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GALVESTON.COM: The Official Website of The Galveston Island Convention & Visitors Bureau
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Hurricane Ike was the ninth named storm, and fifth hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season. It was a Cape Verde-type hurricane, as it started as a tropical disturbance off the coast of Africa near the end of August, then tracked south of Cape Verde and slowly developed.



On September 1, it became a tropical storm west of the Cape Verde islands. By the early morning hours of September 4, Ike was a Category 4 hurricane, hitting its peak of 145 mph (230 km/h) winds and a pressure of 935 mbar (27.61 inHg). That made it the most intense storm so far in the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season.

At one point the diameter of Ike's tropical storm and hurricane force winds were 450 and 190 miles (720 and 305 km), respectively.

Ike has been blamed for 117 deaths, primarily in Haiti, which was already trying to recover after the impact of three prior 2008 systems, Fay, Gustav, and Hanna, and in the United States, with many of the deaths taking place well inland.



Damages from Ike are estimated at $27 billion (2008 USD), if the estimates are true, Ike will be the fourth costliest Atlantic hurricane of all time and third costliest U.S. hurricane of all time. (Source: Wikipedia)



 

"Hurricane Ike" Galveston.com PhotoShows
1

"Hurricane Ike" Video Channel
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24-Hour Urgent Care Facility for Children Now Open at UTMB
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A Message from the Executive Director of Rosenberg Library
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An Open Letter from The Grand
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Beach Renourishment Now Underway on Galveston Isle
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Book to Chronicle Hurricane Ike in Pictures
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Galveston Arts Center Suffers Significant Damage from Hurricane Ike
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Galveston County Health District Provides A Range of Services for Ike Victims
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Galveston's Collaborative Efforts Facilitate Recovery of Port of Galveston
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GHF Offers Free Consulting Teams to Owners of Ike-Stricken Historic Homes, Neighborhoods
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GHF Preservation Resource Center to Hold Galve-Scan 2009 on Saturdays through January
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GHF Receives Disaster Relief Grant from Meadows Foundation
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Hurricane Ike Children's Clothing Campaign Now Underway
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Mitchell Historic Properties Commits $30 Million to Restoration Efforts in Downtown Galveston Following Hurricane Ike
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New Book by GHF and Arcadia Press Recalls the Worst Storm in U.S. History
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Pet Owners Now Have Tool for Find Lost Pets Due to Ike
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Schlitterbahn Park to Reopen After Clean Up & Construction
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History of Hurricane Ike

On the morning of September 13, 2008, the eye of Hurricane Ike approached the Texas coast near Galveston Bay, making landfall at 2:10 a.m. CDT over the east end of Galveston Island. People in low-lying areas who had not heeded evacuation orders, in single-family one- or two-story homes, were warned by the weather service that they may "face certain death" from the overnight storm surge.

In regional Texas towns, electrical power began failing before 8 p.m. CDT, leaving millions without power (estimates range from 2.8 million) to 4.5 million customers). Flood waters begin to rise in a neighborhood of Galveston, Texas. In Galveston, by 4 p.m. CDT on September 12, the rising storm surge began overtopping the 17-ft (5.2 m) Galveston Seawall, which faces the Gulf of Mexico; waves had been crashing along the seawall earlier, from 9 a.m. CDT.

Although Seawall Boulevard is elevated above the shoreline, many areas of town slope down behind the seawall to the lower elevation of Galveston Island. Even though there were advance evacuation plans, Mary Jo Naschke, spokesperson for the city of Galveston, estimated that (as of Friday morning) a quarter of the city's residents paid no attention to calls for them to evacuate, despite predictions that most of Galveston Island would suffer heavy flooding storm tide.

By 6 p.m. Friday night, estimates varied as to how many of the 58,000 residents remained, but the figures of remaining residents were in the thousands. Widespread flooding included downtown Galveston: six ft (2 m) deep inside the Galveston County Courthouse, and the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston was flooded. - source: Wikipedia


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