The Great Bahamian Hurricanes of 1933
The Stories of Five of the Greatest and Deadliest Hurricanes to Impact the Bahamas in the 1930s
by
Book Details
About the Book
The 1933 North Atlantic hurricane season is the most active season on record in terms of Accumulated Cyclone Energy with a total of 259. It also set a record for the number of named tropical cyclones in a single season, twenty, which stood until 2005, when there were twenty-eight. The season ran from May 1933, with tropical cyclone development occurring as early as May and as late as November. The system was active for all but thirteen days from June 28 to October 7.
There were also eleven hurricanes, including six major (Category 3 or higher) hurricanes. In addition, two Category 3 hurricanes made landfall in The Bahamas all within one month of each other: the Great Treasure Coast Hurricane in the northwest, central, and southeast Bahamas, followed by the Category 5 Great Cuba-Brownsville Hurricane in the northwest Bahamas.
The Great Treasure Coast Hurricane caused forty-eight deaths, and several additional people were declared missing. The other hurricanes impacting The Bahamas reported significant damages but no noteworthy loss of lives reported. This book examines the large-scale impact this storm season had on the Bahamas and the effect it continues to have today.
About the Author
Wayne Neely is an international speaker, bestselling author, lecturer on hurricanes, meteorologist, and New York Times Bestselling Author. He has been a WMO-certified Bahamian meteorologist in Nassau, Bahamas, for over thirty-five years. He has a great passion for writing and does it in his spare time when he is not working at his primary job as a Weather Forecaster at The Bahamas Department of Meteorology. He has written sixteen bestselling books on hurricanes.