Loading descriptions...
In September of 1938, people in New England found themselves, virtually without warning, in the midst of the most devastating storm ever recorded in North America.
In September of 1938, a great storm rose up on the African coast
and began to cross the Atlantic. The National Weather Bureau
predicted it would blow itself out at Cape Hatteras, just as such
storms usually did. But there was nothing typical about this storm.
Without sophisticated forecasting tools, the East Coast was taken
by surprise as the storm suddenly headed north. Within 24 hours of
the Weather Bureau's benign forecast, the so-called "Florida
cyclone" ripped into the New England coast with a fury that set off
seismographs in Alaska. Expecting only heavy rains, people found
themselves, virtually without warning, in the midst of the most
devastating storm ever recorded in North America. Traveling at 60
m.p.h., with peak gust winds surging up to three times that speed,
the storm killed some 600 people, destroyed 8,000 homes and wrecked
6,000 boats. This program follows the lives of fishermen,
Shinnecock Indians and vacationers who were caught up in this
incredible natural disaster.