Hurricane Hattie was a powerful Category 5 hurricane that hit Central America on Halloween during the 1961 Atlantic hurricane season. It caused millions of US dollars in damages and killed around 275 people. Hattie is the only hurricane on record to have earned three names (Hattie, Simone, Inga) while crossing into two different basins three times.
Hattie swept across the Caribbean and came ashore in the town of Belize City, British Honduras (now Belize), on October 31. It was a strong Category 4 hurricane at landfall, having weakened from a Category 5 just offshore. After making landfall, its remnants crossed over into the Pacific and attained tropical storm status again under the name Simone. In a remarkable turn of events, after Simone itself made landfall, its remnants crossed back over to the Gulf of Mexico, where the storm became Tropical Storm Inga before dissipating. However, it is debatable whether Inga in fact formed from the remnants of Simone at all.
Hattie held Category 5 intensity on the dates of October 30 and October 31, making it the latest Category 5 storm on record in the Atlantic basin.
Violence broke out in the aftermath of the storm, causing the British frigate, H.M.S. Troubridge, to land 125 officers and men to aid colony police in halting widespread looting and pillaging. Authorities hanged four looters in the center of town as an example and warning.
The name Hattie was retired the following year and will never be used by an Atlantic hurricane again. It was replaced by Holly in 1965.
1961 meteorology | 1961 Atlantic hurricane season | 1961 Pacific hurricane season | Atlantic hurricanes | Category 5 hurricanes | Hurricanes in Belize | Pacific hurricanes | Retired Atlantic hurricanes
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