FloodZoneMap.org

Hurricane (Typhoon) — Lauderdale, MS

Jul 10, 2005

Hurricane Dennis made landfall during the afternoon of July 10th near Navarre Beach Florida as a category 3 Hurricane. The storm moved north-northwest across Southwest Alabama and then into East-Central Mississippi and finally across Northeast Mississippi during the overnight hours. Wind gusts over tropical storm force were common across areas east of a line from Starkville to Newton to Hattiesburg. These winds caused several hundred trees to uproot or snap and took down numerous power lines. Ad

Source: NOAA National Weather Service Storm Events Database (event 5467186). Narrative written by NWS staff at the time of the event.

Flood Risk Context for Lauderdale, MS

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

View Lauderdale County flood data →

More Flood Stories

Hurricane (Typhoon)1 death$450.0M damage

Lauderdale, MS · Aug 29, 2005

Hurricane Katrina will likely go down as the worst and costliest natural disaster in United States history. The amount of destruction, the cost of damaged property/agriculture and the large loss of life across the affected region has been overwhelming.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$400K damage

Lauderdale, MS · Aug 30, 2021

Major hurricane Ida made landfall as a strong category four hurricane around 11:55am on August 29 near Grand Isle, LA. It then moved very slowly north through south central Louisiana and into Mississippi on August 30.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$300K damage

Lauderdale, MS · May 11, 2019

After a cold front stalled across the ArkLaMiss region the day before, the remnant stationary front served as a focus for the development of widespread showers and thunderstorms on May 11th.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood$30K damage

Lauderdale, MS · Aug 30, 2021

Major hurricane Ida made landfall as a strong category four hurricane around 11:55am on August 29 near Grand Isle, LA. It then moved very slowly north through south central Louisiana and into Mississippi on August 30.

Read the full account →