1935 Atlantic hurricane season

The 1935 hurricane season officially began on June 1, 1935 and ended on 30 November 1935. These data limits for the amount of time each year, usually from when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico.

The season of 1935 was not very active, but extremely eventful. A category 1 hurricane in the West Indies killed an estimated 2,150 people in the Greater Antilles and Central America. A Category 3 storm hit central Cuba, grazed Miami. An extratropical hurricane hit Newfoundland.

The most notable storm of the season by far was the Labor Day hurricane that came ashore in the Florida Keys on September 2. The storm was initially discovered as unrest east of the Bahamas. He quickly became stronger as he moved through the Straits of Florida. He arrived at Long Key in the upper Keys as a small but intense Category 5 hurricane A pressure of 892 millibars was measured in the vicinity of the point where the center crossed the islands. This pressure level makes the Labor Day hurricane to the most intense, the U.S. has ever met. It is measured in third place of the most intense Atlantic hurricane after the lowest pressure and thus is just behind Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, who did not hit and Wilma of 2005, the United States.

After he crossed the Keys, he advanced to the west coast of Florida and brought torrential rains along its path. The storm sighted in rural Apalacheeküste last country. He moved inland and then turned towards the sea and broke up in the North Atlantic. More than 400 people were killed in the Keys and the damage in the area of shore was absolute. Parts of the Florida East Coast Railway in the upper Keys were totally destroyed. The hurricane swept an evacuation train from the rails and many who were waiting to be rescued, as killed veterans from the First World War, who lived in the Keys and as part of a legal assistance project of the government, were.

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  • Disaster in 1935
  • Tropical cyclone season
  • Natural disaster ( 20th century)
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