Basin: | EPac |
Year: | 1935 |
First Storm Formed: | July 1, 1935 |
Last Storm Dissipated: | August 26, 1935 |
Strongest Storm Name: | Two |
Strongest Storm Pressure: | 1002 |
Total Storms: | 5 |
Total Hurricanes: | 1 |
Five Seasons: | 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937 |
Atlantic Season: | 1935 Atlantic hurricane season |
West Pacific Season: | 1935 Pacific typhoon season |
North Indian Season: | 1930s North Indian Ocean cyclone seasons |
The 1935 Pacific hurricane season ran through the summer and fall of 1935. Before the satellite age started in the 1960s, data on east Pacific hurricanes was extremely unreliable. Most east Pacific storms were of no threat to land. This season saw three tropical cyclones and ended early in August.
A tropical storm caused gales in Manzanillo on July 1.[1]
On August 5, a tropical cyclone formed just off the coast of Mexico. It generally moved west-northwest, and was last seen August 9. The storm caused gales, and a ship reported a pressure reading of 29.61inHg.[2]
South of the Gulf of Tehuantepec, a tropical cyclone formed on August 17. It remained poorly organized and moved slowly, making landfall on August 20. It had moved back off shore by August 21. It headed northwest, passing west of Cabo San Lucas, and hugged the Pacific coast of the Baja California Peninsula. It rapidly weakened as it headed north, and its remnants made landfall near Point Conception, California, on August 26 and dissipated after that.[2]
The tropical cyclone destroyed many buildings in Salina Cruz on August 20. It also blew down trees and downed power lines. No casualties were reported.[3] The tropical cyclone remnants also caused rainfall of up to 2inches in parts of California and Arizona.[4]