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Tropical Storm Alice (1953)

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Tropical Storm Alice
Tropical Storm (SSHWS/NWS)
File:June 6, 1953 Tropical Storm Alice weather map.jpg
Surface weather analysis of Alice on June 6
Formed May 25, 1953
Dissipated June 6, 1953
Highest winds 1-minute sustained: 70 mph (110 km/h)
Lowest pressure 997 mbar (hPa); 29.44 inHg
Fatalities Several unconfirmed
Damage Minimal
Areas affected Central America, Cuba, Florida
Part of the 1953 Atlantic hurricane season

Tropical Storm Alice was the first tropical cyclone in the Atlantic Ocean to receive a female name. It was a rare off-season tropical cyclone that hit Central America, Cuba, and Florida in late May to early June 1953. Alice formed on May 25 in the western Caribbean, and executed a large loop over Central America. It passed over western Cuba, causing heavy rainfall and possibly several casualties from drowning. It then executed another loop in the Gulf of Mexico, reached a peak intensity of 70 mph (110 km/h), and weakened before hitting the Florida panhandle on June 6. Although heavy rainfall occurred in Florida, there was little damage.

Meteorological history

File:Alice 1953 track.png
Map plotting the track and intensity of the storm according to the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale

In May and June 1953, an unusually long-lasting upper-level low persisted across Mexico and Central America. On May 25, a weak warm-core surface circulation developed east of Nicaragua. It moved around the upper-level low, bringing it to the northwest and later looping to the south through Honduras and Central America. The system weakened over land, but it re-intensified over the western Caribbean Sea, moving over western Cuba as a 50 mph (80 km/h) tropical storm on May 31.[1] Advisories for Alice did not begin until June 1, when the storm entered the Gulf of Mexico.[2]

Around the time the cyclone's naming, reconnaissance aircraft reported winds of around 65 mph (105 km/h), and subsequently Alice executed another loop off the northwest coast of Cuba.[1] Alice weakened quickly to minimal tropical storm status, due to interaction with a cold front off Florida.[3] It deteriorated so much that advisories were discontinued, with Miami Weather Bureau meteorologist James George remarking that "no danger [existed there] whatsoever."[4] After again passing near the Cuban coast, Alice turned to the northwest and began re-strengthening. On June 5, reconnaissance aircraft estimated 70 to 75 mph (110 to 120 km/h) winds in brief squalls northeast of the center, along with a pressure of 997 hectopascals (29.4 inHg); this would be its peak intensity. The storm again weakened as it approached the Florida peninsula, and Alice made landfall just west of Panama City Beach on June 6 as a minimal tropical storm. It dissipated shortly thereafter.[1]

Impact and records

File:Alice 1953 rainfall.png
Storm total rainfall for Alice

While the storm was in the vicinity of western Cuba, it produced heavy rainfall, which broke a nine-month drought. The rainfall caused flooding, and there were unconfirmed reports of several deaths due to drowning.[1]

When advisories first began on the storm, the National Hurricane Center issued storm warnings from Key West through Tarpon Springs on the west coast of Florida; at the same time, the agency posted small craft warnings for the east coast up through Palm Beach.[2] Alice brought heavy rainfall to Florida, peaking at 13.48 inches (342 mm) in Lake Placid in the central portion of the state.[5] The rains ended a dry spell in the state.[1] Along the Florida panhandle, workers tied down planes in local Air Force and Naval bases. No evacuations were ordered, and the primary impact was in the form of light rain.[6] There were no reports of damage in the state.[1]

From 1950 to 1952, Atlantic hurricanes were named using the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet. Before the 1953 season, officials changed the system to using female names; hence, Alice was the first in the new format.[7] Male names would not be used until 1979.[8] The name "Alice" was later reused twice in 1954 for a hurricane in June and December, as well as for a hurricane in 1973.[8]

See also

References

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External links