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The Great Galveston Hurricane (1900) was the deadliest hurricane with an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 deaths (though some put that number as high as 12,000) and $20 to $30 million in property damage.
The worst devastation from Hurricane Ike occurred on the Bolivar Peninsula, TX, which was inundated with 3.7-4.9 m (12 -16 ft) of water. The storm surge exceeded the islands elevation, leading to inundation, overwash and extreme coastal change.
For perspective: Hurricane Katrinas death toll came in at 1,836. The death toll of The Galveston Hurricane, on the other hand, came in at a minimum of 6,000 and a maximum of 12,000 dead, with most reports settling on 8,000 as a compromise. Over 3,600 homes in Galveston were completely destroyed that day.
Impact CountryDeathsMissingDominican Republic2N/ACuba7N/AUnited States11316Total196161 more row
Bolivar Peninsula and southern Chambers County Bolivar Peninsula got the strong side of the storm. Bolivar Peninsula, just east across the water from the landfall site on Galveston Island, had been submerged under the storm tide. Water from the storm surge was over the first floor of many houses.

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Hurricane Ike generated an incredibly high storm surge for a Category 2 storm; the maximum surge height recorded was 5.3 m in Chambers County, TX, located to the northeast of Galveston Island.
Hurricane Ike made landfall at Galveston Island at 2:10 a.m. Saturday, September 13, 2008 with 110 mph sustained winds, a strong Category 2. The landfall of Ike resulted in extensive storm surge flooding, wind damage and rainfall flooding across all of Harris and surrounding counties.

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