News
Hurricane Hazel's storm surge impacting Morehead City on October 15th, 1954 (Russell James). Hurricane Hazel was one of the most powerful and destructive storms to strike Eastern North Carolina ...
Hosted on MSN8mon
LOOKING BACK: Hurricane Hazel's impact 70 years later - MSN70 years ago on October 16, 1954, Rochester, and Western New York as a whole faced the remnants of Hurricane Hazel. Which blew through with hurricane-force winds being reported in parts of the ...
Hurricane Hazel, which hit North Carolina in 1954, was the only Category 4 storm to ever make landfall in the state. Hurricane Florence might join that short list by the end of the week.
Hurricane Hazel was the most powerful hurricane to ever hit North Carolina. The storm caused major flooding and damage as it made landfall in October 1954. More than 1,000 people were killed in ...
Hurricane Hazel was the deadliest and costliest hurricane of the 1954 season. To this day, it's the strongest and only category 4 hurricane to ever hit the North Carolina coast.
Hurricane Hazel (1954) Category: 4 Landfall: Oct. 15, 1954, North Carolina/South Carolina border near Calabash, North Carolina, halfway between Myrtle Beach and Wilmington.
Hurricane Hazel was the worst hurricane of the 1954 Atlantic hurricane season and one of the worst hurricanes of the 20th century. Hazel killed as many as 1,000 people in Haiti before striking the ...
Hurricane Hazel hit Myrtle Beach on Oct. 15, 1954. Hazel made landfall as a Category 4 Hurricane along the South and North Carolina coasts with 150-mph winds.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results