FloodZoneMap.org

Tropical Storm — Western Kent, RI

Aug 28, 2011

Hurricane Irene formed east of the Caribbean island of Dominica, part of the Lesser Antilles region, on the afternoon of August 20. Irene moved through the Caribbean and up the east coast of the United States making landfall twice. She first made landfall as a Category 1 Hurricane near Cape Lookout, North Carolina around 7:30am on August 27, then moved offshore again during the evening. She then made a 2nd landfall, again as a Category 1 Hurricane at 540am on August 28 near Little Egg Inlet in N

Source: NOAA National Weather Service Storm Events Database (event 345178). Narrative written by NWS staff at the time of the event.

Flood Risk Context for Western Kent, RI

This event is one of many recorded floods in Western Kent County. See the full FEMA flood zone map, NFIP claim totals, and disaster history for the area.

View Western Kent County flood data →

More Flood Stories

Flood1 death$1.3M damage

Kent, RI · Mar 14, 2010

A stacked low pressure system (surface low and upper level low on top of each other) moved southeast of Nantucket, spreading rain across Southern New England. This resulted in widespread rainfall totals of three to six inches.

Read the full account →
Tropical Storm$38K damage

Western Kent, RI · Aug 22, 2021

Tropical Storm Henri made landfall in southwest Rhode Island around noon on August 22nd, then moved slowly northwestward and westward across northern Connecticut and weakened. Henri brought strong wind gusts and flash flooding.

Read the full account →
Flood$25.6M damage

Kent, RI · Mar 29, 2010

A low pressure system sat just south of Long Island for two days, bringing heavy rain to much of Southern New England during that time. A persistent southerly low level jet brought very moist air into the area, which resulted in high rainfall rates.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$100K damage

Kent, RI · Sep 1, 2013

An upper level disturbance moved over southern New England bringing showers and thunderstorms to the region. Precipitable water values over two inches indicated a very moist atmosphere; in addition, weak winds at the mid levels resulted in very slow moving storms.

Read the full account →