It depends on the hurricane, but the average is 300 miles.
Sizes ma y range from only 60 miles to over 1300 miles.
Over 52 feet
1926 Miami: The blow that broke the boom : The 1926 storm was described by the U.S. Weather Bureau in Miami as "probably the most destructive hurricane ever to strike the United States." It hit Fort Lauderdale, Dania, Hollywood, Hallandale and Miami. The death toll is estimated to be from 325 to perhaps as many as 800. The "Great Miami" Hurricane was first spotted as a tropical wave located 1,000 miles east of the Lesser Antilles on September 11th. The system moved quickly westward and intensified to hurricane strength as it moved to the north of Puerto Rico on the 15th. Winds were reported to be nearly 150 mph as the hurricane passed over the Turks Islands on the 16th and through the Bahamas on the 17th. Little in the way of meteorological information on the approaching hurricane was available to the Weather Bureau in Miami. As a result, hurricane warnings were not issued until midnight on September 18th, which gave the booming population of South Florida little notice of the impending disaster.
That point is in the Atlantic Ocean, about 1,150 miles southeast of Washington DC, 1,260 miles east-northeast of Miami FL, 1,410 miles north-northeast of Caracas, Venezuela, 2,070 miles north of the equator, 3,050 miles west of Casablanca, Morocco,
Actuaally, there's no city there -- it's in the Atlantic Ocean. But ... the nearest city is Key Largo, FL; the latitude and longitude you presented is about 29 miles Southeast of there.
Hurricane Katrina struck landfall as a category 3 with winds around 120 mph caused most of its damage through flooding. Hurricane Andrew struck Florida and the gulf as a category 5 with winds acceding 165 mph. Even though Andrew was much stronger when it hit. The damage Katrina caused exceeded Andrew's cause of all the flooding done because of New Orleans being under sea level and the levee's failing which instead of blocking the water it trapped the water in. The official death toll is 1,836.
No, it is 15 miles north of Miiami and it is even north of North Miami Beach. Florida.
25 miles
Hurricane Andrew had peaks sustained winds of 175 miles per hour, which had weakened to 165 miles per hour by the time of landfall in Florida.
Over 52 feet
14 miles
No, Port Canaveral is 209 miles north of Miami.
257 miles up I-75 NORTH.
1926 Miami: The blow that broke the boom : The 1926 storm was described by the U.S. Weather Bureau in Miami as "probably the most destructive hurricane ever to strike the United States." It hit Fort Lauderdale, Dania, Hollywood, Hallandale and Miami. The death toll is estimated to be from 325 to perhaps as many as 800. The "Great Miami" Hurricane was first spotted as a tropical wave located 1,000 miles east of the Lesser Antilles on September 11th. The system moved quickly westward and intensified to hurricane strength as it moved to the north of Puerto Rico on the 15th. Winds were reported to be nearly 150 mph as the hurricane passed over the Turks Islands on the 16th and through the Bahamas on the 17th. Little in the way of meteorological information on the approaching hurricane was available to the Weather Bureau in Miami. As a result, hurricane warnings were not issued until midnight on September 18th, which gave the booming population of South Florida little notice of the impending disaster.
Miami FL to Atlanta Ga is 661 road miles using the Florida Turnpike to I-75 North.
Andrew was a rare case of a hurricane making landfall at category 5 strength with sustained winds of 165 miles per hour. Many homes were destroyed by these extreme winds, where most hurricane destruction is caused by flooding and storm surge.
On average, 810 miles, depending on where you start from.
261 miles up I-75 NORTH.