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The Lake Okeechobee hurricane disaster of 1928 in South Florida remains the second- deadliest tropical cyclone in American history. The aftermath of the storm lingers until this day, as racial tensions between Blacks and whites in the region are still healing over the handling of the dead.

The storm formed off the West Coast of Africa on September 6 as a tropical depression before developing into a full-on storm towards the Caribbean. As it grew in strength, the storm smacked Guadeloupe and was responsible for 1,200 deaths.

As the storm tore through the Bahamas en route to making landfall in Florida, it went from a powerful Category 5 hurricane to a still-strong Category 4 on September 16. The storm hit West Palm Beach first, destroying farmlands, and lavish homes. But the the storm’s devastation was felt most in the Lake Okeechobee area.

The low-lying poor communities that surrounded the lake were made up of mostly Black migrant farm workers. The large lake was hit with a storm surge, which made it pour over a small damn. Waters rushed through the area, rising as high as 20 feet. As estimated in 2003, over 2,500 people perished in the floods, much higher than the 1,800 originally reported.

Little Known Black History Fact: Lake Okeechobee Hurricane Disaster  was originally published on ioneblackamericaweb.staging.go.ione.nyc

On the more affluent eastern side of the like, where Palm Beach rests, property damange was the biggest issue. On the lake’s west side, where the Everglades sit, the communities were poorer and comprised mostly of Black people. The disparity in income, neighborhoods and treatment was quite apparent in this time of Jim Crow.

Black workers mostly handled the dead, and caskets were scarce. Although Black and white towns were destroyed, white families barred Black families from properly burying their dead. A mass grave for whites was the only one memorialized, while ditches were dug for the Blacks.

Because of the warm weather, the bodies began to fester in the soft lands of the swamps and began to float in puddles. State officials then ordered the burning of bodies in the region, and once more Black families were set aside from the fairer conditions of their white counterparts by way of massive unmarked graves.

The Historical Society of Palm Beach had been working on providing the full history of the infamous storm as much of what has been recorded depicts a past that Floridians would rather forget.

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Little Known Black History Fact: Lake Okeechobee Hurricane Disaster  was originally published on ioneblackamericaweb.staging.go.ione.nyc