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National Weather Service
WEATHER FORECAST OFFICE (WFO)
Miami, Florida
Memorial Web Page
for the
1928

Okeechobee Hurricane
In September, 1928, only about 50,000 persons lived
in South Florida. The land and real estate boom was already beginning
to fade, although many subdivisions and new communities were still
being built. The devastating Great Miami Hurricane of September, 1926,
had already sounded a loud alarm to the new residents about the
vulnerability of their new homes to tropical cyclones. However, most of
the damage from that storm was in Dade and Broward counties. Even so, a
bellwether of what was to come occurred with the Great Miami Hurricane
of 1926 as flood waters from Lake Okeechobee were swept by that storm
into Moore Haven, the county seat of Glades County, killing over 100
people.
The City of Palm Beach, founded only 34 years
earlier by Henry Flagler, was incorporated in 1911 and had become a
playground for the rich and famous, while West Palm Beach grew up on
the opposite side of Lake Worth as a place where the support staff
lived. The Atlantic breezes were balmy and the climate was warm. On the
opposite side of the county, a quite different situation was emerging.
The rich, black muck soil near Lake Okeechobee was already being
utilized for its tremendous agricultural productivity. The newly
incorporated town of Belle Glade was growing steadily, fueled by the
rapidly expanding agriculture in fields nearby. A rural, agrarian
society, dependent on migrant labor, was plowing and harvesting along
the shores of the lake behind a hastily built muck levee.
Only two years after the Great Miami Hurricane, what
would become the second category 4 (Saffir-Simpson scale)
hurricane to strike South Florida in as many years formed off the coast
of Africa in early September. It churned across the Atlantic, and
devastated the island of Guadeloupe on September 12, moved through the
Virgin Islands, and struck a direct hit on Puerto Rico on the 13th,
El Día de San Felipe. More than 300 persons were killed by this
storm in Puerto Rico, and it is known as the San Felipe II Hurricane
because of the day on which it struck. To some extent, the devastation
in Puerto Rico provided some warning to residents of Florida’s
east coast. It moved through the Bahama Islands on September 14-15, and
on Sunday evening around 615 PM, September 16, the hurricane made
landfall in the United States in Palm Beach County between Jupiter and
Boca Raton.

Approximate location of the landfall
Of the Great Okeechobee/San Felipe
Hurricane of September, 1928.
Damage in coastal Palm Beach County was severe
especially in the Jupiter area where the eye wall of the hurricane
persisted longer than at any other location because of where the storm
crossed the coast. A storm surge around 10 feet with waves likely as
high as 20 feet crashed into the barrier islands including Palm Beach.
Pictures (source is Palm Beach Hurricane 92 Views, American
Autochrome Company, Chicago, IL, 1928) of the damages along the Palm
Beach County coast from Boca Raton to Jupiter are below (click the
thumbnails for a larger view):
Boca Raton

Delray Beach

Lake Worth

Palm Beach

West Palm Beach

Pompano Beach

However, the greatest loss of life was around Lake
Okeechobee. As the category 4 hurricane moved inland, the strong winds
piled the water up at the south end of the lake, ultimately topping the
levee and rushing out onto the fertile land. Thousands of people,
mostly non-white migrant farm workers, drowned as water several feet
deep spread over an area approximately 6 miles deep and 75 miles long
around the south end of the lake.

Approximate location of the eye of the 1928 hurricane
As it swept water out of Lake Okeechobee and over
the towns of Belle Glade, Chosen, Pahokee, South Bay,
and Bean City. More than 2,500 people drowned.

