1932 Abaco hurricane

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Infobox weather eventTemplate:Infobox weather event/NWSTemplate:Infobox weather event/EffectsTemplate:Infobox weather event/Footer In late August and early September, 1932, a potent Atlantic hurricane—retroactively rated Category 5 on the modern Saffir–Simpson scale—impacted portions of the Lucayan Archipelago and the East Coast of the United States, inflicting locally severe damage. It was known as the Great Abaco hurricane[nb 1] or the 1932 Bahamas hurricane, after the site of its worst effects, which it hit at peak intensity. Though large and powerful, it impacted few areas other than islands. The fourth tropical storm and third hurricane of the 1932 Atlantic hurricane season, it belonged to a pair of Category 5 storms in the Atlantic Ocean that year, the other happening in November.

The cyclone formed north of the Virgin Islands on August 30, over the next three days gradually strengthening. Heading west-northwest, it became a hurricane on September 2 and a strong hurricane a day later. On September 4 it became a major hurricane—Category 3 or stronger—and on September 5 peaked with winds of 160 mph (260 km/h), passing over the northern Bahamas on the latter date. Its eye traversed the Abaco Islands, attended by catastrophic winds and storm surge that killed 18 people. One of four Category 5 storms to hit the Bahamas on record, it was also the first of two such to strike the Abaco Islands, the other being 2019's Dorian.

Within a day of landfall it turned northward and then northeastward, heading seaward while a powerful hurricane. By September 8 the storm weakened to below Category 3 status, never making landfall on the contiguous United States. Nevertheless, its effects were felt on the East Coast of the United States, primarily in the northeastern part of the country, including Script error: No such module "convert". winds offshore of New England, doing mostly minor—but occasionally significant—damage. On September 9 it lost tropical features and continued a week, brushing the Maritimes. In Atlantic Canada it claimed 14–15 lives, widely dispersing impacts, and gradually turned eastward near Iceland, eventually passing north of the Scandinavian Peninsula and ending near the Russian SFSR of the Soviet Union on September 17.

Meteorological history

File:1932 Bahamas hurricane track.png
Map plotting the storm's track and intensity, according to the Saffir–Simpson scale
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At 18:00 UTC on August 30, the Atlantic hurricane database (HURDAT) initiated a tropical depression 50 miles (80 kilometres) east of Anegada in the British Virgin Islands.[2] Around that time the United States Weather Bureau operationally first detected the storm, which it deemed minor. Once noted, the storm tracked generally west-northwest.Template:Sfn The next day a ship logged Script error: No such module "convert". winds, at which time the depression was already a tropical storm. Late on September 2, while centered 100 mi (160 km) east-northeast of Grand Turk Island, the storm became a minimal hurricane,[2] but contemporary meteorologists believed it still weaker.Template:Sfn The storm bypassed the Greater Antilles to the north on the night of September 2–3. A day later a ship saw winds of Script error: No such module "convert"., first verifying hurricane status; meanwhile the storm had strengthened 35 mph (55 km/h) in 24 hours, showing rapid intensification.[3] At 00:00 UTC on September 4 the cyclone reached winds of 115 mph (185 km/h), equal to Category 3 status, and attained Category 4 just 18 hours later; winds no more than Script error: No such module "convert". were reported by mariners to the Weather Bureau as late as the evening of September 4, however.[4] Late the next day it peaked at 160 mph (260 km/h) and crossed the Abaco Islands,[2] making a pressure of less than Script error: No such module "convert". on land during its passage.[nb 2]Template:Sfn As it did so it turned north, missing the most populous Bahamian islands—and the capital Nassau—well to the east,[2] and generated extreme winds on the Abaco Islands.Template:Sfn

