Everything about 1944 Great Atlantic Hurricane totally explained
The
Great Atlantic Hurricane in
1944 was an intense
Atlantic hurricane sometimes compared to the
New England Hurricane of 1938.
Storm history
A hurricane was first detected on
September 9, northeast of the
Lesser Antilles. It likely developed from a tropical wave several days before. It moved west-northwestward, and steadily intensified to a 140 mph major hurricane on the 12th, northeast of the
Bahamas. Around this time, the Miami Hurricane Warning Office designated this storm
The Great Atlantic Hurricane to emphasize its intensity and size, which appears to be the first time a name was designated by the office which evolved into the
National Hurricane Center. The hurricane turned northward, where dry and cooler air was entrained into the circulation. It weakened to a Category 2 hurricane on the 14th as it recurved to the northwest, and hit the
Outer Banks later that day.
Moving rapidly to the northeast, the hurricane maintained its strength somewhat at the time of its
Long Island landfall on
September 15, hitting as an 85 mph hurricane. Shortly thereafter it crossed the
Rhode Island coastline, and after emerging into the Massachusetts Bay it hit
Maine, just before becoming extratropical. The non-tropical system continued northeastward, and merged with a larger extratropical low on the 16th south of
Greenland.
Impact
The hurricane caused $100 million in damage (
1947 USD), roughly one-third of the 1938 hurricane. 390 lives were lost from the hurricane. Most of them were from marine casualties. 46 deaths occurred on land, a low toll due to the well-executed warnings and evacuations.
The last time two intense New England hurricanes occurred so closely together were the
Great September Gale of 1815 and the
1821 Norfolk and Long Island Hurricane.
Hatteras
This storm wreaked havoc on
Hatteras Island,
North Carolina causing the residents to relocate the entire village of
Kinnakeet a few miles further south. Just off
Oregon Inlet, it sank two
United States Coast Guard Cutters, USCGC
Jackson (WSC-142) and USCGC
Bedloe (WSC-128), with a loss of 48 men.
USS Warrington
The storm was also responsible for sinking the Navy destroyer
USS Warrington (DD-383) approximately 450 miles east of
Vero Beach, FL, with a loss of 248 sailors. The hurricane was one of the most powerful to traverse the Eastern Seaboard, reaching Category 4 when it encountered the
Warrington, and producing hurricane force winds over a diameter of 600 miles. The hurricane also produced waves in excess of 70 feet in height. The hurricane and the sinking of the USS
Warrington are documented in the 1996 book
The Dragon's Breath - Hurricane At Sea, written by Commander Robert A. Dawes, Jr. (a former Commanding Officer of the
Warrington), and published by
Naval Institute Press.
In addition to the
Warrington and the Coast Guard Cutters
Bedloe and
Jackson, this hurricane claimed the 136 foot long minesweeper
USS YMS-409 which foundered and sank with all 33 on board lost. Further north, it also claimed the Lightship
Vineyard Sound (LV-73), which was sunk with the loss of all 12 aboard.
Further Information
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