Click the movie logo above to run or ftp a QuickTime
movie loop (mov file) of computer simulated Lake Okeechobee water swept
by the 1928 Okeechobee Hurricane coming out and over the 4-5 foot levee
(at the time). Today’s Hoover Dike is
nearly 30 feet high but needs some repair. Loop is courtesy of Brian
Jarvinen and the Technical Support Branch SLOSH model unit of the Tropical Prediction Center. Please
take note: playing this move loop requires Quick Time Player from Apple
Computer Corp or another suitable player. The movie file is VERY
large... 33.4 Megabytes in size, and depending on your connection speed
and time of day, could require quite a length of time to download.
Lake Okeechobee Region

A book called Okeechobee Hurricane by
Lawrence E.
Will (who experienced the storm first hand) contains some of the best
narrative
of what living through the hurricane was like near Lake Okeechobee. The
following description is from his book:
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The period of the lull here had apparently been between
8:30 and 9:30 that night. The exact
time of the breaking of the dike is difficult to determine. There were
several
breaks and they may have occurred at slightly different times. Although
it took
an appreciable time for the flood to arrive in Belle Glade, those in
the hotel
said that when it did arrive, it rose on the steps at the rate of an
inch a
minute. The highest crest, which was during the maximum velocity of the
wind
during the second phase of the storm, was, according to my
recollection, at
10:20 PM. This crest was a rolling swell of short duration, after which
the
water fell about a foot and remained nearly constant for twenty
minutes. This mark in Belle Glade was about seven feet above the
ground, nearer the lake it was a great deal higher, for example, in
Stein’s house at Chosen, 11 feet 3 inches, and on Torry (Island)
11 feet, 8 inches, and similar heights in South Bay. As the flood
advanced, it necessarily fanned out, becoming shallower. At the
(University of Florida)
Experiment Station its maximum depth was three feet, and that,
strangely
enough, according to foreman Tedder, was after daylight.
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Map of Lake Okeechobee (from Gross, 1995)
Showing approximate areas of the flood.
Of course, the effect of the flood was devastating,
and the loss of life, both human and animal, was apocalyptic. Damages
from this hurricane were estimated around 25 million dollars which,
normalized for population, wealth, and inflation, would be around 16
billion dollars today (Landsea, 2002). The horrible flood in the towns
of Pahokee, Canal Point, Chosen, Belle Glade, and South Bay resulted in
the drownings of many people, probably three quarters or more of whom
were non-white field workers. The flood waters lasted for several
weeks, and survivors were found wandering as late as September 22.
Memorial services, one white, one non-white, were
held at the same time but at different locations on Sunday, September
30, 1928, in West Palm Beach. The Miami Herald article (1928)
on the memorial services reported nearly 1,000 victims of the hurricane
disaster, 674 of whom were non-white. Additional Miami Daily News
articles stated a death toll of 2,200 (September 24, 1928) and 2,300
(September 25, 1928), along with the observation that only the death
toll in the Galveston hurricane of 1900 was higher. In Will’s
book, which seems to have the best detail on the 1928 hurricane of any
source available, the estimated death toll was at first set at 2,300
but later lowered to 1,770. Will quotes the final Red Cross report in
1929 as stating that 1,810 people were killed and 1,849 were injured in
the 1928 hurricane. But Will also quoted a news release from the
Florida State Board of Health on December 7, 1928, which estimated the
deaths in Palm Beach County alone at 1,833. From Will’s book:
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The exact number of those who perished in the Okeechobee
storm can never be ascertained. Probably three-fourths or more of the
casualties were Negroes (sic), many of whom had come from the Bahama
Islands. Accounting for members of this race was complicated by the
migratory habits of their kind and the fact that most of them were
known, even to their friends, only by a nickname. Another reason the
number cannot be
ascertained was that many were carried by the flood far into the
