Formed: | January 1880 |
Dissipated: | After January 19, 1880 |
Pressure: | 955 |
Maximum Snow: | Unknown |
Fatalities: | Unknown |
Damage: | At least several million dollars (1880 USD) |
Areas: | British Columbia, Pacific Northwest |
The Great Gale of 1880 was an intense extratropical cyclone (possibly deeper than 955mb) that impacted the Northwest United States on January 9, 1880.[1]
The greatest snowstorm, and perhaps overall worst storm in SW Washington and NW Oregon history, was that dubbed the ‘Storm King’ event of January 9, 1880....Little data is available for the so-called ‘Storm King’ of January 1880, but it appears the storm center came ashore just south of Astoria, Oregon, on January 9th when a barometric pressure of 28.45” was registered in the town. Portland bottomed out at 28.56.[2]Winds gusted over 70 mph in Portland, probably exceeding 100 mph along the Pacific coast causing extensive damage and several deaths.
On January 19, 1880, a letter to The Daily Oregonian from an Astoria resident reads,
From the graphic, and, in some cases, the heart-rending accounts published in the Oregonian descriptive of the disasters resulting from the late severe windstorms in other portions of the state and the neighboring territory, it would appear that our town and county suffered less injury than almost any other.
Parts of the lower Columbia seem to have experienced a blizzard, as related from Westport:[4]
On the 9th at 2 o-clock P.M., a storm of snow and wind set in and continued for two hours with all the fury of a hurricane.
As documented in the Morning Oregonian, Polk County reported "the heaviest wind storm ever known in these parts" and the Dallas Itemizer said "The storm of Friday was considered very severe here at that time, but since the reports of the havoc in other places, we have concluded that we had no storm here to speak of."[5]
An article printed on January 12, 1880, noted,
The storm near the mouth of the Columbia seems to have been entirely distinct from the one which swept through the Willamette Valley, and scarcely as severe or prolonged. The wind was from the northwest, and did not commence to blow violently until nearly 2 o'clock Friday afternoon.
In the Fort Clatsop area along the Lewis and Clark River, it was reported
The wind changed suddenly to the west, and while the trees were heavily laden with snow, struck the forest with terrific effect.
In contrast to the north coast, a letter from Newport printed in The Oregonian on January 17, 1880, reported
We have just experienced one of the severest gales; nothing like it has occurred since the settlement of the bay. It was southeast, lasted about five hours, and was terrible in force… The tide rose seven feet higher than was ever known; nearly all the old wharves are taken away.
There was no snowfall on the coastal hills around Newport, but "several miles from here it is five inches, and gradually deepens as you go east. Said to be 18 inches deep at Siletz, Oregon." Further south, it was reported on January 19 that Gardiner was struck with a "perfect gale" that threw large breakers ashore and shoved water into a warehouse, threatening livestock. "The rain came down in torrents," and the Umpqua River and Smith River flooded high, adding to the wet mess. "The storm raged with great violence at Coos Bay." The three-masted schooner Emma Utter dragged anchor and was smashed ashore.
The powerful gale struck much of the Willamette Valley in the mid to late morning. For example, "the heaviest windstorm ever known in these parts" struck Monmouth, in Polk County, at about 11 am. The strong winds also struck the city of Corvallis at 11 am, with the gale lasting until about 3 pm, and started around 9 am in Blodgett in the coast range to the west. In Portland, the powerful wind began at 11 am, and lasted until about 2:30 pm.