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Journal
Articles
of Interest about
Jacksonville History
Remembering
Hurricane Dora
Even before
Hurricane Dora’s eye moved ashore in Northeast Florida just after
midnight on September 10, 1964, much of the new Jacksonville Beach Pier
was destroyed by winds. While Dora caused no deaths in Jacksonville,
buildings throughout North Florida were severely damaged or lost. At
the beaches, bulkheads were destroyed and 43 homes were lost in the
Jacksonville beaches area—20 swept to sea.

And the flooding was not from rainfall,
which was oddly limited to less than six inches as the high winds
roared over Jacksonville. The little town of Live Oak and other
interior points experienced more serious rain. It was storm surge that
impacted not only property at the beach, but also along the river and
its tributaries.
In weather bureau recorded history, Dora was the city’s first direct
hit. It was one of the few hurricanes in modern history to hit the
mainland at a nearly perpendicular angle.The seas were ten feet above
normal. Many homeowners along the St. Johns were forced to flee to
avoid the flooding.
Dora
was one of four hurricanes to affect Florida during the 1964 season. As it started off
cape Verde and moved northwest across the Atlantic
toward the U.S., Dora was on a path
thought originally to suggest a New England threat or a turn out to
sea. However, a high pressure system to the north slowly forced Dora on
a curve back to the west. While in the process of turning west, Dora
peaked at 140 mph and slowed in forward movement.
Dora then weakened
back to a Category 2 hurricane while moving westward towards the
northeast coast of Florida. At this
time Dora was a large hurricane. Dora then slowed
considerably before reaching land, and consequently the winds and tides
increased slowly. The strong, long-duration, onshore winds produced
unusually high tides along the entire coast. Just before
landfall on September 9, Dora
regained hurricane Category 3 status before weakening back to a strong
Category 2 at landfall. The eye passed over St. Augustine on the night
of September 9-10 with winds reported at 110 miles per hour at
landfall.
The storm cut a path across the northern part of the state before
finally making a track to the northeast on September 12. As it moved
into southwestern Georgia, Dora was downgraded to a tropical storm
before moving back over Georgia and South Carolina.
Winds from the
storm made one last return to Jacksonville about a
week later as the system
circulated back into the Atlantic Ocean. This time the winds were only at the tropical
storm level, but they confounded the recovery efforts.
Power
supply for Jacksonville and surrounding towns was lost; it was only
restored after six days of outages. About $280 million ($2 billion in
2007 dollars) in damage was attributed to the hurricane, primarily due
to extensive inland flooding. The highest rainfall amount recorded
during the hurricane fell at Mayo, where 23.73 inches fell.
In downtown Jacksonville, the city’s (then) riverfront parking lots
surrealistically appeared as part of the river with the occasional pole
or phone booth dotting the water’s surface. The St.
Johns River six feet above normal, washed over the bulkhead in downtown
Jacksonville filling parking lots. The John T. Alsop (Main St.) Bridge
is in the background.

President Lyndon Johnson arrived in the beleaguered Jacksonville on
September 11 to survey the damage throughout North Florida and meet affected
residents. The area received $8.2 million in federal disaster aid, and
$1.8 million to rebuild the 6-milelong seawall.
The photo at left shows President Johnson in the city following
the storm. (left to right) unidentified Navy Officers, Sen. George
Smathers, Congressman Charles Bennett, The President, Mayor Haydon
Burns, Sen. Spessard Holland and Gov. Farris Bryant.
Despite
the chaos that night, Jacksonville prepared for a quartet of singers
known as the Beatles. Luckily for fans, eletricity was being supplied
to the Gator Bowl by underground power lines during the Sept. 10, 1964,
concert.
Anita Bigler gave
birth to a daughter at the Naval Hospital at Jacksonville Naval Air
Station during the hurricane. Naming the child was no problem. Infant
Dora Bigler joined two sisters, Donna, 6, and Dianna, 2.
The Atlantic Beach
Hotel and pier were devastated.
“Le Chateau,” - The
famous Atlantic Beach restaurant was among the many victims.

Yacht Club Road and the Pirates Cove area were among hardest hit of
residential areas. After Dora had passed, tides and winds pushed the
St. Johns River to an extremely high tide which inundated many
exclusive homes in this area.
The Church of Our Savior. Ironically, the tree which fell
on the historic Mandarin church and destroyed it was one of the trees
described in the original 1883 title to the church property. A famed
Tiffany window was lost along with the church.
This dramatic photo above shows that oceanfront houses were destroyed
or lost to the sea - 43 homes in the Jacksonville Beaches area alone.
Below, the
Jacksonville Beach boardwalk was heavily damaged and the Ferris wheel
was destroyed.
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Jacksonville Historical
Society
317 A.
Philip Randolph Blvd.
Jacksonville,
FL 32202-2217
[ MAP]
[ Driving
Directions ]
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Emily
Lisska, Executive Director
Phone:
904-665-0064
FAX:
904-665-0069
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Jacksonville
Historical Society
Archives
at
Jacksonville University
Phone: 904-256-7271
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Rights Reserved, Jacksonville Historical Society.
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