I did a presentation three weeks ago for Hawaii State Civil Defense (we are updating our hurricane and tsunami plans), the stat I pulled from Boat US is 65,000 vessels damaged or destroyed by Hurricane Sandy.
My Dad's cat boat was found on land, wedged between a couple of trees a half mile from the yard where it had been hauled for the winter two days before. My nephew's Opti floated from Bay Head YC to someone's yard across Barnegat Bay. The new inlet cut at Mantoloking by the storm has been filled.
In comparison, the "Long Island Express" hurricane of 1938 which was bigger, and badder, cost 680 lives plus 700 injuries, $400 million in property damage, destroyed 4500 homes and farms, damaged 15139 others: 2605 vessels lost, 3369 damaged; 26,000 automobiles smashed, and 275,000,000 trees broken off or uprooted. From Everett Allen's 1976 A Wind to Shake the World. Density is the difference. But for us many lost boats that no longer show on the registry were destroyed in 1938.
Jon, glad the family is ok, and hope they are getting back to normality.