Hurricane Fran
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- This article is about the Atlantic hurricane of 1996; for other storms of the same name, see Tropical Storm Fran (disambiguation).
Template:Infobox hurricane | areas affected=South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania | hurricane season=1996 Atlantic hurricane season }} Hurricane Fran was a powerful Cape Verde-type hurricane of the 1996 Atlantic hurricane season that made landfall near Cape Fear in North Carolina at Category 3 strength. The storm caused more than $3 billion in damage (1996 USD) along the Eastern seaboard of the United States, and is to blame for 26 fatalities.
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Storm history
Template:Storm path The tropical wave that would eventually become Hurricane Fran emerged from the west coast of Africa on August 22. It quickly gained deep convection and a recognizable circulation, and organized into a tropical depression on August 23 southeast of the Cape Verde Islands. The storm continued to track westward across the Atlantic without significant strengthening. The slowness of the system's development is attributed to nearby Hurricane Edouard, which was disrupting Fran's inflow currents. Nonetheless the system became a tropical storm on August 27 while well east of the Lesser Antilles, receiving the name Fran. Fran continued strengthening as it followed the path of Edouard, and reached hurricane strength on August 29 before weakening back to a tropical storm on the 30th.<ref name="tcr">NHC Fran Report</ref>
By August 31, Edouard had moved northward, allowing Fran to develop. In the wake of Edouard, a strengthening in the subtropical ridge, a high-pressure system that helps to steer tropical cyclones, kept Fran on a westerly track. Fran moved quickly to the west-northwest, and passed north of the Bahamas as it reached Category 3 strength on September 4. With winds reaching 115 mph (185 km/h), Hurricane Fran became the third major hurricane of the 1996 Atlantic hurricane season, following Bertha and Edouard. <ref name="tcr"/>
Large-scale air flow around a large low-pressure centered over the southeastern United States accelerated Fran to the north, causing it to parallel the Florida coastline while staying well offshore. The storm reached peak strength late on September 4 EDT with 120 mph (195 km/h) winds and a minimum central pressure of 945 mbar (hPa) while east of Florida.<ref name="tcr"/> By this time Fran was recognizable in satellite pictures as unusually large for an Atlantic hurricane, although its exact size is unknown because Hurricane Hunters did not directly measure storm sizes at the time.<ref>NOAA: Basics: Structure</ref>
Fran struck the North Carolina coast very close to Cape Fear around 8:30 p.m. EDT, September 5 1996, with sustained winds of 115 mph (185 km/h). Hurricane-force winds are estimated to have extended northward along the coast as far as Carteret County, despite the storm's oblique angle of landfall. Pressure at landfall is estimated to have been 954 mbar (hPa). The highest wind gust was unofficially measured at 137 mph (220 km/h) about 30 feet off the ground on Hewletts Creek between Wilmington and Wrightsville Beach.<ref name="tcr"/>
After landfall, Fran quickly weakened, dropping to tropical storm strength while over central North Carolina and into a tropical depression while over Virginia. The storm became extratropical late on September 8 EDT while over southern Ontario, amd continued to disintegrate before being absorbed by a frontal system on the 10th.<ref name="tcr"/>
Impact
Twenty-six people were killed by Fran and estimated property damage was $3.2 billion ($4.6 billion in 2005 USD).
South Carolina
There was $15 million (1996 USD) in damage and significant crop damage. Not much else is known about the situation at that location.[1]
North Carolina
Image:Flood sceen.gif Fran caused coastal damage from the South Carolina border to Surf City, North Carolina. Its 12-foot storm surge carried away a temporary North Topsail Beach police station and town hall, housed in a double-wide trailer since Hurricane Bertha's rampage across the same area in July. Extensive flooding struck the coast around Wrightsville Beach, just up the coast from Cape Fear. In Jacksonville, North Carolina, three schools and several homes were damaged. [2] The storm was most damaging to the barrier islands on the North Carolina coastline.[3] Image:Beback.jpg Inland, the storm caused damage on its way north to Wilmington and Raleigh. Rain of up to 15 inches (380 mm) deluged interior North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia, bringing dangerous river flooding to much of the mid-Atlantic. Hurricane Fran's thrashing of North Carolina aggravated the state's problems caused by numerous weather disasters in 1996.
At least six people were killed in the Carolinas; most of them were from auto accidents.[4] In North Carolina, 1.3 million people were left without power.[5] In North Topsail Beach and Carteret county, there was over $500 million dollars (1996 USD) in damage and 90% of structures were damaged.[6] One male teenager died from drowning caused by flooding of a creek near North Hills Shopping Center. Image:Fran1996rain.gif
Virginia
In Virginia, winds between 39 and 73 mph (63 and 117 km/h) lashed Chesapeake Bay and increased water levels in the Potomac River around the nation's Capitol where it backed up into Georgetown and Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. There was severe damage to powerlines that left 415,000 people with out electriticy, making it the largest storm related power outage in history until Hurricane Isabel in 2003.[7] Along the Tappahanock River, a storm surge of 5feet damaged or sank several small boats and damaged warfs and bulkheads. This is the higest tide since Hurricane Hazel of 1954.[8]
Rain up to 16 inches fell in the western part of Virginia, causing major flash flooding. The floods shutdown many of the primary and secondary roads and closed the Shenandoah National Park. About 300 homes were destroyed by Fran, mostly from flooding and 100 people had to be rescued. Damage was totaled to $1 billion dollars (1996 USD).[9]
Maryland
Western Maryland was hard hit by Fran, mostly from flashflooding. About a dozen homes were destroyed and there was $1.4 million dollars in damage. This was the worst flooding event to hit Maryland since Hurricane Hazel and the January flood of 1996.[10]
Washington D.C.
Like Maryland, Washington D.C. suffered flood damage. The floods closed roads which stranded motorists and damaged the National Park Area. Fran left $20 million dollars in damage in Washington D.C..[11]
West Virginia
About 14 inches of rain fell , causing widespread flashflooding. Pendleton and Hardy County were the hardest hit as the floods swept away several briges, damaged several water plants and caused a reported gas leak.[12]
Pennsylvania and Ohio
About 15 counties in Pennsylvania were hit by flashflooding as rainfall up to 9 inches caused the Juniata River to over run its banks.[13] In Ohio, there was localized and street flooding.[14]
Retirement
Template:Seealso Because of the damage in North Carolina and elsewhere in the United States, the name Fran was retired in the spring of 1997 and will never be used for another Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced with Fay in the 2002 season.
See also
References
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