On this day, August 16, 1969, Hurricane Camille headed for the US after striking Cuba. [View all]
I was living and working in Charlottesville when this happened.
Hurricane Camille
Hurricane Camille was the second-most intense tropical cyclone to strike the United States on record. The most intense storm of the 1969 Atlantic hurricane season, Camille formed as a tropical depression on August 14 south of Cuba from a long-tracked tropical wave. Located in a favorable environment for strengthening, the storm quickly intensified into a Category 2 hurricane before striking the western part of the nation on August 15.
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Map plotting the track and intensity of the storm, according to the SaffirSimpson scale
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Camille Storm Total Rainfall
Camille caused moderate rainfall in Tennessee and Kentucky of between 3 and 5 inches (130 mm), helping to relieve a drought in the area, yet in West Virginia, there was flash flooding which destroyed 36 houses and 12 trailers, a total of three quarters of a million dollars in damage.
Virginia
Because the hurricane was expected to quickly dissipate over land, few were prepared for the flash flooding. Arriving in Virginia on the evening of August 19, Camille was no longer a hurricane, but it carried high amounts of moisture and contained sufficient strength and low pressure to pull in additional moisture.
A widespread area of western and central Virginia received over 8 inches (200 mm) of rain from Camille's remains, leading to significant flooding across the state. A total of 153 people lost their lives from blunt trauma sustained during mountain slides, related to the flash flooding, not drowning. More than 123 of these deaths, including 21 members of one family, the Huffmans, were in Nelson County. Debris avalanches occurred on hillsides with a slope greater than 35 percent. In Nelson County, the number of deaths amounted to over one percent of the county's population. The worst of the damage was reported in Massies Mill, Woods Mill, Roseland, Bryant, Tyro, Montebello, Lovingston, Norwood, Rockfish, and along the Davis and Muddy creeks. The James and Tye rivers crested well above flood stage in many areas, including a record high of 41.3 feet (12.6 m) at Columbia, Virginia. Hurricane Camille caused more than $140 million of damage (1969 dollars) in Virginia. Camille was considered one of the worst natural disasters in central Virginia's recorded history.
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Bright Enlightenment
Published on Mar 28, 2013
HURRICANE CAMILLE - A Lady Called Camille HURRICANE CAMILLE - "A Lady Called Camille" | FULL Documentary
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- The video documents the devastation caused by Hurricane Camille and the suffering caused thousands of people. It shows that while hundreds of lives were lost to the hurricane, thousands were saved due to emergency plans, trained rescue teams, and help from the forces of government.
Wed Aug 14, 2024:
On this day, August 14, 1969, Hurricane Camille formed.
Wed Aug 16, 2023:
On this day, August 16, 1969, Hurricane Camille headed for the US after striking Cuba.
Sun Aug 16, 2020:
On this day, August 16, 1969, Hurricane Camille headed for the US after striking Cuba.
Thu Aug 15, 2019:
Another 50th anniversary: Hurricane Camille devastates southeastern US, August 1969
From
RandySF:
Sat Jul 27, 2019:
Hurricane Camille Remembered on Storm's 50th Anniversary
Wed Aug 15, 2018:
On this day in 1969, Hurricane Camille made landfall in Cuba. Within days, it reached the U.S.