- Hurricane Alice (June 1954)
Infobox Hurricane
Name=Hurricane Alice
Basin=Atl
Year=1954
Category=cat1
Type=hurricane
Formed=June 24, 1954
Dissipated=June 26, 1954
1-min winds=70
Fatalities=55– 153
Areas=Mexico ,Texas
Hurricane season=1954 Atlantic hurricane season Hurricane Alice was a
Category 1 hurricane that struck extreme northernMexico and southernTexas in June 1954, causing at least 55 deaths. Alice is most remembered as causing the worstflooding ever seen along theRio Grande ,citeweb
url = http://www.city-data.com/states/Texas-Climate.html
title = Texas - Climate
accessdate = 2007-02-07
year = 2006
publisher = city-data.com] destroying bridges anddike s and flooding many cities along the inner reaches of the river. It was one of two storms named Alice that year.Meteorological history
Alice is estimated to have formed as a tropical storm on June 24 in the
Gulf of Mexico , where it quickly strengthened. By the morning of June 25, it had reached hurricane strength and approached the coastline at theRio Grande on theUnited States–Mexico border . Shortly thereafter, it madelandfall just south of the border in theMexican state ofTamaulipas . The storm approximately followed the Rio Grande after moving inland, passing overLaredo, Texas late on June 25 as it weakened. The storm dissipated early on June 26 over southern Texas.citeweb
url = http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/mwreviews/1954.pdf
title = Hurricanes of 1954
accessdate = 2007-02-06
last = Davis
first = Walter R.
year = 1954
month = December
format = PDF
work = Monthly Weather Review
publisher =United States Department of Commerce
pages = 370]Impact
Damages along the
coastline at the point of landfall were relatively light. Only one death was reported inBrownsville, Texas , just north of the site of landfall. A few shrimpfishing boat s were driven ashore by heavy winds.citeweb
url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,860957,00.html
title = Evil Alice
accessdate = 2007-02-06
year = 1954
month = July
work = TIME Magazine
publisher =Time, Inc. ]Most of the damage resulting from Alice was caused by heavy rain in the inland areas of
Texas ,Tamaulipas andCoahuila ; damage was exacerbated in these areas by previousdrought conditions that rendered the soil especially vulnerable to erosion. Estimates of peak rainfall within 12 hours vary from 22inch es (56 cm) to 26 inches (132 cm),citeweb
url = http://www.wxresearch.org/family/thurlist.htm
title = Texas Tropical Storms and Hurricanes
accessdate = 2007-02-06
last = Freeman
first = John C.
year = 2007
format = HTML
publisher = Weather Research Center] and a total of 35 inches (89 cm) of rain fell in 24 hours, approaching the world record that had been set by an unnamed hurricane in Texas in 1921.citeweb
url = http://agfacts.tamu.edu/D11/Drought/Weather%20Outlook.pdf
title = Weather Outlook for Texas, 2006
accessdate = 2007-02-06
last = Metz
first = John
year = 2006
format = PDF
publisher =National Weather Service (NWS)
page = 55] Heavy rain fell across all of southern Texas and northern Mexico as a result of Alice, causingflash flood s in inland areas. InOzona, Texas , 15 people were killed in the early morning of June 25 by a "wall of water" as high as 30 feet (9.2 m) that poured out of a drygully and overwhelmed most of the town. Other towns, includingLamesa, Texas andLaredo, Texas , were also badly damaged by flash floods.Later in the day, the
Rio Grande rose well above flood level at the cities ofEagle Pass, Texas andPiedras Negras, Coahuila . While the city of Eagle Pass was evacuated, Piedras Negras was not. Both cities were completely flooded, and the dike intended to protect Piedras Negras from floods was washed away. At least 38 people (some sources say 39) were killed in Piedras Negras after the dike collapsed. The river crested atLaredo, Texas , where waters reached a peak of 62.2 feet (19 m), at least 10 feet (3 m) above the previous record flood. International Bridge, connecting Laredo andNuevo Laredo , was swept away. Another bridge over thePecos River was swept away by water rising as high as 86 feet (26 m). Over 10,000 people were evacuated from nearbyCiudad Acuña following the flood.citeweb
url = http://www.drchamber.com/live/history/acunaflood.html
title = The Great Acuña Flood of 1954
accessdate = 2007-02-07
year = 2006
publisher = Del RioChamber of Commerce ]Estimates for total death toll range from 55 to 153. Death toll estimates for Texas range from 16 to 38, while estimates of deaths in Mexico, where records are less complete, vary more widely. Monetary damage figures are not available, but it is known that flooding from Alice caused considerable damage to crops, primarily
cotton .The disastrous flooding caused by Hurricane Alice along the
Rio Grande accelerated the joint US-MexicoAmistad dam project , a series offlood control dam s designed to prevent similar catstrophes in the future. The project, in the planning stages for decades before the storm, was finally begun in 1960.The name Alice was not retired as a result of this storm; though the storm caused many deaths, damages were light. It was used again later in the 1954 season and again in the 1973 season. It has not been used since and is not on a current naming list.
ee also
*
List of notable tropical cyclones
*List of Atlantic hurricanes References
External links
* [http://www.drchamber.com/live/history/acunaflood.html Images of flooding in Mexico]
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