On September 6 the storm largely retained force, heading north-northeast off the northern Bahamas, away from the mainland United States.[2] Multiple ships this day caught hurricane-force winds and pressures down to Script error: No such module "convert".. At 18:00 UTC the storm lost Category 5 winds but remained intense, and the next day it curved northeastward, roughly paralleling the East Coast of the United States. At 11:00 UTC the ship Deer Lodge clocked Script error: No such module "convert". winds—Beaufort Force 12—and a barometric low of Script error: No such module "convert"., implying maximum sustained winds of Script error: No such module "convert". or greater. Another ship that day also recorded hurricane winds nearby and a pressure of Script error: No such module "convert"., evidencing high-end Category 4 winds—145 mph (230 km/h) or higher—all day.[3]Template:Sfn On September 8, however, a more rapid downtrend started as the storm continued northeast, losing intensity. By 18:00 UTC it was no longer a major hurricane, but being of great extent, still brought high winds to coastal New England. Overnight the storm angled toward the coast, heading north, and passed about 200 mi (320 km) offshore with winds of 100 mph (155 km/h). At 18:00 UTC on September 9 it became extratropical and lurched east-northeast, keeping hurricane-force winds about a day longer. At 12:00 UTC on September 11 it shed hurricane intensity and resumed a northeast course. Shortly afterward it crossed just south of the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, packing winds of 70 mph (110 km/h). Its remnants soon traveled near the Snæfellsnes, Iceland, and Jan Mayen, an island 370 mi (595 km) northeast of Iceland, bypassing those areas on the night of September 14–15. Early on September 16 the system veered eastward, and the following day finally ended over the Barents Sea.[2]Template:Sfn

Preparations, impact, aftermath, and records

Impacts by region
Region Deaths Injuries Locale Deaths Injuries Damages Source
Caribbean
and Bahamas
18+ 300 Bahamas 18+ 300 [5]
United States 3 ? Massachusetts 2 [6]
New York 1 [7]
Canada 14–15 ? 14–15 >Template:Nts [8]
Total 35–36+ 300+ >Template:Nts [9]

Storm warnings in the United States were placed at 15:00 UTC on September 5 from Daytona Beach to Punta Gorda, Florida.Template:Sfn Due in part to the warnings, people in the affected areas began boarding up windows and completing other preparations, some as early as September 3.[10][11] A pair of trains were dispatched to evacuate Lake Okeechobee-area denizens.[12] Evacuees streamed northward from Miami and West Palm Beach; between the latter place and Jacksonville many filling stations ran out of gas. Melbourne, which was filled up with refugees, converted its high school into a shelter.[13] As the cyclone later appeared to miss South Florida,[14] the first warnings were cancelled and new storm warnings issued between Daytona Beach and Wilmington, North Carolina. By early September 7, warnings were extended up the East Coast to Eastport, Maine.Template:Sfn

In all 35–36 people were reported killed. About half the deaths occurred in the Bahamas, on and around Abaco Island; damage estimates in dollars, however, were not released.[8]Template:Sfn Along the East Coast of the United States losses tallied "many thousands".[nb 3][15] Despite the great size and intensity of the hurricane, ample warnings prevented loss of life and commerce at sea.Template:Sfn To date, it is one of four Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes to make landfall in the Bahamas at that intensity—the others having taken place in 1933, 1992, and 2019—and the first of two such storms to hit the Abaco Islands.[16][2]

The Bahamas

The storm caused at least 18 fatalities in the island chain, along with an additional 300 injured.Template:Sfn[nb 4] Passing north of Cat Island, it caused a pressure of Script error: No such module "convert". and a north wind of Script error: No such module "convert". there,[17] downing power lines.Template:Sfn Although the cyclone passed within 65 mi (105 km) of New Providence,[2] it blew at up to Script error: No such module "convert". and did no significant damage there,[12] other than to tomatoes.Template:Sfn At Nassau it produced a pressure of Script error: No such module "convert".,[18] along with sustained winds of Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn Farther west, it left Andros unaffected. On San Salvador, then Watling Island, the storm only destroyed a radio station. The cyclone wrought Script error: No such module "convert". winds on Eleuthera, doing much damage to crops and part of a wharf. It also tore up roads on the island. On Grand Bahama the storm was worse, ravaging vessels, unroofing homes, and causing flooding. Some homes were destroyed and many others badly damaged. Floodwaters reached depths of up to Script error: No such module "convert"., pushing houses off their homesites, and Hawksbill Creek rose to a height of Script error: No such module "convert".. The storm heavily damaged citrus crops at West End. A number of minor injuries occurred as well.Template:Sfn Food shortages were reported between Eight Mile Rock and Sweeting Cay.Template:Sfn

File:1932 Storm 4 September 3 MWR map.png
Map of the storm nearing the Bahamas on September 3

