Retired names of the worst hurricanes

When a really great athlete decides to leave sports, his jerseyor number is often retired. The largest and most destructive stormin the tropics - the hurricane - makes a similar farewell. Hurricanenames can and do get retired, not to be reused for at least tenyears, perhaps longer.

Hurricanes that cause severe damage or kill and injure many peopleare remembered for generations and some go into hurricane history,says the National Hurricane Center in Miami. The country mostaffected can request that the storm's name be removed from useto avoid confusion caused by a future storm having the same name.

When a storm name is retired from the Atlantic's list of names,member countries of the World Meteorological Organization fromthat region select a new name. For Atlantic storms the name canbe either French, Spanish or English, reflecting the languagesof potential victims.

A good example is Hurricane Hugo in 1989. Hugo roared across thenortheast Caribbean devastating many of the small islands eastof Puerto Rico. It then skimmed Puerto Rico before slamming intoSouth Carolina. Hurricane Hugo caused more than $8 billion damageand killed 82 people. Most of the deaths occured on the tiny Caribbeanislands. When the request was made to retire the name "Hugo"from the list of names, the "H" storm was replaced bythe name "Humberto", a Spanish name. Humberto was usedfor the first time in 1995 - it became a hurricane in Septemberwith 105 mph winds. The storm stayed over the Atlantic, neverthreatening land.

The hurricane center says the "retirement rule" oncehad exceptions. Before 1979, when rotation of the permanent six-yearstorm list began, some storm names were simply not used anymore.In 1966, "Frieda" was replaced by "Fern" forno apparent reason.

Below is a list of deadly, costly and destructive storms whosenames have been retired, guaranteeing them a place in hurricanehistory. This is not a complete list of deadly or destructivehurricanes since many such storms hit before 1950 when namingbegan.

Name       Year           Location(s) affected
Agnes      1972          Florida, Northeast U.S
.Alicia     1983          North Texas
Allen       1980          Antilles, Mexico, South Texas
Andrew   1992          Bahamas, South Florida, Louisiana
Anita       1977             Mexico
Audrey    1957          Louisiana, North Texas
Betsy       1965          Bahamas, Southeast Florida, Southeast Louisiana
Beulah     1967          Antilles, Mexico, South Texas
Bob          1991          North Carolina, Northeast U.S.
Camille    1969          Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama
Carla        1961          Texas
Carmen    1974          Mexico, central Louisiana
Carol*      1954          Northeast U.S.
Celia         1970          South Texas
Cleo          1964          Lesser Antilles, Haiti, Cuba, Southeast Florida
Connie      1955          North Carolina
David        1979          Lesser Antilles, Hispaniola, Florida, Eastern U.S.
Diana        1990          Mexico
Diane        1955          Mid-Atlantic U.S., Northeast U.S.
Donna       1960          Bahamas, Florida, Eastern U.S.
Dora         1964          Northeast Florida
Elena        1985          Mississippi, Alabama, Western Florida
Eloise       1975          Antilles, Northwest Florida, Alabama
Flora        1963          Haiti, Cuba
Frederic    1979          Alabama, Mississippi
Gilbert      1988          Lesser Antilles, Jamaica, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
Gloria      1985          North Carolina, Northeast U.S.
Hattie      1961          Belize,Guatemala
Hazel       1954          Antilles, North and South Carolina
Hilda       1964          Louisiana
Hugo       1989          Antilles, South Carolina
Ione        1955          North Carolina
Inez        1966          Lesser Antilles, Hispaniola, Cuba, Florida Keys, Mexico                       
Janet       1955          Lesser Antilles, Belize, Mexico
Joan        1988          Curacao, Venezuela, Colombia, Nicaragua  [Crossed into the Pacific  Ocean, becoming  Miriam]                    
 Klaus    1990          Martinique

The name "Carol" was used again to denote a hurricanein the mid-Atlantic Ocean in 1965. However, because the name doesnot appear after that time, it is assumed that the name was retiredretrospectively for the damages caused by the 1954 storm of thesame name.


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