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Impact of great hurricanes on Caribbean islands 1780

This description of a hurricane is transcribed from "A treatise on tropical diseases: on military operations; and on the climate of the West-Indies" written by Benjamin Moseley and first published in 1787.

Description of a hurricane: 1780 Atlantic hurricane season “Hurricanes generally set in from the North, or North-west, from the great rarefaction of the air within the tropic of Cancer, by the sun’s northern declination at this season of the year: from which an influx of dense air rushes in from the polar regions, and the great western continent (the earth being susceptible of much greater degrees of cold and heat than the ocean, which is preserved in a more uniform temperature, from being incapable, like all transparent bodies, of deriving heat from solar light), and great conflict is raised; the wind varying from every point of the compass, with furious blasts, until an equilibrium is restored, and nature composed, by the eastern winds regaining their course. The ruin and desolation accompanying an hurricane cannot be described. Like fire, its resistless force consumes every thing in its track, in the most terrible and rapid manner. It is generally preceded by an awful stillness of the elements, and a closeness, and mistiness, in the atmosphere, which makes the sun appear red, and the stars larger. But a dreadful reverse succeeding: - - - the sky is suddenly over-cast, and wild. The sea rises at once from a profound calm into mountains. The wind rages and roars like the noise of a canon. The rain real descends in deluges. A dismal obscurity envelopes the earth with darkness. The superior regions appear rent, with lightning and thunder. The earth often does, and always seems to, tremble. Terror and consternation distract all nature. Birds are carried from the woods into the ocean; and those, whose element is the sea, seek for refuge on the land. The frightened animals in the fields assemble together, and one almost suffocated by the impetuosity of the wind, in searching for shelter; which, when found, serves only for their destruction. The roofs of houses are carried to vast distances from their walls, which are beat to the ground, burying their inhabitants under them. Large trees are torn up by the roots, and huge branches slivered off, and driven through the air in every direction, with immense velocity. Every tree and shrub, that withstands the shock, is stripped of its boughs and foliage. Plants and grass are laid flat on the earth. Luxuriant spring is changed in a moment to dreary winter. This direful tragedy ended, when it happens in a town, the devastation is surveyed with accumulated horror. The harbour is covered with wrecks of boats and vessels: and the shore has not a vestige of its former state remaining. Mounds of rubbish and rafters, in one place; heaps of earth, and trunks of trees, in another; deep gullies from torrents of water; and the dead and dying bodies of men, women, and children, half buried and scattered about, where streets but a few hours before were, present the miserable survivors with a shocking conclusion of a spectacle, generally followed by famine; and when accompanied with an earthquake, by mortal diseases. Such were the hurricanes, that left melancholy traces in many of the West Indian islands, in the month of October, 1780: and particularly in Jamaica; where, on the third of that month, the west end of the island was laid waste. Vast districts of finely cultivated land were made a desert, and several villages destroyed”. The above was transcribed by Michael Morrissey from: A treatise on tropical diseases: on military operations; and on the climate of the West-Indies. By Benjamin Moseley, M.D. Physician To Chelsea Hospital, Member Of The College Of Physicians Of London, Of The University Of Leyden, Of The American Philosophical Society At Philadelphia, &c. &c. Published in London, 1792. Notes The 1780 Atlantic hurricane season produced four high category storms that extraordinarily destructive, one of the deadliest Atlantic hurricane seasons in recorded history with over 28,000 deaths. Dr Benjamin Moseley spent 12 years in Jamaica and other islands of the West Indies. The first edition of his book was published in 1787. It is therefore highly likely that his description of hurricanes was based at least in part on first hand observations. The above was transcribed from the third edition published in 1792: https://books.google.co.id/books?id=sUIZ0B6jrfcC&pg=PR1&lpg=PR1&dq=A+treatise+on+tropical+diseases+Benjamin+Moseley+M+D&source=bl&ots=A-8rp2W3JZ&sig=XajIi4G6fi1QN4_nrzGBtjnoueg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi63-7m2brKAhVBcI4KHU0rD4MQ6AEINjAF#v=onepage&q=hurricanes&f=false The source of the map is: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1780_Atlantic_hurricane_season#/media/File:1780Season.jpg