News

Tropical Storm Chantal (shahn-TAHL) has made landfall in South Carolina. Tropical storm force winds extended outward 140 nautical miles from the storm center. Life-threatening flash flooding is ...
These are some of the major hurricanes that have hit South Carolina over the years and what hurricane categories mean.
Hurricane Hugo, a Category 4 storm with winds of 135 to 140 mph, struck Sullivan's Island, South Carolina, on Sept. 22, 1989, causing significant damage as it moved through North Carolina.Hugo ...
It’s the night Hurricane Hugo, a Category 4 hurricane made landfall at Sullivan’s Island. WATCH: Live 5 News special: “Hugo: 30 Years Later” State and local leaders had spent the days leading up to ...
Hurricane Matthew made landfall Saturday morning in the town of McClellanville, 27 years after Hugo slammed into the fishing village. The Live 5 News team looked back at the hurricane that changed the ...
Hurricane Hugo coverage from The State: Sept. 17 - Sept. 24, 1989. Read more stories from The State’s original reporting of Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
Hurricane Hugo, which hit just north of Charleston, S.C., around midnight on Sept. 22, 1989 as a Category 4 storm with 135-140 mph winds, confirmed that hurricane forecasting can be an around-the ...
Hurricane Hugo coming ashore near Charleston Myrtle Beach Boardwalk after Hugo - MYRTLE BEACH, SC (WMBF) - Thursday marks 28 years since Hurricane Hugo devastated much of South Carolina.
In September of 1989, a NOAA hurricane hunter airplane intercepted Hurricane Hugo as it approached the Caribbean islands, just before Hugo's destructive rampage through the Caribbean and South ...
The grand finale of Pride Month was held Sunday in New York City, starting with a march past the Stonewall Inn, the ...
This weekend marks 35 years since Hurricane Hugo battered the South Carolina coast in 1989.In September 1989, Hugo formed from a cluster of storms off the coast of Cape Verde in Africa.
CHARLOTTE — After Hurricane Hugo blew through Charlotte, thousands of downed trees covered homes and roadways, 85 percent of households were out of power and much of the city was inaccessible.