Hurricane Edna was a deadly and destructive major hurricane that impacted the United States East Coast in September of the 1954 Atlantic hurricane season. It was one of two hurricanes to strike Massachusetts in that year, the other being Hurricane Carol. The fifth tropical cyclone and storm of the season, as well as the fourth hurricane and second major hurricane, Edna developed from a tropical wave on September 2. Moving towards the north-northwest, Edna skirted the northern Leeward Islands as a tropical depression before turning more towards the west. The depression attained tropical storm status to the east of Puerto Rico and strengthened further to reach hurricane status by September 7. The storm rapidly intensified and reached its peak intensity of 120 mph (195 km/h) north of the Bahamas before weakening to Category 1 status before landfall in Massachusetts on September 11. The storm transitioned into an extratropical cyclone in Atlantic Canada before its remnants reemerged in the northern Atlantic.
Edna caused 20 fatalities throughout its lifetime as a tropical cyclone, as well as a moderate amount of damage.
Read more about Hurricane Edna: Meteorological History, Preparations, Impact
Famous quotes containing the word hurricane:
“Staid middle age loves the hurricane passions of opera.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)