Hurricane Alicia also set off many tornadoes in southeast Texas. Fourteen were reported in the area between Galveston and Houston in one day. This was unprecedented and skyscrapers were lashed by these storms. The winds smashed winds and sent shards of glass onto the streets causing some slight injuries and frightening more. On the following day, nine separate twisters were reported due north of Houston
In addition to the 21 people who lost their lives in the storms, many homes were damaged and some had to be abandoned and their owners lost all of their possessions. The emergency services had to rescue many people, especially motorists. The exact damage caused by the storm is not known. It was believed to be a record and a figure of 2 billion dollars is often quoted. Texas infrastructure was also badly hit and many bridges and roads were made impassable or damaged. The environmental costs were also immense it is estimated that thousands of trees were blown over. Galveston’s Beach lost tonnes of sand caused by the winds and the high tides. For the most part, though, Galveston’s sea defences successfully defended the city. It was later believed that the seawall saved the city from destruction such as that which New Orleans experienced in 2005. The sea-wall had been very costly to build but it had proven its worth.
Galveston had been devasted by a similar strength hurricane once before in 1900. It had left the entire city flooded and approximately 1500 people are believed to have died in the storm, which is regarded as the city’s darkest moment.