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Tropical Storm — Tidal Berkeley, South Carolina

2024-09-27 · Tidal Berkeley, South Carolina

$465K
Property damage

Event narrative

Strong winds associated with Helene produced scattered trees down across the entire county. Berkeley County Emergency Management reported at least 4 homes with minor damage across the entire county.

Wider weather episode

Helene first developed into a tropical storm in the northwest Caribbean Sea in the late morning of September 24, and strengthened into a hurricane near the Yucatan peninsula about 24 hours later. Helene continued to strengthen and became a major hurricane as it moved to the north-northeast across the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Helene made landfall in the Big Bend region of Florida in the late evening hours of September 26 as a category 4 hurricane. Once inland, Helene moved quickly northward through the state of Georgia and produced widespread significant impacts across multiple states.

The very large wind field associated with Helen produced widespread tropical storm force winds across southeast South Carolina during the evening and overnight hours of September 26-27. The peak observed wind gust in southeast South Carolina was 75 mph at the Beaufort Marine Corps Air Station (KNBC). Wind impacts due to Helene were significant including widespread tree damage and power outages with several counties reporting near 100 percent power outages. Conditions along the east side of the track of Helene were very conducive to tropical tornadoes, and 8 tornadoes were confirmed across southeast South Carolina. Fortunately, there were no injuries or fatalities due to the tornadoes or strong winds associated with Helene.

Helene also produced heavy rainfall across southeast South Carolina. Rainfall amounts ranged from 2-5 inches in most areas, with the heaviest swath of rain occurring across Jasper, Hampton, Allendale, and Colleton counties where amounts were more on the order of 5-8 inches. However, no significant flooding or flash flooding was observed due to heavy rainfall.

Helene did produce modest storm surge along the southeast South Carolina coast, resulting in a peak observed tide level of 2.26 ft MHHW (8.02 ft MLLW) at the Charleston Harbor National Ocean Service (NOS) tide gage.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1217463. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.