sawgrass
wastes.
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The NWS had long listed the Okeechobee Hurricane of
1928 death toll as 1,836, making it the second worst hurricane death
toll since the Galveston Hurricane of 1900. No doubt use of this figure
by the NWS dates to
Mitchell (1928), who quoted a Red Cross official casualty estimate
dated October 28, 1928. Dunn and Miller (1960) also quote the Red Cross
figure. Pfost (2003) called for a revision of the death toll to
2,500 with an asterisk, denoting that the exact number of people killed
will never be known. Blake et al. in the latest (2005) update to the
National Hurricane Center publication "The Deadliest, Costliest, and
Most Intense United States Tropical Cyclones" lists the death toll from
the Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928 as "at least 2,500", establishing the
Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928 the second worst natural disaster as far
as number of people killed in U.S.
history.
The hurricane continued northwest across the lake
and then turned north through Highlands and Polk counties, passing near
Gainesville and west of Jacksonville before paralleling the Atlantic
coasts of Georgia and the Carolinas. It finally moved inland over
Virginia and became extratropical over Pennsylvania and the Great Lakes.
There is still tangible evidence of this
historical tragedy. In West Palm Beach’s Woodlawn Cemetery, a stone marker stands
today in memory of 69 victims of the storm. Also in West Palm Beach, at
the corner of Tamarind
Avenue and 25th Street, a new State of Florida historical
marker stands in sentinel over the place where 674 victims of the
storm were buried after being transported from the Belle Glade area. At
the Port Mayaca cemetery in Martin County, another stone marker was
placed over a mass grave of about 1,600 victims. Near the Belle Glade
Public Library in downtown Belle Glade, a beautiful memorial stands
as a remembrance of the deadly storm and its devastation.
While today’s Hoover Dike with a grade
elevation approaching 30 feet is reassuring, it has not yet been tested
with a direct hit by a category 4 or 5 hurricane, and it needs
continuing maintenance. The only sure thing
is that South Florida will have future encounters with hurricanes,
perhaps even a category 4 or 5, in years to come. It is important that
South Florida residents know our hurricane history in order to better
prepare for tomorrow’s hurricane threats.
REFERENCES
Blake, Eric S., E. N. Rappaport, J. D. Jarrell, and
C.W. Landsea, 2005: The Deadliest, Costliest, and Most Intense United
States Tropical Cyclones from 1851 to 2004 (And Other Frequently
Requested Hurricane Facts). NOAA Technical
Memorandum NWS TPC-4, Tropical Prediction Center, Miami, FL.
Dunn, Gordon E., and B. I. Miller, 1960: Atlantic
Hurricanes, Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, LA., 326
pages.
Landsea, Christopher W., 2002: personal communication.
Gross, Eric L., 1995: Somebody Got Drowned, Lord:
Florida and the Great
Okeechobee Hurricane Disaster of 1928, Vols I and II, Dissertation
submitted to the
Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a
doctoral degree, College
of Arts and Sciences, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL.
Miami Daily News, Monday, September 24, 1928,
Miami Public Library.
Miami Daily News, Tuesday, September 25, 1928,
Miami Public Library.
Miami Herald, Monday, October 1, 1928,
University of Miami, Fla. Otto G. Richter Library.
Mitchell, Charles L., 1928: The West Indian Hurricane
of September 10-20, 1928. Mon. Wea. Rev., 56, pages
347-350.
Mykle, Robert, 2002: Killer ‘Cane.
Cooper Square Press, New York, NY.
Palm Beach Hurricane 92 Views, American
Autochrome Company, Chicago, IL, 1928
Pfost,
Russell, 2003: Reassessing the Impact of Two
Historical Florida Hurricanes. Bulletin of
the American Meteorological Society, 84, Issue 10 (October 2003) pp.
1367–1372
Pielke, Roger A., and C. W. Landsea, 1998: Normalized
Hurricane Damages in the United States: 1925-95. Wea. Forecasting,
13, 621-631.
Will, Lawrence E., 1990: Okeechobee Hurricane and
the Hoover Dike. Glades Historical Society, Belle Glade, FL, third
edition, second printing.
Recommended New
Information Source
Kleinberg, Eliot, 2004: Black Cloud
: The Great Hurricane of 1928. Carroll and Graf, New York, NY.
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