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On October 15, 1989, as most of the Gulf Coast was easing into fall, Hurricane Jerry made a surprise landfall near Jamaica Beach on Galveston Island. With sustained winds of 85 miles per hour, Jerry wasn’t the strongest storm to hit Texas, but it was one of the latest.
In fact, Jerry was the latest hurricane to make landfall on the upper Texas coast since official records began in 1851. Across the entire state, only one hurricane arrived later: a Category 2 storm in 1912, which came ashore just one day later, on October 16.
A Rare October Visitor
By mid-October, the Texas coast is usually safe from hurricanes. Cooler air and shifting winds from mid-latitude weather systems tend to steer late-season tropical storms toward the eastern Gulf. Cold fronts become more common, and the Gulf’s energy begins to fade.
But in 1989, the atmosphere had other plans. Jerry slipped into the Gulf and took aim at Texas just as those early autumn systems began to sweep across the country. Instead of curving away, it drove straight for Galveston, defying seasonal odds.
Rain and Wind, Mostly East of Houston
Most of Jerry’s heavy rain fell to the east of Houston. Silsbee, northeast of Beaumont, reported the highest total: 6.4 inches. Anahuac saw 4.5 inches, and the National Weather Service office in Galveston measured 1.46 inches.
Across Harris County, the impacts were much lighter. Hobby Airport recorded only 0.14 inches, and Bush Intercontinental saw just a trace. For most of Houston, Jerry felt more like a blustery front than a full-fledged hurricane.
Still, the storm made its mark. Two tornadoes spun up in southeast Harris County: one near Webster along I-45, another in Baytown. Thankfully, there were no injuries or fatalities from the pair. But tragically, three people lost their lives in Galveston when their car was believed to have been blown off the seawall during the height of the storm.

The Wind and the Water
At Galveston’s Scholes Field, sustained winds reached 75 mph with gusts up to 100 mph. It was enough to rattle windows and down trees but not enough to cause widespread destruction. Farther inland, Hobby Airport saw gusts up to 37 mph.
Jerry also pushed water into Galveston Bay. Storm tides rose to 7.0 feet above mean sea level in Baytown, 6.0 feet at the Galveston Flagship Pier, and 5.3 feet at Anahuac. An unofficial report even noted 8.0 feet near the entrance to the Houston Ship Channel.
Looking Back
More than three decades later, Hurricane Jerry remains a reminder that hurricane season isn’t truly over until it’s over. Even as Texas settles into fall, the Gulf can still surprise us.
As we mark the anniversary of Jerry’s landfall on October 15, we remember not just the storm itself, but the lessons it left behind about preparedness, timing, and the unpredictable nature of the coast we call home.
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