Stephen Long is an American forester, writer, author, natural historian, and co-founder of the magazine Northern Woodlands. Long is also a former playwright and former film reviewer.[2]
The 1938 New England Hurricane (also referred to as the Great New England Hurricane, Long Island Express, and Yankee Clipper) was one of the deadliest and most destructive tropical cyclones to strike Long Island, New York, and New England. The storm formed near the coast of Africa on September 9, becoming a Category 5 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, before making landfall as a Category 3 hurricane on Long Island on September 21. It is estimated that the hurricane killed 682 people, damaged or destroyed more than 57,000 homes, and caused property losses estimated at $306 million ($4.7 billion in 2017). Damaged trees and buildings were still seen in the affected areas as late as 1951. It remains the most powerful and deadliest hurricane in recorded New England history, perhaps eclipsed in landfall intensity only by the Great Colonial Hurricane of 1635.
^Penna, Anthony N. (October 2017). "Thirty-Eight: The Hurricane That Transformed New England. By Stephen Long". Environmental History. 22 (4): 754–755. doi:10.1093/envhis/emx065.
^Ouzts, Clay (Spring 2018). "Thirty‐Eight: The Hurricane that Transformed New England. By Stephen Long". The Historian. 80 (1): 108–109. doi:10.1111/hisn.12769. S2CID148870494.