List of storms named One
Appearance
The name Hurricane One can reference to multiple tropical cyclones:
- Hurricane One (1851), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that made landfall in Medina County, Texas
- Hurricane One (1852), a Category 3 Atlantic hurricane also known as the Great Mobile Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1860), a Category 4 Atlantic hurricane that made landfall in Louisiana
- Hurricane One (1870), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane also known as the Mobile Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1896), a Category 2 Atlantic hurricane that made landfall east of Pensacola, Florida
- Hurricane One (1897), a Category 2 Atlantic hurricane that was first observed near Cape Verde and meandered over the Atlantic Ocean
- Hurricane One (1898), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that made landfall in Hobe Sound, Florida
- Hurricane One (1908), a Category 2 Atlantic hurricane also known as the 1908 March Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1913), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that made its final landfall in Padre Island, Texas
- Hurricane One (1918), a Category 3 Atlantic hurricane also known as the 1918 Louisiana Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1920), a Category 2 Atlantic hurricane that also meandered over the Atlantic Ocean
- Hurricane One (1925), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that developed somewhat close to the East Coast and moved northeastward
- Hurricane One (1928), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane also known as the 1928 Fort Pierce Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1929), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that made landfall near Matagorda Bay, Texas
- Hurricane One (1938), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that formed in January of that year
- Hurricane One (1943), a Category 2 Atlantic hurricane also known as the 1943 Surprise Hurricane
- Hurricane One (1944), a Category 1 Atlantic hurricane that passed through the Caribbean and took a turn to the northeast
- Hurricane One (1955), a Category 1 Pacific hurricane that meandered over the Pacific Ocean for about three days
- Hurricane One (1956), a Category 1 Pacific hurricane that meandered over the Pacific Ocean for about two days