Hurricane Hazel
The first Atlantic hurricane to have its name retired was Hurricane Carol of 1954.
Due to the death & destruction caused by Hurricane Camille the name was indefinitely retired after the 1969 hurricane season.
Yes. The name Stan has been retired and replaced with Sean.
Many have not been retired - the ones we still use.
The name Irene is retired from the list of Atlantic hurricanes.
The first Atlantic hurricane to have its name retired was Hurricane Carol of 1954.
Yes. The name Ivan was retired in 2004, to be replaced by Igor, which was used for the first time this year.
Due to the death & destruction caused by Hurricane Camille the name was indefinitely retired after the 1969 hurricane season.
Yes. The name Stan has been retired and replaced with Sean.
Yes. If a hurricane is bad enough then the name is retired and replaced with one of the same gender and first letter. For example, Katrina in 2005 was bad enough that the name was replaced with Katia for the 11th named storm in the 2011 season.
There are no names for tornadoes. The name of a hurricane is retired if the storm is particularly devastating.
Yes, the name Jeanne has been retired and replaced with Julia.
The name Irene is retired from the list of Atlantic hurricanes.
Many have not been retired - the ones we still use.
The name Irene has not been retired, at least not yet.
Yes, the name Fifi was retired from use for hurricanes in 1974
First of all, Katrina was a hurricane, not a tornado. Tornadoes do not have names. And second, no. Hurricane Katrina dissipated seven years ago and can never return. The name Katrina is retired, so no future hurricane will ever have that name.