- 1952 Atlantic hurricane season
Infobox hurricane season
first storm formed=February 2 ,1952
last storm dissipated=October 28 ,1952
strongest storm=Fox - 934mbar (hPa ), 150mph (240km/h )
total storms=7
major storms=3
total daUSD )
$26.7 million (2005 USD)
total fatalities=47
basin=Atlantic hurricane
five seasons=1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954The 1952 Atlantic hurricane season officially began onJune 15 ,1952 , [INS. [http://www.thehurricanearchive.com/Viewer.aspx?
] Retrieved on2008-06-06 .] and lasted untilNovember 15 ,1952 . [Associated Press . [http://www.thehurricanearchive.com/Viewer.aspx?
] Retrieved on2008-06-06 .] These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when mosttropical cyclone s form in theAtlantic basin . However, the "Groundhog Day Tropical Storm " formed onFebruary 2 , well outside these limits. This is the earliest a tropical cyclone has ever formed in the Atlantic basin.The February storm notwithstanding, it was a fairly quiet season. Hurricane Able made landfall as a Category 2 hurricane on the
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale atHilton Head, South Carolina . What became Hurricane Charlie struckSanto Domingo , capitol of theDominican Republic , as a tropical storm. Hurricane Fox struckCuba as a Category 4 storm; the next time a hurricane of this intensity would strike Cuba would be in 2001, whenHurricane Michelle struck the island.torms
Tropical Storm One
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=1952 Groundhog Day tropical storm track.png
Formed=February 2
Dissipated=February 5
1-min winds=50Tropical Storm One formed in the westernCaribbean Sea onFebruary 2 . It moved quickly northeastward, hittingFlorida the next day as a 50 mph tropical storm. The storm moved rapidly up the coast, and became extratropical on the 4th.Hurricane Able
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Able 1952 track.png
Formed=August 18
Dissipated=September 2
1-min winds=90
Pressure=998Hurricane Able developed from a tropical wave onAugust 18 , just off theAfrica n coastline. The Bermuda-Azores High pressure system to the north moved the depression westward, where unfavorable conditions disallowed development until the 24th when it became a tropical storm. The path it took was similar to the1893 Sea Islands Hurricane , but at a weaker pace. As Able passed north of theLesser Antilles , it strengthened into a hurricane, but it remained disorganized, having two separate eyewalls. OnAugust 31 , as it was about to make landfall on southernSouth Carolina , Able reached its peak of 100 mph winds. It weakened after making landfall, turned to the northeast in response to a trough, and dissipated nearMaine onSeptember 9 . The hurricane caused heavy flooding, resulting in $2,750,000 in damage (1952US dollars ) and 3 deaths.Hurricane Baker
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Baker 1952 track.png
Formed=August 31
Dissipated=September 9
1-min winds=105
Pressure=969OnAugust 31 , Tropical Storm Baker formed just east of theLesser Antilles , likely from a tropical wave. It moved northwest, bypassing the islands, and strengthened to a hurricane on the 1st. Baker reached a peak of 120 mph, but as it turned to the northeast, cooler waters and upper level shear weakened it until it became extratropical on the 8th. Baker brushed southeastern Newfoundland, but caused no damage.Hurricane Charlie
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Charlie 1952 track.png
Formed=September 22
Dissipated=October 1
1-min winds=105
Pressure=993An easterly wave became a tropical depression onSeptember 22 in the easternCaribbean Sea . It became a tropical storm the next day before hitting easternDominican Republic , and moved northward out to sea. Charlie attained a peak of 120 mph before becoming extratropical on the 29th over the north Atlantic. Charlie caused $1,000,000 in damage (1952 dollars) inPuerto Rico from heavy rainfall, as well as 4 deaths.Hurricane Dog
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Dog 1952 track.png
Formed=September 25
Dissipated=September 29
1-min winds=75
Pressure=998A tropical wave developed into a tropical storm onSeptember 25 , east of theLesser Antilles . Dog moved northwestward, reaching a peak of 85 mph before dissipating on the 29th.Reconnaissance Aircraft indicated that Dog may not have had a circulation, and thus, was possibly not a tropical cyclone.Hurricane Easy
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Easy 1952 track.png
Formed=October 6
Dissipated=October 11
1-min winds=95
Pressure=968A small tropical depression formed onOctober 6 , east of the Lesser Antilles. After moving northward, it looped back to the southwest, reaching a peak of 110 mph before dissipating on the 11th.Hurricane Fox
Infobox Hurricane Small
Basin=Atl
Track=Fox 1952 track.png
Formed=October 20
Dissipated=October 28
1-min winds=130
Pressure=934The last and most severe hurricane of the season developed from anIntertropical Convergence Zone disturbance onOctober 20 over the centralCaribbean Sea . A small storm, it steadily intensified as it moved northward across the Caribbean, reaching hurricane strength on the 22nd. As Fox approached theCuba n coastline on the 24th, it rapidly strengthened to its peak of 150 mph winds and hit south-central Cuba at that intensity. It rapidly weakened to a 100 mph hurricane while over land, and drifted over theBahamas over the next 2 days. It was slowly absorbed by an approaching frontal boundary, and dissipated on the 28th. While Fox crossed over a relatively rural area of Cuba, it caused major damaged to the sugar crop, with 36 of Cuba's 261 sugar mills being damaged by the hurricane. 600 buildings were destroyed in the island town of Aguada de Pasajeros. [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/mwreviews/1952.pdf] The hurricane caused moderate damage amounting to $10 million (1952 USD, $71 million 2005 USD) and 40 deaths. [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/NHR-Cuba.pdf]Storm names
These names were used to name storms during the 1952 season. 1952 was the third and last time storm names were taken from the
Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet . Names that were not assigned are marked in tcname unused.References
See also
*
List of Atlantic hurricanes
*List of Atlantic hurricane seasons External links
* [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/mwreviews/1952.pdf Monthly Weather Review]
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