As the storm made its way across the Atlantic and up the eastern seaboard, there was little warning. Radar had not been invented. The National Weather Bureau predicted it would blow itself out at North Carolina, but it didn't. No one had ever seen a storm like this.
Rhode Island fishermen, residents and vacationers recount what it was like to live through one of the greatest natural disasters recorded in North America.
The Great Colonial Hurricane sweeps across southern New England on a path west of Providence, Rhode Island, and Plymouth, Massachusetts. Narragansett Bay floods, drowning 17 Native Americans; tree damage is severe throughout southeastern Massachusetts. Governor William Bradford described the storm: "such a mighty storm of wind and rain as none living in these parts, either English or Indian ever saw. ...It blew down sundry houses and uncovered others. ...It blew down many hundred thousands of trees turning up the stronger by the roots and breaking the higher pine trees off in the middle."
After a fire in New Hampshire, the United States Congress offers disaster relief aid for the first time. This legislation will eventually lead to the formation of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The Gale of 1815 sweeps across New England, again flooding Providence, Rhode Island, and causing immense losses along the coast and in the shipping industry.
James P. Espy is named the government's first official meteorologist.
A Mr. Saxby foresees a "severe storm" and soon thereafter, by coincidence, a hurricane lashes eastern Maine and the Bay of Fundy. This is the last major tropical system to cross the New England coast as a destructive hurricane until the 1938 Hurricane. It is named Saxby's Gale.
President Ulysses S. Grant orders the secretary of war to record weather observations from sites across the United States. In 1873 reports are added from posts in the Caribbean that allow for better forecasts of hurricanes.
Congress passes legislation changing the Army Signal Corps weather forecasting operation into a civilian service, the Weather Bureau, within the Department of Agriculture.
Six hurricanes hit the United States in one year, killing a total of 4,000 people.
A hurricane hits Galveston, then the wealthiest city in Texas, leaving between 6,000 and 8,000 residents dead. This remains the worst weather disaster in American history, as measured in lost lives.
An earthquake in San Francisco is followed by four days of a devastating fire. An estimated 3,000 lives are lost and damage is estimated at $500 million in 1906 dollars.
An avalanche at Wellington, northeast of Seattle, Washington, sweeps two trains -- a mail train and a passenger train -- off a mountain pass through the Cascades, killing 96 people.
A tornado touches down in Missouri and sweeps through Illinois and Indiana before dissipating. In three hours, the Tri-State Tornado kills 695 people.
The "Big Blow" crashes into the nation's hottest vacation spot, Miami Beach, Florida, surprising residents who have ignored forecasts. In the aftermath, the lobbies of prestigious Collins Avenue hotels are covered in sand, 253 people are dead, and at least 25,000 people are left homeless.
After devastating Puerto Rico, a ferocious storm whips ashore at Palm Beach, Florida. Rain from the hurricane fills Lake Okeechobee, Florida, causing major flooding. In the storm's aftermath, 1,836 people are dead.
The most intense Category 5 Atlantic hurricane ever to touch down in the United States roars into the Florida Keys. The "Great Labor Day Hurricane" kills 408 people.
A devastating hurricane drives through the northeastern United States. Residents are unprepared for the storm and the flooding it brings. Over 600 people are killed, most by drowning. Another hundred are never found. Property damage is estimated at $300 million -- over 8,000 homes are destroyed, 6,000 boats wrecked or damaged. Yet the hurricane does not receive much media attention; Neville Chamberlain's appeasement of Adolf Hitler in Europe dominates headlines before and after the storm.
The Weather Bureau is relocated from the Department of Agriculture to the Department of Commerce.
An earthquake in Alaska triggers a wave of energy that eventually forms into a tsunami that hits Hawaii. One hundred and fifty-nine people are killed, many of them children curious about the receding waterline that signals the oncoming wave.
Hurricanes begin to be named alphabetically with the radio alphabet: Able, Baker, Charlie, Dog, etc.
