Derek Ortt wrote:I do not like singling out Florida as the target. It tends to give other areas a false sense of security.
It shouldn't....not considering the sizable number of historical major Florida hurricanes which passed across the state and slammed into other U.S. states as major hurricanes.
A few examples:
October 1846....severe hurricane obliterated Key West then blasted ashore near Cedar Key. After roaring across the state into the Atlantic, the monster was strong enough to cause major damage along the North Carolina coast, including cutting inlets along Ocraoke Island.
Sept 1896...small, violent cat-3 hurricane roars NNE across Florida from Cedar Key to west of KJAX.....winds over 100 mph in Jacksonville. The damage in SE Georgia was described in the Atlanta newspapers as "indescribable"....dozens died in Georgia as well.
Sept 1919....large 150 mph cat-4 blasts Keys, veers WNW into the Gulf and slams into Corpus Christi, Texas a few days later....hundreds died in Florida and Texas.
Sept 1926...Great Miami hurricane ravages south Florida killing hundreds....then roars into Pensacola/Mobile area, still a major 125 mph hurricane. Damage was catastrophic in Fla Panhandle.
Sept 1928...large intense 929 mb monster plows Palm Beach after killing thousands in Puerto Rico.
After killing another 2000-3000 around Lake Okeechobee, hurricane recurves over Florida, still a major hurricane. Considerable damage into Georgia and South Carolina.
Sept 1947...extremely large intense cat-4 roars across SFla from Broward county to Naples. All of southern Florida devastated....hurricane accelerates toward the WNW and plows New Orleans....causing major damage from Pascagoula west to SE LA; winds gusted to 110 mph at Baton Rouge....over 120 at KMSY. Storm surge at Gulfport harbor 14.8'..second only to Camille at that location.
Sept 1960...."Donna". Slammed Keys...inland over Fort Myers, then recurved over Lakeland to Daytona Beach.....re-intensified to cat-3 before slamming North Carolina to Long Island...wind gusts over 130 mph at Block Island, RI
I'm sure everyone in Lousiana remember what Betsy and Andrew did AFTER smashing Florida.....Betsy caused more death and destruction in Louisiana than in Florida.
Just because Florida has entered another hurricane cycle shouldn't cause anyone to breath a sigh of relief. First, because so many landfalling Florida major canes end up being major Texas canes, major Louisiana canes, major Carolina canes, etc......ALSO, just because one area is hit most often during a hurricane cycle doesn't mean other areas can't be. Hurricane Audrey in 1957 should be a vivid example to everyone....killing 400+ in Louisiana and Texas during a decade in which all hurricanes seemed attracted to the east coast (**also Opal slammed into the Florida panhandle during a Carolinas major hurricane cycle).
PW