'Hurricane Jerry' was the tenth named storm and the sixth and final hurricane of the 1989 Atlantic hurricane season. Jerry was also the third U.S. landfalling storm and the third storm to strike
Texas during the 1989 season.
Storm history
A
tropical wave moved off the coast of
Africa and moved westward through the
Caribbean Sea without any development. The system's forward speed decreased when it reached the
Yucatán Peninsula and stalled and meandered for several days until a
Hurricane Hunter found a closed area of circulation and winds in excess of 25 mph (40 km/h). The tropical wave was upgraded to a tropical depression at 1600 UTC. Later on, during post-storm analysis, officials found that the storm had become a depression hours earlier near the
Mexican port of
Veracruz[1].
Now Tropical Depression Fourteen, the storm moved northward where it became a tropical storm on
October 13 and was named Jerry. Jerry continued to move northward before turning northeastward as the storm gained strength. On
October 14, Jerry encountered an upper level system which slowed the storm down and nearly sheared it apart, but the still-strengthening storm continued northward and entered an area with less
wind shear. Within 12 hours, Jerry had attained
Category 1 hurricane status.
[1]
Hurricane Jerry made landfall in
Galveston, Texas on
October 16 as a weak hurricane. The storm then moved inland, its forward speed always increasing. By the end of
October 16, Jerry was absorbed by a frontal system.
[3]
Impact
Jerry killed three people and caused $70 million dollars (1989
USD, $110 million
2005 USD) in damage. Jerry's landfall (along with Chantal and Allison earlier) was the most tropical cyclone landfalls for
Texas since the
1886 season.

Rainfall totals from Hurricane Jerry
Texas
Jerry produced heavy rainfall when it made landfall, with 6.4 inches of rain being reported in
Silsbee, Texas[4]
Three people were killed when their car crashed off the
Galveston Seawall during the storm. It was unknown if the car simply drove off the seawall because of heavy rains or it was blown off by high winds. Jerry also caused light beach erosion along the Texas coast.
[3]
Inland U.S.
3-5 inches (8-13 cm) of rain was reported in
Tennessee and
Kentucky.
[6]
Aftermath
In Polk County, Texas, Jerry knocked out power for five to ten days to half of the residents. Trees were downed everywhere, blocking roads and destroying area homes. Jerry became only the fourth storm to hit this area directly since 1983, the others being
Alicia of 1983,
Bonnie of 1986 and
Hurricane Chantal earlier in the season.
[2]
Unpredictability

The forecast models of Jerry were never close to the hurricane's actual landfall
Jerry was an unpredictable storm as the strengthening before landfall and the continuation to the northwest was not anticipated. Equipment failure meant that data was not readily available, resulting in the release of a
hurricane warning only eight hours prior to landfall. The NHC forecast model was also disabled, throwing the accuracy of Jerry's track off.
[7]
Lack of retirement
Because the damage was not extreme, the name Jerry was not retired. The name was reused for the
1995 Atlantic hurricane season and again in the
2001 season.
See also
★
List of notable tropical cyclones
★
List of notable Atlantic hurricanes
★
List of Texas hurricanes
★
Tropical cyclone
External links
1. [ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1989/jerry/prelim01.gif Jerry 1989 report]
2. [ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1989/jerry/prelim01.gif Jerry 1989 report]
3. [ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1989/jerry/prelim02.gif Jerry 1989 report]
4. Jerry rainfall
5. [ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1989/jerry/prelim02.gif Jerry 1989 report]
6. [1]
7. [ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1989/jerry/prelim03.gif Jerry 1989 report]