Does anyone in S.C. remember this one? Any damage here?

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USA TODAY wrote:Hurricane David
Aug. 25-Sept. 8, 1979
Max. winds: 175 mph Min. pressure: 924 mb Category: 5
Mighty Hurricane David grew into one of the most intense storms ever to cross the Caribbean Sea. After wiping out the tiny island of Dominica with 150 mph winds, David crashed ashore in the Dominican Republic at peak intensity on Aug. 30, with wind gusts over 200 mph. More than 1,200 people on the two-nation island were killed and over 80,000 were left homeless. Damage totaled more than $1 billion in the Caribbean alone. Skipping through the Bahamas, David struck a glancing blow on Florida, just north of the Gold Coast, tore across Cape Canaveral and then chewed its way up the East Coast on Sept. 6, downing trees and powerlines well into New England.

Stormsfury wrote:I was 7 years old at the time, and I remember Hurricane David VERY WELL ... classic hurricane type rainfalls (well over 6" of rain, very gusty winds, a little stronger than Tropical Storm Gaston earlier this season, and lasting from the afternoon, through the overnight hours ... several tornadoes were also spawned ... and that was my very FIRST hurricane that I remembered, and the fascination with tropical weather, and my weather passion was solidified ...
David at one point was a SOLID CAT 5 which at its peak went to 173 MPH (150 KTS) and the lowest pressure was 924 MB ... and remains a CAT 5 for 42 hours ... the impacts on Hispanola were catastrophic (and also what ultimately prevented David from becoming the killer storm that it once was ...USA TODAY wrote:Hurricane David
Aug. 25-Sept. 8, 1979
Max. winds: 175 mph Min. pressure: 924 mb Category: 5
Mighty Hurricane David grew into one of the most intense storms ever to cross the Caribbean Sea. After wiping out the tiny island of Dominica with 150 mph winds, David crashed ashore in the Dominican Republic at peak intensity on Aug. 30, with wind gusts over 200 mph. More than 1,200 people on the two-nation island were killed and over 80,000 were left homeless. Damage totaled more than $1 billion in the Caribbean alone. Skipping through the Bahamas, David struck a glancing blow on Florida, just north of the Gold Coast, tore across Cape Canaveral and then chewed its way up the East Coast on Sept. 6, downing trees and powerlines well into New England.
Source: USA TODAY research by Chris Cappella

charleston_hugo_veteran wrote:...I was 14 and don't remember that much...lol

HurricaneQueen wrote:I remember a prediction that David was headed to the West Coast of Florida so lots of people evacuated to the East Coast only to meet David. We stayed put and I really don't remember having any effects at all. It was, however, the first time I filled the bathtub and had an evacuation inland planned, just in case. I believe it hit over Labor Day weekend.

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