On 19 February 1954, a tropical cyclone crossed over Coolangatta. Serious structural damage to buildings occurred in Brisbane, Gold Coast and the Sunshine Coast.

At Cudgen (NSW north coast), some houses were blown apart and large trees of more than a metre in diameter twisted from the ground. Widespread structural damage Gold and Sunshine Coasts and around Brisbane. At Noosa, cyclonic southerly Winds pushed the waters of Lake Weyba two thirds of a metre over the road north of the lake. A 0.64m storm surge was recorded in Moreton Bay while at Beachmere the surge was much higher, with boats lodged in the mangrove tree tops. The sea came into the shopping area of Coolangatta and waves at Kirra brought 2m of water onto the highway washing cars from the road.

Storm surge Caused 50 families to be evacuated from the Broadwater on the Gold Coast and a dramatic rescue of people from MacIntosh Island, which at the time was farming land. Residents there were huddled in chest-deep water on the highest point of the island before being rescued. As a result of the heavy rain, flooding which combined with the storm surge in the Nerang River caused many evacuations in the area. 900mm of rain were recorded at Springbrook in the 24 hour period up to landfall. 30 people tragically died from these unprecedented effects.

Observations from the ship Kaipara (from New York): The Kaipara berthed at New Farm in Brisbane on the afternoon of 21 February 1954. The captain said that the ship had a bad time in the cyclone with rooms flooded and superficial damage to the ship. The captain said that 'the winds were estimated to have reached 85mph and I have never seen such rain.'

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Retired Senior BOM Forecaster Jeff Callaghan on Cyclone Dinah and…

Feburary 1954 - 24 hour rainfall totals around the worst hit floo…

The mean sea level pressure distribution for the 1954 Feburary Cy…

Springbrook Forestry pluviograph (40 points equal to about 10mm r…

Position of the cyclone at 7pm when the disastrous flooding began…