Remembering the Greatest June Storm Ever, Hurricane Audrey

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HURAKAN
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Remembering the Greatest June Storm Ever, Hurricane Audrey

#1 Postby HURAKAN » Sat Jun 25, 2005 12:00 am

HURRICANE AUDREY, 1957

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Audrey was first detected over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico on June 24. It moved slowly northward as it became a tropical storm and a hurricane the next day. A faster northward motion brought the center to the coast near the Texas-Louisiana border on the 27th. Rapid strengthening in the last six hours before landfall meant Audrey made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane. The cyclone turned northeastward after landfall, becoming extratropical over northern Mississippi on June 28 and merging with another low over the Great Lakes the next day. The combined system was responsible for strong winds and heavy rains over portions of the eastern United States and Canada.

No reliable wind or pressure measurements are available from Audrey's core at landfall. The main impact was from 8 to 12 ft storm surges that penetrated as far inland as 25 miles over portions of low-lying southwestern Louisiana. These surges were responsible for the vast majority of the 390 deaths from Audrey. Damage in the United States was estimated at $150 million.

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Five pictures of the disaster left by Audrey and a short movie at the bottom of the page.

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl= ... D%26sa%3DN

Hurricane Audrey was more than unique but the future may hold surprises and Audrey reign could be in jeopardy. I hope to see the day a cyclone stronger than Audrey develops in June to make history, but of couse, stays as a fish. Hard to get right!
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cyclonaut

#2 Postby cyclonaut » Sat Jun 25, 2005 12:29 am

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#3 Postby SeaBrz_FL » Sat Jun 25, 2005 1:39 am

Great post, HURAKAN, and I really enjoyed the video, too.

I was born in Miami, 11 months after Audrey hit, so it's extra-fascinating to me to see the news clips about storms around that time.

Thanks for taking the time to research and share!

SeaBrz
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#4 Postby JtSmarts » Sat Jun 25, 2005 1:52 am

I did a search on the internet and found an interesting pdf about the tracking of Audrey.

http://docs.lib.noaa.gov/rescue/mwr/085 ... 6-0221.pdf
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#5 Postby mobilebay » Sat Jun 25, 2005 2:05 am

This hurricane fascinates me more than any other storm. I mean it completely overcome climatology. You look in any book or website and it will tell you this should never happen in June. Amazing. :D
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#6 Postby HurricaneBill » Sat Jun 25, 2005 2:25 am

The death toll from Audrey was actually much higher. Many sites state it as 550. I read in a book a toll of 578.

Hurricane Audrey was the deadliest U.S. hurricane of the second half of the 20th century.
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#7 Postby SouthernWx » Sat Jun 25, 2005 2:51 am

At the time, there were a couple unconfirmed reports from oil rigs just offshore in the Gulf of 175-180 mph gusts....and from the damage, death, and extent of storm surge flooding....it's possible.

The peak storm surge height was 14-15', which is the basis of the 945 mb/ 120 kt (135-140 mph) intensity. It's possible, based on the oil rig reports that Audrey was even stronger....perhaps 145 mph sustained. The radar shot above clearly shows the well developed and very intense hurricane....incredible for so early in the season.

PW
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#8 Postby LAwxrgal » Sat Jun 25, 2005 3:07 am

Makes me wonder what the SSTs were. For her to just spin up like that in June...she had to pass an eddy of some sort.
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#9 Postby Aquawind » Sat Jun 25, 2005 4:02 am

Interesting hurricane alright..It could have crossed and eddy.. even if it was a small or shallow one for June. As usual it was probably a combination of factors..I imagine the wind profile got real favorable as in good outflow with little shear. Looks like it caught the trough well inland and thus had some high pressure and the dry air was probably well inland behind the trough. Excellent timing for Audrey 57'

Paul
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#10 Postby bbadon » Sat Jun 25, 2005 7:32 am

I live here in a little town in the SW corner of LA. called Johnson Bayou. Audrey demolished our whole parish. Worst of all everyone went to bed that night thinking they would have time to head to higher ground the next morning. Not so most people woke up to gulf water running through there house. I was not born when Audrey hit but my dad and grandfather have told me many stories. Audrey is one of the biggest reasons I am so fascinated by Hurricanes. June 27 is hurricane Audrey day in our Parish. It serves as a reminder for everyone to remember where we live and awesome power of the greatest storms on earth.
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