Hurricane Gloria
| Category 4 hurricane (SSHS) | ||
|---|---|---|
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Gloria near peak intensity on |
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| Formed | ||
| Dissipated | ||
| Highest winds |
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| Lowest pressure | 919 |
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| Fatalities | 8 direct | |
| Damage | $900 million (1985 $1.725 billion (2007 USD) |
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| Areas affected |
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| Part of the 1985 Atlantic hurricane season |
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Hurricane Gloria was a powerful
Overall, the storm caused extensive damage along the
Storm history
Gloria began as a tropical wave that moved off the coast of Africa on September 15. It
moved westward through the favorable tropical Atlantic Ocean, and organized into a tropical depression the next day while south
of the Cape Verde Islands. Tracking steadily west-northwestward due to the strong subtropical
ridge, the depression continued to strengthen and became Tropical Storm Gloria on the 17th. Conditions for tropical development
deteriorated, causing Gloria to weaken to a tropical depression on the 18th. After it crossed 45°W on the 20th, the system was
able to restrengthen to a tropical storm, and steadily intensified as it approached the
Moving westward, Gloria threatened much of the
Shortly after peaking, Gloria's asymmetrical wind field caused the storm to rapidly weaken, and its winds decreased to
90 mph (145 km/h) after 18 hours.[3] Continuing around the periphery of the subtropical ridge, the hurricane turned to the
north-northeast, and its winds strengthened to 105 mph (170 km/h) as it passed over the warm waters of the
Gloria made its final landfall on western
Preparations
As Gloria approached the
Officials recommended 95,000 citizens along the
Offices and classes of
Impact
Hurricane Gloria was a large hurricane that affected much of the northeastern
United States. Gloria brought strong wind gusts to the area, downing thousands of trees and leaving over 2 million people
without power. Overall, Gloria caused $900 million (1985
Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic
Upon making landfall on the
Because much of the Mid-Atlantic experienced the western, weaker side of this hurricane, damage was relatively light. High
winds downed numerous trees throughout the area, leaving hundreds of thousands without power, including 237,000 in New Jersey,
124,000 in Maryland, and 56,000 in Virginia.[12]
Extreme rainfall in
Long Island and New York
Though Gloria hit
Gloria's high winds caused significant damage across Long Island and southeastern New York. The area hit the worst was eastern Long Island, where high wind gusts blew thousands of trees into buildings and across roads. In addition, the winds ripped roofs off of many buildings, including hangars at the MacArthur Airport and the roof of the Islip Police Station.[12] Prolonged exposure to high winds and waves led to moderate beach erosion, washing away several piers and docks.[12] The storm surge, though relatively weak, destroyed 48 houses on the ocean side of the island. Gloria's high winds left 683,000 people in New York without power, with some lacking electricity for over eleven days. Even though damage amounted to $300 million ($532 million in 2005 USD),[14] due to well-executed evacuations there was only one casualty, the death occurring from a falling tree.[12]
New England
Upon making landfall in
Gloria's high winds downed numerous trees across New England, causing minor to moderate damage. In the region, Connecticut received the worst of the hurricane, where tree and structural damage was greatest. Along the coastline, storm surge and strong waves washed away several fishing piers, and some roadways were underwater during the storm's passage. The hurricane did not pass close enough to Rhode Island and parts of Massachusetts, so these areas did not receive significant damage.[12] New Hampshire was affected only slightly from the hurricane, and was limited to minor wind damage and localized flooding.[15] In Maine, damage was more severe, where strong wind gusts ripped off roofs and uprooted hundreds of trees. High winds across New England resulted in significant power outages, leaving 250,000 in Maine,[16] 84,000 in Massachusetts, 174,000 in Rhode Island, and 669,000 in Connecticut without power. In all, 7 deaths occurred in New England, many of which occurred from falling tree limbs.[12]
Canada
The extratropical remnants caused minimal damage in Nova Scotia and produced tropical storm force winds across southern Newfoundland. [17]
Aftermath
- See also: List of retired Atlantic hurricanes
In the immediate aftermath in New York, hundreds of thousands had great difficulty living their everyday lives without power.
The long duration without electricity led to a general disdain for the
In Maine, most citizens remained indoors during the passage of the hurricane. One police officer noted that even the criminals stayed home. In the Lewiston area, restaurants experienced a great surge in business. During the power outage after the storm, several businesses stored frozen goods for houses without a generator.[16]
After the storm, President
Due to its impact, the name Gloria was retired from the Atlantic tropical storm name list in the spring of 1986, so it will
never again be used for an Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced with Grace in the
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e Case, Robert A.. Annual Summary: Atlantic Hurricane season of 1985 (PDF). Monthly Weather Review. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ a b c d Lawrence, Miles B.. Preliminary Report: Hurricane Gloria (GIF). NOAA. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ Bender, Morris A. (October 1996). "The Effect of Relative Flow on the Asymmetric Structure in the Interior of Hurricanes". Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 54 (6): 703-724.
- ^ Mandia, Scott A.. What's In Store For New York's Future?. The Great Hurricane of 1938: The Long Island Express. Suffolk County Community College. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ Canadian Hurricane Center (
September 9 , 2004). Canadian Hurricane Centre Gloria Information The Canadian Connection. CHC. Retrieved on 2006-03-30. - ^ Nuclear Management Company (2002). Emergency preparedness near nuclear power plants. Nuclear Facts - Safety. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ Plowman, Terry (December 2001). Danger! Coastal states get ready for a really rainy day -- by cranking up their evacuation plans. Planning Magazine. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ Guenther, Alan. "N.J. shore vulnerable to big storm", New Jersey Courier-Post,
September 1 ,2005 . Retrieved on 2006-03-30. - ^ Cape May County officials say full evacuation necessary
- ^ Howe, Peter J.. "Hurricane Gloria Goes Easy on
Cambridge", The Harvard Crimson, September 28,
1985 . Retrieved on 2006-03-30. - ^ a b Hydrometeorological Prediction Center. Late Twentieth Century Virginia Hurricane History. NOAA. Retrieved on 2006-03-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g Grammatico, Michael. Hurricane Gloria - September 27, 1985. United States Hurricanes. Geocities. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
- ^ Machos, Greg (2005). Hurricane Gloria: 20 years later. hurricaneville.com. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
- ^ a b Wick, Steve. "Life in the Wake of Gloria: An epic hurricane transforms LI, its people and, eventually, its power company", Newsday, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
- ^ Division of Emergency Services, Communications, and Management/Bureau of Emergency Management (2000). Geologic Hazards. Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan. New Hampshire Department of Safety. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
- ^ a b Cotterly, Wayne (2002). Hurricane Gloria-(1985). Maine Hurricane History. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
- ^ Canadian Hurricane Centre CHC Storms of 1985URL Accessed
June 2 ,2006 - ^ IRS Revenue Ruling 85-195. Internal Revenue Service (1985-12-30). Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
External links
- NOAA information on Hurricane Gloria
- HPC information on Gloria's rainfall
- NOAA hurricane intensities at landfall
- An unofficial Hurricane Gloria page
- ^ Buchholz, Margaret and Savadove, Larry (1993). Great Storms of the Jersey Shore. Down the Shore Publishing. ISBN 0-945582-51-X.
| Retired Atlantic hurricane names | |
|---|---|
| 1950s | |
| 1960s | Donna • |
| 1970s | Celia •
Agnes • Carmen • Fifi • |
| 1980s | Allen • |
| 1990s | |
| 2000s | |
|
Tropical cyclones of the 1985 Atlantic hurricane
season
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