Data from these years was extremely unreliable, so there were many more typhoons that did not hit land and were not detected by ships.
In September 1906, a typhoon struck China near Hong Kong, killing around 15,000 people, and causing US$20 million in damage.
From March 26–27, a typhoon moved through the Caroline Islands, killing 473 people in the archipelago.
On August 26, the track shifted more to the west-northwest, bringing it over the Batanes islands offshore northern Luzon.
That night, the storm approached southwest coast of Taiwan (then known as Formosa) with great intensity, possibly moving over the island.
The storm made landfall in eastern China on August 27 and continued northward for three more days.
[5] In September, a typhoon killed 1,000 people and left US$20 million in damage when it struck Japan and sank the SS Kiche Maru.
In September, a typhoon struck the Japanese island of Honshu, killing 4,000 people and leaving US$50 million in damage.
In November, a typhoon killed 129 people when it struck Majuro in the Marshall Islands.