I believe that Audrey was not a cat 4 at landfall.
Well, I certainly respect your view on the matter, and likewise we're all entitled our opinions, and they vary widely on just about every controversy--even among pro-mets. But until some fairly sound data beyond hindsight application of an algorithm that for all it's acceptance is by no means infallible, I will believe almost ALL the historical accounts which show it was not only a 4, but a fairly strong one with wind speeds at approx. 144 mph. It's kind of difficult to ascertain with any certainty what storms of the past may have been as actual data (especially of both barometric pressure and wind speeds) become less and less reliable as one goes back further in time; hence beyond speculation, there just is no way to prove it one way or the other.
I do know that official NWS advisories show the following:
Name:AUDREY/Date:1957/6/27/0600Z/Latitude:27.9/Longitude:-93.8/Wind:133mph (115 knots) /Central Pressure:999/Category:Hurricane - Category 4
Name:AUDREY/Date:1957/6/27/1200Z/Latitude:29.3/Longitude:-93.8/Wind:144mph (125 knots) /Central Pressure:946/Category:Hurricane - Category 4 **approx. 20 nm from Landfall
She was clearly actually strengthening as she moved in.
with the annotation:
All information from the official hurricane advisories.
Additionally, from a NOAA site, the following is noted about Audrey:
Highest winds were reported to 96 m.p.h. at the NWS site with reports up to 105 m.p.h. in Lake Charles. An unofficial report of 180 m.p.h. winds was received from an oil rig, however this could have been associated with a severe thunderstorm embedded within Audrey's eye wall. Oil company tenders
reported 150 m.p.h. winds which, although they are unofficial, are believed to be reasonably accurate.
And surge data isn't nearly as accurate as it is today; but we do know beyond doubt that Audrey's storm surge pushed in 25 MILES. I dunno--maybe a "marginal 3" could do all that; but unless/until shown otherwise, I'll go with the official records.
A2K