Hurricane Flora, 1963

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Hurricane Flora, 1963
Other forms of name
Ciclón Flora, 1963
Flora, Hurricane, 1963
Huracán Flora, 1963
See Also From tracing topical name
Hurricanes
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q3243642
Library of congress: sh 86005003
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: Almeida Bosque, J. Contra el agua y el viento, c1985: introd.(Ciclón Flora) p. 117 (Huracán Flora, 9-30/10-11-63)
  • NYT index(Hurricanes: Flora '63)
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Wikipedia description:

Hurricane Flora is among the deadliest Atlantic hurricanes in recorded history, with a death total of at least 7,193. The seventh tropical storm and sixth hurricane of the 1963 Atlantic hurricane season, Flora developed from a disturbance in the Intertropical Convergence Zone on September 26 while located 755 miles (1,215 km) southwest of the Cape Verde islands. After remaining a weak depression for several days, it rapidly organized on September 29 to attain tropical storm status. Flora continued to strengthen, reaching Category 3 hurricane status after moving through the Windward Islands and passing over Tobago, and it reached maximum sustained winds of 145 miles per hour (233 km/h) in the Caribbean. The storm struck southwestern Haiti near peak intensity, turned to the west, and drifted over Cuba for four days before turning to the northeast. Flora passed over the Bahamas and accelerated northeastward, becoming an extratropical cyclone on October 12. Due to its slow movement across Cuba, Flora is the wettest known tropical cyclone for Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. The significant casualties caused by Flora were the most for a tropical cyclone in the Atlantic Basin since the 1900 Galveston Hurricane.

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