The National Hurricane Center establishes a system for naming storms, using alphabetical lists of women's names. Rather than repeat names every year, enough names are used so that a single list of names is recycled every six years, although storms that cause significant damage or loss of life have their names "retired."
Hurricane Diane assaults the east coast, killing 187 people.
The "Ash Wednesday Storm" slams against the East Coast from North Carolina to New England, leaving hurricane-like devastation.
Hurricane Camille, one of only two Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes to make landfall in the U.S., blasts Mississippi and Alabama, causing $1.4 billion in damage.
The Weather Bureau is renamed the National Weather Service, and becomes part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration within the Commerce Department.
Hurricane Agnes, a relatively weak but large weather pattern, hits Florida and moves northward up the East Coast, causing floods in Pennsylvania and New York, killing 115 people and causing $2.1 billion in property damage.
The system for naming hurricanes evolves to include men's names, as well as names of English, Spanish and French origin. Since 1981, the naming system has been administered by the World Meteorological Organization, an international committee.
Hurricane Frederic assaults Mississippi and Alabama, causing $2.3 billion in damage.
Hurricane Alicia makes landfall at Galveston Island, Texas, unleashing 23 small tornadoes. The storm kills 21 people, leaves Houston littered with tree limbs and broken glass, and causes $2 billion in damage.
Hurricane Juan devastates south central Louisiana and coastal Texas. Though only rated a Category 1 storm, Juan racks up $1.5 billion in damage, and kills 63 people.
Hurricane Gilbert generates the lowest sea level pressure (888 millibars) to be recorded in the Western Hemisphere -- but by the time it reaches land at Cozumel, Mexico, its intensity has subsided. Moving northward, Gilbert takes the form of a major rainstorm over Texas and Oklahoma, spawning 29 tornadoes and killing three people.
Hurricane Hugo slams the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Florida and South Carolina, causing $7 billion in damage. At the time, it is the costliest hurricane ever to hit the nation, though loss of life is limited.
Hurricane Bob affects North Carolina, New York, and New England, destroying 32 of 35 shorefront homes in Angelica Point, Massachusetts, blowing 125 mph wind gusts through the Cape Cod towns of Brewster and North Truro, and leaving $1.5 billion in damage in its wake.
Hurricane Andrew sweeps through Florida and Louisiana, causing $26,500,000,000 worth of damage (in 1992 dollars), more than any hurricane before.
Hurricane Iniki, birthed from the El Niño weather phenomenon, hits one of the Hawaiian islands, Kauai, killing seven people and damaging an estimated 90% of the island's wood-frame buildings.
Hurricane Opal makes landfall just south of Pensacola, on Florida's Panhandle. Nine people are killed in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina, all but one by falling trees. In Opal's wake, $3 billion in property damage is assessed.
Hurricane Fran blows into Cape Fear, North Carolina, wreaking havoc on coastal towns, homes, and trees, and racking up $3.2 billion in property damage.
Hurricane Isabel brings flooding, 100-mph winds, and power-outages to North Carolina, Virginia, and much of the Mid-Atlantic. 6.5 million households lose electricity during the storm.
Hurricane Katrina claims an estimated 1,400 lives and causes over $100 billion in property damage. It is the costliest hurricane in U.S. history.
Hurricane Ike's landfall in Galveston, Texas, results in the largest evacuation in Texas state history.
This stunning film portrait of Yosemite National Park uses the 1851 diary of the first expedition of soldiers into the Native American territory.
The New Deal program CCC put three million young men to work in camps across America.
Today one of the most-recognized figures in American literary history, poet Walt Whitman was denounced by critics in his own time.
In 1934, American polar explorer Richard Byrd became the first to experience winter in Antarctica's interior.
High on a granite cliff in South Dakota's Black Hills tower the huge carved faces of four American presidents: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt.
The story of the farmers who dreamed of prosperity and lived through ten years of drought, dust, disease and death.
The life of the legendary photographer, known best for his black and white images of the wilderness of the American West.
The epic battle waged over dinosaur fossils by rival paleontologists in the American West.