executed a small cyclonic loop over Cuba. On September 23, the system redeveloped its surface center, and it became a tropical depression again, moving ashore Monroe County, Florida that day. The storm drifted northeastward across the state, re-intensifying into a tropical storm and reaching winds of Template:Convert. The storm turned back to the west-northwest and weakened again to a tropical depression. Florence moved across the northeastern Gulf of Mexico, moving ashore again near the Alabama-Florida border on September 26, and dissipating soon after.<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="meta"/>
On Grand Bahama, Template:Convert of rain fell in only 6 hours.<ref name="fprelim7">Template:Cite web</ref> The storm dropped rainfall across Florida, though the heavier amounts were mainly on the Atlantic coast. Precipitation peaked at Template:Convert near Fellsmere, while rainfall reached Template:Convert in some areas of the Miami metropolitan area.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> Although Florence was a depression at landfall,<ref name="mwr"/> sustained winds between Template:Convert were recorded in Ocean Ridge,<ref name="fprelim6">Template:Cite report</ref> while a gust as high as Template:Convert was reported in Vero Beach.<ref name="mwr"/> In Jacksonville, a pressure gradient combined with Florida to produce tides of Template:Convert about normal.<ref name="fprelim7"/> Template:Clear
Storm names
The following list of names was used for named storms that formed in the North Atlantic in 1960.<ref>Template:Cite news Template:Free access</ref> Storms were named Abby and Donna for the first (and in the case of Donna, only) time in 1960.
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Retirement
Template:See also Following the 1960 season, the U.S. Weather Bureau retired the name Donna from its rotating Atlantic naming lists due to the damage and deaths it caused, and it will not be used again in the basin. Donna was replaced with Dora for the 1964 season.<ref name="retired">Template:Cite report</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Season effects
This is a table of all of the storms that formed in the 1960 Atlantic hurricane season. It includes their name, duration, peak classification and intensities, areas affected, damage, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect (an example of an indirect death would be a traffic accident), but were still related to that storm. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical, a wave, or a low, and all of the damage figures are in 1960 USD.
Template:TC stats table start3 Template:TC stats cyclone3<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="stormdata6">Template:Cite report</ref> Template:TC stats cyclone3<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="geppert"/> Template:TC stats cyclone3<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="butson"/> Template:TC stats cyclone3 Template:TC stats cyclone3<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="Thegreatdr"/><ref name="deadly">Template:Cite report</ref><ref name="EC-Donna">Template:Cite report</ref> Template:TC stats cyclone3 Template:TC stats cyclone3<ref name="mwr"/><ref name="stormdata"/><ref name="TB2"/> Template:TC stats cyclone3
Template:TC stats table end3See also
- 1960 North Indian Ocean cyclone season
- 1960 Pacific hurricane season
- 1960 Pacific typhoon season
- Australian region cyclone seasons: 1959–60 1960–61
- South Pacific cyclone seasons: 1959–60 1960–61
- South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons: 1959–60 1960–61
References
External links
Template:1960 Atlantic hurricane season buttons Template:TC Decades Template:Tropical cyclone season