The storm was at its most damaging on the Abaco Islands, delivering powerful wind gusts—estimated at over Script error: No such module "convert".—that shattered strong buildings,Template:Sfn leveling hundreds of homes.[19] On Abaco Island the storm afflicted half a dozen settlements,[20] destroying most of the houses there; one of the sites lost all but one home.[21] Collectively the storm leveled 171 homes in the villages of Cornish Town, Cherokee Sound, Cedar Harbour, Riding Rock, Blackwood, and Coopers Town.Template:Sfn A Script error: No such module "convert". pier was obliterated.Template:Sfn At Marsh Harbour, the storm's eye passed overhead for a very short while around 20:00 UTC, yielding a 15-minute calm and a barometric low of at most Script error: No such module "convert"..[nb 5] 12 homes were destroyed and most of the rest severely damaged.[nb 6][22] Schools, a teacher's home, a pair of wharves, and many boats were wrecked as well, along with orchards and crops,Template:Sfn but no one was killed. A storm surge of more than Script error: No such module "convert". swamped the area,Template:Sfn and 3,000 banana plants were ripped up.Template:Sfn At Hope Town, Elbow Cay, the winds destroyed 83 homes, as well as the public buildings and a wireless radio station; the same also badly damaged 63 other homes. 40 more homes received light damage.[22] A few churches were destroyed as well,Template:Sfn along with the post office and a jail.[23] A tin washtub was found Script error: No such module "convert". away, and winds lofted a house Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn Notwithstanding damage, no fatalities occurred in Hope Town.Template:Sfn An anemometer there witnessed a gust of Script error: No such module "convert". before blowing away.Template:Sfn Around 15:00 UTC, at the height of the storm, a barometer measured a low of Script error: No such module "convert"., during which winds shifted from northeast to southeast. In the aftermath food supplies ran low and salt contaminated the drinking supply.[22] Across Elbow Cay the storm destroyed three settlements, engendering the creation of Dundas Town.Template:Sfn On Man-O-War Cay the storm severely damaged or destroyed 24 homes.Template:Sfn

Hardest hit of all was Green Turtle Cay—whose history was split by the storm;Template:Sfn the storm's fiercest winds were reported there,Template:Sfn along with its eye.Template:Sfn Observers deduced sustained winds of Script error: No such module "convert". or more from photographs.Template:Sfn Out of 80 houses only a dozen were left. Additionally, the storm felled all fruit and coconut trees on the cay.Template:Sfn It also ruined four churches, a school, the New Plymouth Hotel, and the Government Wharf; among the churches were a large brick pair with Script error: No such module "convert". stone walls, blocks of which were tossed Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The sea submerged the island, removing all vegetation and boats,Template:Sfn as well as a cemetery, gravestones and corpses all.Template:Sfn Six people died there and 26 sustained severe injuries.Template:Sfn Debris crushed most of the livestock on the island.Template:Sfn Virtually all inhabitants were left homeless,Template:Sfn including the residents of Bluff Point.Template:Sfn At the latter the strongest winds were from the north and northwest; these were attended by a storm surge that inundated the settlement.[22]Template:Sfn Water carried a mail boat Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn Stricken islanders endured almost a week without food except coconuts and sugarcane.[24] Just four homes out of 35 still stood on Great Guana Cay,[22]Template:Sfn where the barometric minimum was Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn There the storm ravaged many boats,[22] and one person died.Template:Sfn At nearby Coopers Town, which was "wiped out",Template:Sfn but six homes survived the storm;[22] in all the storm destroyed 40 homes there.Template:Sfn At Spanish Cay the storm destroyed a home,Template:Sfn and flattened six more at Sales Cay.Template:Sfn Small watercraft, a schooner, and a sloop were swept out at Water Cay.Template:Sfn

Charles Dundas and the wife of Bede Clifford surveyed the aftermath on Abaco Island; the latter dressed a wound there.[25] Three Abaco parliamentarians partook in a relief mission,[21] reaching Green Turtle Cay on September 10. The few intact homes were used as operation centers and makeshift hospitals, while the ship Lady Cordeaux delivered fresh water;[24] the vessel also brought blankets, food, and construction materials.Template:Sfn Donors privately contributed as well,Template:Sfn including the victims' relatives. Many groups set up relief funds, among them churches and the Royal Bank of Canada. The Nassau Theatre Club held a benefit showing of Edward G. Robinson's Two Seconds. The Governor-General and other dignitaries attended a relief show at Victoria Hall. The Daughters of the Empire and other organizations hosted special events such as relief luncheons.Template:Sfn 21 packages of clothing were shipped aboard the Ena K. from Miami.Template:Sfn The Government House was converted into a distribution center, pooling private contributions.Template:Sfn Public relief was scarce, but locals quickly rebuilt. Few ships were lost at sea, and loss of life was relatively low.Template:Sfn The storm coincided with a seven-year span of severe hurricanes, notably in 1926, 1929, and 1933. The cumulative effects of these storms made Bahamian sponge diving unviable, effectively ending a key to the local economy.Template:Sfn

