Thunderstorm Wind — Monmouth, New Jersey
2002-08-02 · near Countywide, Monmouth, New Jersey
Wider weather episode
The worst meteorological phenomenon to cause damage in Monmouth County since the December 1992 nor'easter moved through the county during the evening of the 2nd. A complex of severe thunderstorms brought hurricane force wind gusts across the county and downed thousands of trees and power lines and hundreds of poles. Dozens of homes and vehicles were damaged by fallen trees. Forty-four of the fifty-three municipalities in the county reported damage from the storm. A state of emergency was declared in the county as 168,000 homes and businesses lost power. It took until August 8th for power to be fully restored. The loss of power was exacerbated by the unusually hot and humid weather. Food in supermarkets spoiled. Many businesses were closed on Saturday the 3rd. The county opened cooling centers in Middletown and Long Branch to help residents with the heat. Jersey Central Power and Light distributed water and dry ice. The preliminary damage estimate was 10.2 million dollars. Hardest hit municipalities included Allenhurst Borough, Deal Borough, Fair Haven Borough, Long Branch City, Middletown Township, Oceanport Borough, Shrewsbury Township, Tinton Falls Borough, Union Beach Borough and West Long Branch Borough. No deaths or serious injuries were reported during the storm, but a couple of deaths and injuries occurred during the clean-up. Debris along roadways was stacked six feet high. A wind gust to 83 mph was measured at the North Shrewsbury Ice Boat Clubhouse before the instrument broke. In Eatontown Borough, the Old Orchard Country Club lost 123 trees. Two hundred other trees (5 to 6 feet in diameter) were badly damaged. Another golf course lost 50 trees. In Fair Haven Borough, a 40-year-old man died after removing tree debris. About 10 to 15 trees fell on and badly damaged homes. Some downed trees were up to 250 years old and eight feet in diameter. Thirty streets were impassable. In Little Silver Borough, a dog was killed when a tree fell through a house. Roads were closed through the 4th. Long Branch City was "pummeled". Thirty-five percent of the city still did not have power on the 5th. Power lines were knocked down on major roadways. Emergency services responded to 200 calls of downed trees and wires and flooding. In Middletown Township, hundreds of trees also fell. One couple was displaced after a giant oak tree fell through their home. A public works employee was injured while he was clearing an apparently dead power line. In Monmouth Beach Borough, only two percent of the borough had power after the thunderstorms moved through. In Ocean Township, a house was damaged by downed trees. Many mature trees crashed onto township golf courses closing them for four days. In Red Bank Township, several homes were damaged by fallen trees. Most of the downtown area was without power into the fourth. In Ocean Township, one house was damaged by downed trees. A couple of golf courses were closed through the 4th because of tree damage. The deputy police chief in Sea Bright suffered a heart attack after a day of clearing brush. In Tinton Falls Borough, one house was completely destroyed by downed trees. Fifty trees blocked roadways. One man suffered minor injuries after a large oak tree crashed into his house. A tree also fell onto borough hall, but did not damage it. In West Long Branch Borough, Monmouth University suffered extensive damage. Thirty large trees came down on campus. The wind peeled the roof from the Willow Hall dormitory. Heavy ain then exacerbated the damage. A large tree fell through the Garden Apartments Residence Hall. All offices of the university were closed for five days. Damage to the university alone was estimated at 1.5 million dollars. A three story office building was badly damaged after its roof was torn off and rain inundated it. It was expected to take a couple of months to repair the building.The line of thunderstorms wreaked havoc on the infrastructure of Jersey Central Power and Light. Systemwide the thunderstorms knocked out power to 200,000 of its customers (168,000 in Monmouth County). The storm damaged 2,200 power lines and 420 poles. Of the 200,000 initial outages systemwide, 148,000 still did not have power restored the evening of the 3rd. The number dropped to 86,000 the afternoon of the 4th, 69,300 the evening of the 4th, 45,000 the afternoon of the 5th, 35,000 the morning of the 6th (all in Monmouth County), 10,000 the evening of the 6th, less than 1,000 the evening of the 7th and the last few (in Rumson Borough) until 1140 a.m. EDT on the 8th.
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Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 5318054. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.