1898 Atlantic hurricane season


The 1898 Atlantic hurricane season ran through the summer and the first half of fall in 1898. The season was a fairly active one, with 11 storms forming, 5 of which became hurricanes.

Timeline



ImageSize = width:800 height:200
PlotArea = top:10 bottom:80 right:20 left:20
Legend = columns:3 left:30 top:58 columnwidth:270
AlignBars = early
DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy
Period = from:01/08/2017 till:01/12/2017
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
ScaleMinor = grid:black unit:month increment:1 start:01/08/2017
Colors =
id:canvas value:gray
id:GP value:red
id:TD value:rgb legend:Tropical_Depression_=_≤39_mph_
id:TS value:rgb legend:Tropical_Storm_=_39–73_mph_
id:C1 value:rgb legend:Category_1_=_74–95_mph_
id:C2 value:rgb legend:Category_2_=_96–110_mph_
id:C3 value:rgb legend:Category_3_=_111–129_mph_
id:C4 value:rgb legend:Category_4_=_130–156_mph_
id:C5 value:rgb legend:Category_5_=_≥157_mph_
Backgroundcolors = canvas:canvas
BarData =
barset:Hurricane
bar:Month
PlotData=
barset:Hurricane width:10 align:left fontsize:S shift: anchor:till
from:02/08/2017 till:03/08/2017 color:C1 text:"One "
from:31/08/2017 till:01/09/2017 color:C1 text:"Two "
from:03/09/2017 till:05/09/2017 color:C1 text:"Three "
from:05/09/2017 till:20/09/2017 color:C2 text:"Four "
from:12/09/2017 till:22/09/2017 color:TS text:"Five "
from:20/09/2017 till:28/09/2017 color:TS text:"Six "
from:25/09/2017 till:06/10/2017 color:C4 text:"Seven "
barset:break
from:25/09/2017 till:28/09/2017 color:TS text:"Eight "
from:02/10/2017 till:14/10/2017 color:TS text:"Nine "
from:21/10/2017 till:23/10/2017 color:TS text:"Ten "
from:27/10/2017 till:04/11/2017 color:TS text:"Eleven "
barset:break
bar:Month width:5 align:center fontsize:S shift: anchor:middle color:canvas
from:01/08/2017 till:31/08/2017 text:August
from:01/09/2017 till:30/09/2017 text:September
from:01/10/2017 till:31/10/2017 text:October
from:01/11/2017 till:30/11/2017 text:November
TextData =
pos:
text:""

Systems

Hurricane One

A "feeble" tropical disturbance developed into a tropical storm near West End, Grand Bahama, early on August 2. Three hours later, the storm made landfall in Hobe Sound, Florida, with winds of 40 mph. The system briefly weakened to a tropical depression on August 2, before re-strengthened into a tropical storm and emerged into the Gulf of Mexico near Tarpon Springs. Later that day, the cyclone intensified quickly, becoming a Category 1 hurricane on the modern-day Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale at 23:00 UTC. Simultaneously, the hurricane made landfall on St. George Island with winds of 80 mph. After moving inland, it rapidly weakened and dissipated over southwestern Alabama late on August 3.
About 24 hours of heavy rainfall was observed in the Tampa area, with "great damage done in many places." In the Florida Panhandle, considerable impact was inflicted to crops, turpentine farms, and property. Offshore, three barges, four tugboats, and many sailing crafts were sunk. Among the capsized vessels was the tugboat Nimrod, with 12 people aboard, all of whom drowned.

Hurricane Two

The next storm formed off the northern coast of Florida on August 30 causing significant damage to coastland communities when it made landfall. It hit around the border usually between South Carolina and Georgia with winds, and dissipated on September 1, causing $400,000 in damage.
At Port Royal, South Carolina, this storm caused 10.82 in of rain over the course of a day, breaking the previous one-day record by 5.89 in., with a storm total of.

Hurricane Three

A hurricane was first observed on September 3 over the northeastern Atlantic, likely having existed for several days prior. It headed northeastward, and became extratropical on September 5 north of the Azores.

Hurricane Four

The Winward Islands Hurricane of 1898
The next storm formed on September 5 off the coast of Africa. It moved westward and hit the Lesser Antilles with winds, where it caused heavy damage across the islands. The hurricane turned to the north, remaining a hurricane until becoming extratropical on September 19 near Newfoundland. The hurricane caused $2.5 million in damage and 383 deaths.

Tropical Storm Five

The fifth storm formed over the western Caribbean Sea on September 12. It tracked northwestward, and hit the Yucatán Peninsula with 60 mph winds. Later, the storm traveled north. It hit Louisiana on September 20 with 60 mph winds and dissipated over Illinois on September 22.

Tropical Storm Six

The sixth storm formed over the western Caribbean Sea on September 20. It followed a path similar to the fifth storm, tracking northwestward and hitting the Yucatán Peninsula with 60 mph winds. Later, it traveled north. The system hit the United States near the Texas/Louisiana border on September 28, and dissipated shortly thereafter. Heavy rainfall fell across the central Gulf coast and up the Mississippi Valley, with the highest totals recorded at Pensacola, Florida with and Sikeston, Missouri where fell.

Hurricane Seven

The Georgia Hurricane of 1898
The seventh storm formed to the east of the Lesser Antilles on September 25 and traveled northwest, reaching 110 mph winds but sparing the islands. On the 2nd, it made landfall as a category 4 hurricane in Cumberland Island, Georgia and northeast Florida with 135 mph winds, causing heavy damage amounting to around $2.5 million, and 179 casualties. It dissipated after winding its way through Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, southern Canada, part of Maine, and Newfoundland on October 6.

Tropical Storm Eight

The eighth storm formed in the Western Caribbean, crossing to the northeast across Cuba, and dissipated over the Bahamas. It formed on September 25 and dissipated on September 28.

Tropical Storm Nine

A tropical wave forms into a tropical depression on October 2 with winds of 45 MPH. The storm moved across Cuba causing minor flooding and crop damage killing 2, then nearly struck Florida. It then moved to the North Eastern sea and dissipated October 14.
This caused flooding and extensive damage on Sapelo Island, Georgia, including destroying a church at the community of Hanging Bull and washing away an entire cemetery.

Tropical Storm Ten

The 10th storm of the season followed a path similar to the 8th storm, forming in the West Caribbean, crossing Cuba, and dissipating over the Bahamas. This storm lasted from October 21 to October 23

Tropical Storm Eleven

The final storm of the season formed over the Northern Lesser Antilles on October 27 and took a nearly straight-lined path to the west, hitting the Yucatán Peninsula with 60 mph winds, and disintegrated soon after on November 4.