East Coast of the United States

File:1932 Storm 4 HWM 7 September 12 UTC.png
Map of the storm off the East Coast on September 7

Although warnings were posted for the eastern United States, the storm's path prevented landfall, leaving the main effects as heavy swells and gales.Template:Sfn In the Southeast, large breakers pummeled the Florida coast from Cape Canaveral to Miami. Blowing at Script error: No such module "convert"., west winds whipped up sea spray, forming Script error: No such module "convert". "streamers" and presenting onlookers with a spectacle "such as never has been witnessed by inhabitants hereabouts".[26] Above-normal tides undermined an unfinished road on the Outer Banks, between New and Oregon inlets. Just offshore winds blew at Script error: No such module "convert"..[27][28] The elements forced a ferry en route from Manns Harbor to Roanoke Island to dock at WancheseScript error: No such module "convert". south of its normal port.[29] Winds peaked at Script error: No such module "convert". at Cape Hatteras. Strong gales on the evening of September 7 blew the Cape Lookout Lightship loose from her anchorage. Off the coast at the same time, the crew of the Munson steamer Munloyal, then believed to be 350 mi (565 km) southeast of Frying Pan Shoals, North Carolina, reported that her position was unknown and her rudder blown away. The United States Coast Guard dispatched cutters from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to her assistance.[30] Script error: No such module "convert". winds reversed her course nearly Script error: No such module "convert"., while breaking her radio antenna. The storm also tore off a propeller, paralyzing the ship, which had to be towed to port.[31]

Up the coast in the Mid-Atlantic, low-lying parts of Norfolk, Virginia, flooded.[32] Along coastal New Jersey rough surf and brisk winds caused locally extensive damage.[33] Waves swept away parts of the boardwalk in Atlantic City, New Jersey, along with a fishing pier at Stone Harbor and the remains of another in Ocean City. The sea also destroyed a water main, a Script error: No such module "convert". section of boardwalk, and Script error: No such module "convert". of railing at Cape May. At Atlantic City sea spray surged Script error: No such module "convert". upward, drenching onlookers, and seawater drowned nearby streets. Big waves marooned two motorists, and snapped folding doors at a Skee-Ball arcade. At Ocean City surf destroyed a three-story frame clubhouse. Four people were reported missing at sea but later found.[34] At Matawan the storm broke off tree limbs, blocking traffic. Tides on Matawan Creek and at Keyport rose to within a foot of the record, slightly damaging boats at the latter place. Coastal bungalows, moorings, and bulkheads took "considerable" damage.[35] Treacherous currents, including strong undertow, menaced bathers. At Point Pleasant Beach rescuers averted three drownings.[36] Surf overtopped a seawall at Monmouth Beach. Seawater submersed Sea Bright and Highlands, but did mostly scant damage to North Jersey, other than massive coastal erosion. The Shrewsbury River backed up, clogging sewers.[37] The weather and damage were the same in New York as in New Jersey.[33] On Long Island the storm dislodged "several feet" of beachfront, west of Montauk, and breached Westhampton Beach, cutting a Script error: No such module "convert". inlet at the latter, where Script error: No such module "convert". water sloshed over Script error: No such module "convert". of road.[38] The storm removed Script error: No such module "convert". of shoreline at Oak Beach. Squalls overturned a skiff, drowning one of its two occupants.[7] Inclement weather caused a motorboat to drift onto a sandbar near Dead Horse Bay, stranding its two occupants for a few hours.[39] Large trees and signs fell down in Brooklyn, New York, due to the winds. Cold temperatures succeeded the hurricane.[40][7]

