On the 18th of February, this tropical cyclone crossed the coast near Cardwell where the pressure dropped to 965 hPa. Huge seas left a trail of damage along the strand in Townsville. Three open baths, a Memorial Park, and a seawall were destroyed. Flood waters driven back by storm surge isolated many parts of the city streets under 1 to 1.5 metres of water. A horse was found drowned with rider missing.

Sea high up on residential land and fishermen at mouth of Ross River suffered much damage to boats gear and houses. Waves 3 feet above flooring wrecked a house. Bayview Hospital damaged by wind. Giant fig trees uprooted. Houses in the Stanton and Melton Hills suffered the most damage with roofing iron torn off and outhouses blown over. Trees were defoliated.

At Ingham, the police house, church and 2 hotels were unroofed and badly damaged. The Italian Club was lifted and carried 90 metres down the street. Nearly every building in town was damaged. At the coast large slices of Esplanade and the road were swept away. Tanks all over town moved hundreds of metres. At Innisfail, a mother and child were injured by falling tree and another child injured by wind. Many trees were blown down.

At Tully, The wind blew down fences, outhouses and unroofed a sawmill. At Palm Island, two dormitories were unroofed and a concrete jail flattened. The Breakwater (hulk of ship) was torn to pieces by the sea. Waves caused tremendous changes to the sea front. Flooding caused much damage to crops and infrastructure across the region.

The effect of the cyclone on air services was to ground all aircraft in the vicinity, and all North Queensland air services were cancelled, whilst Dutch and Empire Flying Boats were delayed at Darwin and Karumba.

All that remains of the old swimming baths on The Strand. A set o…

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Townsville cyclone 1940 - mean sea level analysis at 9am, 18 Febr…

Townsville cyclone 1940 - mean sea level analysis at 9am, 19 Febr…