East Coast Low (1967-06-26)

Cyclone developed just to the east of Brisbane (26th) and moved slowly north to the east of Double Island Pt (27th) and then turned slowly towards the SE. Hurricane force winds were reported from Cape Moreton from 9am 26th to 3pm 27th.

A man was killed when his car crashed into a creek at Nerang in bad weather on the night of the 26th. Some houses and buildings were unroofed at Burleigh and Surfers Paradise. At Mudgeeraba a building was blown off its stumps and wrecked. Boats were swept from their moorings. Two houses at Mermaid Beach were lost to the sea (26th).

Large sections of the esplanade at Surfers was lost to the sea and lanes and streets collapsed at Palm Beach (26th). The swimming pool from the Beach Lodge resort was lost to the sea at Surfers. By the 28th the esplanade at Main Beach fell into the sea and 5 houses were wrecked at Nobby's and Palm Beach.

Many houses were badly damaged by the sea along the Gold Coast however a volunteer army of 5000 people placed around 100,000 sandbags along the foreshore helping to prevent many houses being lost to the sea. Wreckage of the Prawn Trawler Sydney J was found at Tewantin with no trace of the owner skipper who was believed to have drowned.

This event is classified as an East Coast Low and was part of series of storms experienced in June 1967. Find out more about the Winter Storms of June 1967.

More about East Coast Lows
Harden Up
Bureau of Meteorology website
The Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research report