User:Censusdata/sandbox
Appearance
Type | Tornado outbreak |
---|---|
Duration | April 15-16, 1921 |
Tornadoes confirmed | 34 |
Max. rating1 | F4 tornado |
Fatalities | 90 deaths, 676 injuries |
Damage | Unknown |
Areas affected | Southern United States |
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale |
The April 1921 tornado outbreak occurred on April 8-9, 1919 in the Southern United States, producing numerous strong tornadoes and killing at least 90 people.[1]
Confirmed tornadoes
FU | F0 | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 29 | 4 | 1 | 0 | = 34 |
April 15 event
F# | States | Location | County | Time (UTC) | Path length | Damage |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F2 | MS | Near Crystal Springs | Copiah | unk | unk | 1 injury when home destroyed |
F2 | TX | N to NE of Mineola | Wood | 1245 | 5 miles | 2 injuries, several homes destroyed. Likely beginning point of violent tornado family |
F2 | TX | SW to NE of Gladewater | Upshur | 1340 | 15 miles | 7 injuries, all near end of path were widespread downburst winds also occurred |
F4 | TX, AR | Mims Chapel TX to Delight AR | Marion TX, Cass TX, Miller AR, Hempstead AR, Pike AR | 1410 | 112 miles | 59 fatalities, 300 injuries Likely a tornado family. Witnesses often described twin tornadoes or multiple vortices. Damage was catastrophic from it's beginning in Mims Chapel as it devastated community after community into Arkansas. It veered NNE near end of path. |
F2 | TX | N of O'Farrell to SW of Texarkana | Cass, Bowie | 1515 | 20 miles | 2 fatalities, 25 injuries Traveled parallel and 10 miles east of larger tornado event. Two people in an open field died in Bowie Co |
F2 | MS | S of Morton | Scott | 1530 | unk | 10 injuries, 15 homes damaged |
F3 | AR | NW Gravelly | Yell | 1530 | 5 miles | 1 fatality, 25 injuries 10 homes destroyed, one was blown 100 yards away. |
F3 | AR | Gravelly | Yell | 1530 | 5 miles | 1 fatality, 25 injuries 10 homes destroyed, one was blown 100 yards away. |
April 9 event
F# | States | Location | County | Time (UTC) | Path length | Damage |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F2 | TX | E and NE of Bells | Grayson | 0030 | 12 miles | 2 fatalities, 20 injuries Two dozen homes destroyed E of Bells in Canaan community. Moved mostly due N the tornado hit and derailed a freight train, killing one worker |
F4 | TX, OK | SE of Whitewright TX to Mulberry OK | Grayson TX, Fannin TX, Bryan OK | 0045 | 25 miles | 8 fatalities, 50 injuries Tornado moved NNE and devastated towns of Mulberry TX and Yarnaby OK |
F2 | OK | Near Albany | Bryan | 0100 | unk | 1 fatality, 3 injuries Woman killed when home was destroyed in Albany |
F2 | TX | Near Mullin | Mills | 0110 | 2 miles | 1 injury, damage to 20 homes and a bank in Mullin |
F3 | OK | SW of Roberta to NW of Durant | Bryan | 0145 | 10 miles | 9 fatalities, 35 injuries All deaths in Roberta, where damage was significant |
F2 | OK | Armstrong area | Bryan | 0200 | unk | 5 injuries, houses and oil tanker hit, trees downstream were coated with oil |
F3 | OK | NW of Bromide to E of Durant | Coal, Pontotoc | 0230 | 20 miles | 1 fatalities, 4 injuries Homes damaged SE of Jesse |
F4 | TX | N of Eustace SE of Grand Saline | Henderson, Van Zandt | 0330 | 30 miles | 17 fatalities, 60 injuries Most of Eustace was wiped out. Tornado may have been up to 1.5 miles wide or had multiple funnels |
F4 | TX | SE of Mineola W of Mount Pleasant | Wood, Camp, Titus | 0415 | 50 miles | 24 fatalities, 100 injuries Continuous path of catastrophic destruction up to one mile wide. Entire families were injured or killed as hundreds of homes were obliterated. |
F2 | TX | SW to NE of Oak Grove | Red River, Bowie | 0500 | 10 miles | 4 fatalities, 15 injuries Significant damage in Oak Grove. Three more people may have later died from injuries. |
F3 | TX, AR | NW of Texarkana TX to N of Columbus AR | Bowie TX, Little River AR, Hempstead AR, Howard AR | 0715 | 30 miles | 8 fatalities, 59 injuries Killed two in Texas before crossing into Arkansas and devastating the community of Ogden. Four more died in [Saratoga, Arkansas|Saratoga]]. |
See also
References
Bibliography
- Grazulis, Thomas (1993), Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991: A Chronology and Analysis of Events, St. Johnsbury, Vermont: Environmental Films, ISBN 1-879362-03-1