In New England, small boats wrecked at Newport, Rhode Island.[41] At its closest approach to the mainland United States, the storm generated Script error: No such module "convert". winds in coastal Massachusetts,[3] downing signage there and in neighboring states, as well as smashing windows.[42] Nantucket measured Script error: No such module "convert". as the hurricane stayed offshore,Template:Sfn along with a pressure of Script error: No such module "convert".,[43] and a weather station at Chatham unofficially reported Script error: No such module "convert".. At Cape Cod unparalleled tides cast dozens of boats ashore,[44] and 30 more washed up around Nantucket.Template:Sfn Script error: No such module "convert". winds churned past Highland Light,[45] delaying the departure of ships from Boston Harbor.[46] Nantasket Beach felt its highest tides in five years.[41] Winds off the Massachusetts coast topped Script error: No such module "convert"., snarling shipping.[47] Tremendous seas—among the highest known to "the oldest inhabitants"—hurled boats ashore on Martha's Vineyard, even in secure spots. Wreckage filled the seas off the island. Salt spray zoomed over Script error: No such module "convert". dunes, filling brackish ponds in the island's interior. Winds sheared off tree branches, damaged fruit crops, and leveled cornfields, yet little injured homes. Automobile doors flexed in the winds.[48] At Manomet Bluffs the storm sank or unmoored 16 out of 20 boats. In the Plymouth area it did "thousands" of dollars in damage to watercraft, including fishing boats, and lobster traps. The surf drew "hundreds" of onlookers. Many dories washed ashore near Plymouth Rock.[49] At Gloucester winds splintered tree limbs and blew off apples, injuring gardens.[50] Near Highland Light the schooner Getrude L. Thebaud lost two of her crew.[6] Coast Guardsmen retrieved a crew of two from a sloop that capsized at Scituate.[51] The storm crippled the auxiliary training ship Nantucket offshore New England, causing her to drift Script error: No such module "convert". after high seas caused flooding, disabled the radio, and wrenched loose an anchor weighing Script error: No such module "convert".. The Nantucket also lost three lifeboats and a Script error: No such module "convert". section of the spar deck, and tossed a motorboat off a davit into the chart house.[52] On the high seas the storm rocked the steamship Manhattan, injuring several passengers.[53]

Bermuda, Atlantic Canada, Newfoundland, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, and far North Atlantic

File:1932 Storm 4 September 12 HWM.png
Map of the storm south of Greenland on September 12

The storm's arrival at Bermuda suspended a test of the Bathysphere. Vigorous winds and mountainous seas affected the island.[54] Atlantic Canada reported 14–15 fatalities, all off Nova Scotia. In Nova Scotia the worst of the storm missed Halifax, which clocked winds of Script error: No such module "convert".. Water overflowed roads at Glace Bay, and the steamer Watford foundered, killing two crew members. The storm laid waste to 10% of the apple crop in the Annapolis Valley. At Canso it sank a pleasure craft and 18 fishing boats. Winds toppled a chimney, crumpling the roof of a church. A fire during the storm engulfed a few garages, a hotel, and homes at Beaconsfield, at a loss of $33,800. Losses to lobster fishing equipment at Amherst totaled "several thousand dollars". At Chéticamp the storm damaged grain and wheat crops. Three boats beached at Scatarie Island, as did a liquor carrier at Lingan. In Hants County a barge sank with its load of cordwood. On Cape Breton Island the storm downed phone and power lines. Winds there reached Script error: No such module "convert".. Floods obliterated roads and railways on the island. Winds leveled small buildings at Pugwash. A man aboard the Mary H. Hirtle drowned off Sable Island. Two schooners—the Patara and the BeeBee—succumbed as well, along with 11 or 12 of their crew. A third, unnamed schooner sank off St. Brendan's, Newfoundland. At Little Cape 25 fishing boats were a total loss, along with half a dozen more at Pouch Cove. At Cappa Hayden the steamer Odensholm grounded. At Culdesac winds buckled a few homes and a church. The storm also tore apart all the fishing stages at Leading Teakles, as well as 16 smacks. The storm ripped apart an abandoned steamer at Burnt Point. Winds of Script error: No such module "convert". buffeted Prince Edward Island. In addition, the storm drove four schooners ashore on Saint Pierre and Miquelon.[55] Although extratropical by then, the storm was still notably intense off Newfoundland, Iceland, and Jan Mayen, the last of which observed pressures at or below Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn Rough weather incapacitated a fishing vessel off Patreksfjörður, Iceland, necessitating the rescue of its crew.[56][57]

Notes

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  1. Tropical cyclones in the Atlantic basin were not formally named prior to World War II. Storms such as this one were denoted by their attributes, including coincidence with Catholic saints' feasts.[1]Template:Sfn
  2. This value was read on an instrument at Green Turtle Cay.Template:Sfn
  3. All losses are in 1932 United States dollars unless otherwise noted.
  4. At least one source puts the death toll at 16.Template:Sfn
  5. Another source puts the latter at just Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn
  6. One report listed 3,012 homes as being battered.Template:Sfn

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See also

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References

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Sources

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