Nowhere in our history books can we find a hurricane such as Audrey making landfall with sustained winds of 150 mph along with a forward movement of 30 mph. Audrey spread a massive storm surge across most of Cameron parish, and across the southern halves of Vermilion, Iberia, and St. Mary parishes, causing total devastation in property and many lives lost. Water and more water. Property damage and power outages affected thousands.Hurricane Audrey's destruction has not been forgotten. During the early morning hours of June 27, 1957, an early season hurricane named Audrey roared ashore into Southwest Louisiana and Southeastern Texas. https://www.chron.com/news/houston-weather/hurricanes/article/Hurricane-Audrey-one-deadliest-us-history-storms-11299694.php Photo: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive It … Prior to making landfall, Audrey severely disrupted After moving inland and transitioning into an extratropical cyclone, Audrey caused additional damage across the interior United States. One contributor to Audrey's formation—an area of anomalously low Audrey gradually weakened and turned to the northeast after moving inland, degenerating to a tropical storm on June 28. The Category 4 storm made landfall in late June 1957 and ravaged the Gulf Coast, claiming upwards of 500 lives, according to the "The high number of deaths were attributed to the storm moving ashore earlier and stronger than originally predicted and in a decade where all radio and TV stations signed off the air in the evening, leaving no form of communication to warn the public to evacuate the coast sooner," a report from "Hurricane Audrey will be a storm that residents of Southwest Louisiana will always remember, as many in the area still know of family members that were lost or affected by the storm in some way.
My sister and I were playing in the yard with our ballerina dolls we’d gotten for Christmas the year before. --Sen. Willie L. Mount (LA) In June 1957, Hurricane Audrey formed deep in the Gulf of Mexico in the Bay of Campeche, 460 miles south of Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The Category 4 storm made landfall in …
A mass grave still exists at a plot in Lake Charles, where 31 unidentified bodies remain six decades after the hurricane. It was June of 1957. This book contains over 30 eyewitness accounts of the horrifying events experienced by a legendary people who survived one of the most brutal assaults in our nation's history. Story by Rita Monette It was late afternoon on June 27, 1957. Despite the brief period of submersion, the morphology of the coast changed significantly; about 50% of the coast had retreated inland, with a large amount of sedimentation occurring primarily in the form of The destruction wrought by Audrey on Cameron, Louisiana, was credited as contributing to the successful evacuation of The extensive storm surge caused the hurricane represented the first research opportunity for the newly-formed Due to the damage and fatalities caused by Audrey, the name was In 1962, Whitney Bartie, along with hundreds of others, A major hurricane is a tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds of at least 111 mph (179 km/h), or a Category 3 or higher on the When New Orleanians think of devastating hurricanes, they think of Katrina. Along with Hurricane Alex in 2010, it was also the strongest June hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic basin as measured by pressure. from Stories of Bayou Life.
Mama hollered for us from the back door and told us to get our things inside.
The storm produced 18 tornadoes across The formation and development of Hurricane Audrey was multi-faceted.
This summer marks the 60th anniversary of Hurricane Audrey, among the deadliest natural disasters in U.S. history. Hurricane Audrey, 1957, Cameron, Louisiana. But before 2005, the most notorious storm name in Louisiana was Audrey… Hurricane Audrey was one of the deadliest tropical cyclones in U.S. history, killing at least 416 people in its devastation of the southwestern Louisiana coast in 1957. Photo: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive Photos: 60 years ago, Hurricane Audrey became one of the deadliest storms in US history An approaching Although Audrey's formation was not explicitly forecast, the In total, approximately 75,000 people evacuated from low-lying areas on the United States Gulf Coast in advance of Audrey.The high death toll caused by Audrey was partially blamed on the incompleteness of evacuations before the storm made landfall, attributed by meteorologist The Weather Bureau initially estimated that the death toll from Audrey was over 500, with the cost of damage estimated between $150–200 million.In Galveston, the storm surge swelled to a height of 6.2 ft (1.9 m) above mean sea level; the total expanse of coast that saw tides higher than 6 ft (1.8 m) spanned 330 mi (530 km).Portions of eastern Texas were analyzed to have experienced high-end Category 2 conditions as Audrey made landfall just east of the state.Hurricane Audrey's strong winds generated rough seas offshore Louisiana, with wave heights of 40–50 ft (12–15 m) occurring in the Gulf of Mexico.Saltwater inundation was particularly damaging to rice, while strong winds blew down corn and heavy rains flooded cotton fields; these were the main crop losses attributed to Audrey.
In Louisiana, preliminary estimates of crop damage reached $5 million.The interaction of Audrey and a second frontal system tracking across the A total of ten lives were lost in Illinois, Indiana, and The remnants of Audrey entered Ontario with tropical storm force winds after crossing Audrey's storm surge on the Louisiana coastline began receding 10 hours after the storm struck, with the ocean returning to normal levels in around 1.5 days. In the early morning hours of June 27, Hurricane Audrey came ashore just a little to the west of Cameron driving a 12-foot wall of water ashore devastating Cameron and the small towns along the east-Texas, western Louisiana border area.