SoCal Hurricane 1950

Meteorological History
On Aug.8, 1950, a Tropical Wave turned into Tropical Depression 7 off the coast of southern Mexico. The next day, the NWS in Miami, FL, classified it Tropical Storm 7. On Aug.10, it made landfall in Mexico with 55MPH winds, and central pressure of 979 mbar, killing 32. It then curved out to sea, and weakened back to a Tropical Depression. Despite being forecasted to dissipate the next day, it regained strength, and eventually became a Cat.1, then Cat.2, and after rapid strengthening, it became a Category 4 hurricane off the coast of southern California. It made landfall in north-east San Diego at peak intensity, causing millions of dollars in damage and killing almost 1,000 people. It went over land and caused flash floods in South-East California, Arizona, Western New Mexico, Southern Colorado, Southern Utah, and South-East Nevada before dissipating.

Other Events That Happened During The Hurricane
The hurricane caused a small tornado outbreak in Central Arizona, the strongest being an F3 tornado in Phoenix. The outbreak killed 0 and had 18 tornadoes. Other then that, the hurricane caused nothing else, not even a major boat sink.