Hurricane Hilda (1955)
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This article is about the Atlantic hurricane in 1955. For the retired hurricane in 1964, see Hurricane Hilda. For other storms of the same name, see Tropical Storm Hilda (disambiguation).
Category 3 hurricane (SSHS) | ||
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Formed | September 10, 1955 | |
Dissipated | September 20, 1955 | |
Highest winds |
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Lowest pressure | 952 mbar (hPa) | |
Damage | $120 million (1955 USD) $824.4 million (2005 USD) |
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Fatalities | 304 direct[1] | |
Areas affected |
Leeward Islands, Hispaniola, Cuba, Yucatán Peninsula, Mainland Mexico | |
Part of the 1955 Atlantic hurricane season |
Hurricane Hilda was a strong Category 3 hurricane in the 1955 Atlantic hurricane season. The name was not retired even though the storm killed 300 people and caused over $800 million (2005 US dollars) in damage during its course through the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico.
Contents |
[edit] Storm history
On September 10, a westward moving tropical wave organized into a tropical depression over the northern Lesser Antilles. It moved to the northwest, and with favorable upper level winds and warm water temperatures, it strengthened into Tropical Storm Hilda on the 11th. Hilda, a small storm, quickly intensified as it moved westward, and became a hurricane on the 12th while north of the Mona Passage. The storm continued to intensify, and reached 95 mph winds before turning to the west-southwest. Hilda crossed the Guantánamo Province coastline in eastern Cuban on the night of the 13th, and quickly weakened to a tropical storm.
20 hours after making landfall, Hilda reached the Caribbean Sea as a 70 mph tropical storm. Still retaining its small and compact windfield, the storm was able to intensify under the favorable conditions of the Western Caribbean Sea. Hilda became a hurricane again on September 14, and reached major hurricane status on the night of the 15th. The hurricane lost some intensity as it neared the Yucatán Peninsula, and hit the sparsely populated area between Chetumal and Cozumel on the 16th as a 110 mph hurricane.
Hilda crossed the peninsula, and retained winds of at least 95 mph over land. If it weakened over land, it is impossible to know the sparse information readings and lack of reconnaissance aircraft at this time. Upon reaching the Gulf of Mexico on September 17, Hilda again was able to strengthen. It continued its westward track, likely due to a ridge of high pressure to the north, and reached a peak of 130 mph on the 18th in the western Bay of Campeche. The hurricane weakened prior to landfall, and hit near Tampico, Mexico on the 19th as a 95 mph hurricane. Hilda rapidly weakened over Mexico, and dissipated on the 20th.
[edit] Impact
In Tampico, Mexico, Hilda dropped heavy rains and flooding that left half of the city flooded. The Panuco River was at its highest level in 30 years. Maximum sustained winds were up to 105 mph, with wind gusts estimated at 150 mph. In all, Hilda caused $120 million in damage, with 300 people reported killed.
[edit] Lack of retirement
Despite its damage, Hilda was not retired. Had it been retired, the 1955 hurricane season would have had 5 retired storms, tied for the record with 2005. The name Hilda was later retired by a Hurricane Hilda that struck Louisiana in the 1964 season.