The name Grace has been used for nineteen tropical cyclones worldwide: six in the Atlantic Ocean, ten in the Western Pacific Ocean, two in the Australian region of the South Pacific Ocean. and one in the South-West Indian Ocean.
In the Atlantic:
In the Western Pacific:
- Tropical Storm Grace (1945) â approached Japan.
- Typhoon Grace (1950) (T5008) â Category 1 typhoon that made landfall in South Korea as a tropical storm.
- Typhoon Grace (1954) (T5405) â affected Japan.
- Super Typhoon Grace (1958) (T5819) â Category 5 super-typhoon with 190 mph winds and a pressure of 905 mbar that moved through the Ryukyu Islands and made landfall in Zhejiang.
- Tropical Storm Grace (1961) (30W) â Japan Meteorological Agency analyzed it as a tropical depression, not as a tropical storm.
- Tropical Storm Grace (1964) (T6410, 13W) â executed a loop before re-strengthening and eventually dissipating southeast of Japan.
- Tropical Storm Grace (1966) (T6623, 25W) â near typhoon-force storm that did not affect land.
- Typhoon Grace (1969) (T6913, 16W) â Category 2 typhoon, remained over the open ocean.
- Tropical Storm Grace (1972) (T7219, 19W, Osang) â took an erratic track east of Luzon.
- Tropical Storm Grace (1975) (T7517, 20W, Oniang) â took an erratic track east of Luzon, eventually dissipated in the Bering Sea.
In the Australian region:
- Cyclone Grace (1984) â Category 3 severe tropical cyclone (Australian scale) that affected Queensland.
- Cyclone Grace (2004) â Category 2 cyclone (Australian scale) that resulted in nearly 30 in. of rainfall and $20 million in damage in Australia.
In the South-West Indian:
See also