Journey to the coast with Michael Morgan as he looks back at the
area's most deadly storms.
Coastal Delaware, Maryland and Virginia have always been vulnerable to
the power of storms. In the early nineteenth century, storm-driven
shipwrecks led to the construction of the Delaware breakwater. In 1933,
a storm created an inlet on the south edge of Ocean City and changed the
character of the Maryland resort. The Ash Wednesday nor'easter of 1962
devastated oceanfront communities, led to the creation of beach
replenishment projects that pushed the ocean back from the new
multimillion-dollar buildings that sat on the sand and spurred the
creation of Assateague Island National Seashore. Michael Morgan narrates
the stories of these storms and reminds us of the power of wind and
water.