Hurricane Season Setting More Records On The Anniversary Of The Deadliest U.S. Disaster
Sep. 9--The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season has reached the climatological halfway point, and already 13 records for early forming storms have fallen. Two more could follow in the next few days.
On average, Sept. 8 -- which happens to be the anniversary of the landfall of the devastating Galveston hurricane of 1900 -- is the date that the sixth named storm of the season forms. The 2020 number stands at 17; the average for the entire June 1 to Nov. 30 season is 11.
The newest additions, Paulette and Rene (the list is Q-less), are the earliest-forming 16th and 17th storms of any season in the satellite era, and add to a string of records that began with Edouard in early July. To earn a name, a storm needs peak winds of at least 39 mph.
Five have become hurricanes, with winds of 74 mph or better; on average the season's third hurricane doesn't form until Sept. 9, and the normal for the entire season is six.
Neither of the recent entries should affect the Philadelphia region, as both should stay well out in the North Atlantic.
"Paulette is going to be a fish storm, and Rene also is going to be a fish storm," said Ray Kruzdlo, the hydrologist at the National Weather Service office in Mount Holly.
But a disturbance off the Southeast coast, which the hurricane center says has a 40% chance of earning a name, could move northwest and add a dash of juice to local rainfall in the next several days, he said.
Meanwhile, yet another feature in western Africa is given a 70% chance of becoming a tropical storm, and nothing suggests that the hyperactivity is going to wane.
In the satellite era (since 1966), the record for named storms in any season in the basin, which includes the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, is 28, set in 2005. That year, the P storm formed on Sept. 17; Paulette beat it by 10 days.
This season is on the verge of running through the alphabet -- the letters Q, U, X, Y, and Z aren't used, by international convention -- and when it does, the names will move to the Greek alphabet, starting with Alpha.
Back in 1900, when a hurricane leveled the prosperous port city of Galveston, Texas, tropical storms didn't have names, although that one has since earned the moniker Issac's Storm, from the title of Erik Larson's book that lionized weatherman Isaac Cline.
The storm, which made landfall on Sept. 8, ranks as the deadliest U.S. natural disaster on record, claiming at least 8,000 lives.
Winds up to 140 mph and storm surge of 15 feet-plus caused catastrophic destruction. Eyewitnesses told of "dead bodies all lying in the ruins, little babies in mothers' arms." Corpses were towed on barges and cast into the Gulf of Mexico, only to be washed ashore. Many of the bodies were burned along with the storm's wreckage.
It also ranks as the second-costliest hurricane behind the Miami hurricane of September 1926, based on an analysis by the ICAT insurance service that takes into account inflation and today's levels of building.
Interestingly, No. 5 for cost was the Galveston hurricane of 1915, and the wall built after the 1900 storm evidently lessened the damage. That wall, about 10 miles long, remains, but the Galveston area and other parts of the Gulf Coast continue to struggle with serious erosion problems.
A side note: The 1900 storm long predates the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the era of federal disaster assistance. The wall was built primarily with private funds.
___
(c)2020 The Philadelphia Inquirer
Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.inquirer.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Creek Fire Is ‘In A Class By Itself’ As It Continues To Destroy California Homes and businesses
Chubb Launches Chubb Studio(SM), Simplifying Digital Partner Integration
Advisor News
- Pay or Die: The scare tactics behind LA County’s Measure ER tax increase
- How to listen to what your client isn’t saying
- Strong underwriting: what it means for insurers and advisors
- Retirement is increasingly defined by a secure income stream
- Addressing the ‘menopause tax:’ A guide for advisors with female clients
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- MassMutual turns 175, Marking Generations of Delivering on its Commitments
- ALIRT Insurance Research: U.S. Life Insurance Industry In Transition
- My Annuity Store Launches a Free AI Annuity Research Assistant Trained on 146 Carrier Brochures and Live Annuity Rates
- Ameritas settles with Navy vet in lawsuit over disputed annuity sale
- NAIC annuity guidance updates divide insurance and advisory groups
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- GLP-1 Drug Costs Cited as Heights Schools Hike Taxes and Cut Staff
- Pay or Die: The scare tactics behind LA County’s Measure ER tax increase
- Column: N.C.’s Medicaid ‘compromise’ comes at a cruel cost
- Idaho farmers can band together to buy cheaper health insurance through Farm Bureau deal
- HHS NOTICE OF BENEFIT AND PAYMENT PARAMETERS FOR 2027 FINAL RULE
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- 2025 Insurance Abstracts
- AM Best Affirms Credit Ratings of Berkshire Hathaway Life Insurance Company of Nebraska and First Berkshire Hathaway Life Insurance Company
- Generational expectations: A challenge for the industry
- Greg Lindberg asks NC judge for no jail time in bribery, fraud cases
- National Life Group Names Brenda Betts to Its Board of Directors
More Life Insurance News