according to the story behind the Edmund Fitzgerald, there was in 1975. but that one and the one in 1913 are the only ones i have ever heard of.
Edit: There have been some fierce storms on the Great Lakes, especially Superior, but none have technically been hurricanes or tropical systems of any sort.
There was a Pacific Hurricane Cristina in 2014.
No, there has never been a hurricane named Brandy. The name Brandy has not been used in the annual rotation of hurricane names.
No. No hurricane has gone by that name. Tornadoes are not given names.
No, there has never been a hurricane named Mariah. Hurricane names are chosen by the World Meteorological Organization, and the closest name to Mariah that has been used is "Maria."
I personally have not, but many people have.
To answer this question I went to wikipedia and searched for great lakes and looke at the picture and could see Lake Superior is farthest west. I'm sure you could do this too. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes
No there has not been a hurricane by the name of drew
no not ever because it is a inner state and it is not close to the ocean plus even though it is by a lake... it will not have a hurricane
There was a Pacific Hurricane Cristina in 2014.
The largest lake sturgeon ever caught in Lake Superior was in 1922 by Lapointe Fisheries in Batchewana Bay. It was seven feet, eleven inches long and weighed 310 pounds.
Yes, there has been a hurricane called Hurricane Robert, which occurred in the Pacific Ocean in 1997. It was a Category 1 hurricane that formed in the eastern Pacific basin.
No, there has never been a hurricane named Brandy. The name Brandy has not been used in the annual rotation of hurricane names.
Yes, on October 1st 1973 it became a hurricane
yes
poey
No, there has not been a hurricane named Katelyn in the Atlantic Basin. The name Katelyn has not been used on the official list of Atlantic hurricane names.
No, there has not been a hurricane named Lucy in the Atlantic hurricane basin. The name Lucy has not been used for tropical cyclones in the Atlantic.