Hurricane Frances, 2004

Storm Lifecycle

Frances began as Tropical Depression Six on August 24, and it became a named storm on August 25 while well east of the Windward Islands. Frances strengthened rapidly, reaching Category 4 intensity by August 27. Initially forecast to turn north and potentially threaten Bermuda, conditions changed and Frances's predicted track shifted westward. After grazing the Turks and Caicos Islands, it plowed through the Bahamas. From September 2 through September 4, Frances slowly ground its way across the Bahamas. More » Its slow movement allowed a record 2.5 to 3 million Floridians to evacuate their homes. However, as it ground its way across the Bahamas, it weakened to a Category 2 hurricane due to wind shear, although it was still a very large storm. After sitting stationary off the coast of Florida for nearly 24 hours, Frances finally moved onto the coast of Florida in the early hours of September 5. It traveled northwest over land, briefly emerging over the Gulf of Mexico and striking the Florida panhandle. As it passed over Georgia on September 6, it caused heavy rainfall across the southern U.S. Over 15 inches of rain were recorded in some places in North Carolina and Virginia, causing heavy flooding. Frances was downgraded to a tropical depression and dissipated over Pennsylvania on September 9. Damage to the United States was approximately $9 billion, making it the 10th costliest hurricane in U.S. history. Most of Hurricane Frances's damage occurred in Florida as a result of the storm's slow movement, large size, and long duration of winds. The storm is directly responsible for seven deaths; one in the Bahamas and six in the United States. Hurricane Frances also produced a record-setting 123 tornadoes as it moved its way through the United States. For official forecasts, see: the NHC's archive for Hurricane Frances. the HPC's advisory archive on Frances after landfall. « Hide

National Hurricane Center—
Last Messages for Frances

09.07.2004Forecast/Advisory #53
09.06.2004Discussion #52
 Public Advisory #52

Hurricane Frances Tracking Map

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Source: Storm tracks and forecasted paths derived from data provided by the National Hurricane Center. Cloud cover imagery provided by NERC Satellite Station, University of Dundee via the European Meteosat satellite system operated by EUMETSAT. Base imagery courtesy of NASA. Cloud cover may be delayed up to 6 hours and is meant only as a guide.
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