On 12 March 1934, a tropical cyclone crossed the north Queensland coast near Cape Tribulation. A storm surge occurred at nearby Bailey Creek destroying crop plantations. Widespread damage and destruction of property occurred at Mossman and Daintree.

Offshore, a pearling fleet just off the coast near Cape Tribulation was devastated with many luggers and 75 lives lost. The Bailey Creek storm surge was 9.1m. Banana plantation settlers in the Cape Tribulation area stated that the centre of the cyclone was over Bailey's Creek where huge trees 4 feet across were snapped like carrots. The plantations were destroyed and the worst damage was in a six mile wide swathe.

The damage extended from Bloomfield to Snapper Island. At Daintree the bar dropped to 978 hPa at 10 am 12th and by 12.30 pm huge trees were snapped and all vegetation was defoliated. Three houses were totally demolished, one house had its veranda torn off, one house was torn in half and one half blown away, another house was lifted and turned upside down and the sawmill was unroofed.

At Mossman the cyclone struck at 10am 12th and a hotel lost its balcony and main roof. The front veranda of a Cafe was torn off and the windows smashed. Windows of the Post Office were smashed. Roads were strewn with iron timber and other debris. At Mossman Beach a number of houses were damaged and one house was lost to the sea. Not much damage at Port Douglas though there was a 1.8 m storm surge there.

At Cairns limbs snapped from trees and a large tree was uprooted however most damage was from huge seas which damaged rowing boats beached along the Esplanade. Rail services were cut by floods between Cairns and Innisfail. Large washaways on the Cairns to Mossman road by landslides and huge seas.

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Cape Tribulation Cyclone, 1934 - damage areas and cyclone track

Cape Tribulation Cyclone, 1934 - sea level analysis