1956 McDonald Chapel tornado explained

1956 McDonald Chapel tornado
Fujitascale:F4
Casualties:25 fatalities, 200 injuries

The 1956 McDonald Chapel tornado was a deadly weather event that took place during the afternoon of Sunday April 15, 1956, across the Greater Birmingham area in Jefferson County, Alabama, with damage most severe in McDonald Chapel. The F4 tornado killed 25 people and injured 200 others. While only two known tornadoes touched down across the Southeastern United States (the other occurred in northern Georgia) on that day, the Birmingham tornado produced major devastation across areas west and north of downtown Birmingham.

Meteorological synopsis

At 5:15 a.m. CST on April 15, the U.S. Weather Bureau office in Birmingham, Alabama, issued a bulletin that warned of the possibility that a "tornado or two" would touch down in an area covering western Tennessee, northern Mississippi, and northern Alabama—namely, Lauderdale, Limestone, Lawrence, Colbert, and Morgan Counties, plus parts of Marion, Winston, Cullman, and Madison Counties.[1] An update at noon local time highlighted the prospects of severe thunderstorms over west-central Alabama between 1:00–7:00 p.m. CST. Hail and gusts to 60mi/h were expected to remain the primary hazards.[2]

Confirmed tornadoes

April 14 event

List of confirmed tornadoes – April 14, 1956
Location County State Time (UTC) Path length Damage
bgcolor=# F1MorenciLenaweeMI00000.1milesA barn was shifted off its foundation.[3]
bgcolor=# F1SE of MinneolaClarkKS01000.1milesA barn and a cattle shed were destroyed.
bgcolor=# F1MidlothianEllisTX02001milesResidences and barns were unroofed, and some small buildings were destroyed. The tornado path was 200yd wide.
Sources: NCDC Storm Events Database, Grazulis 1993

April 15 event

List of confirmed tornadoes – April 15, 1956
Location County State Time (UTC) Path length Damage
bgcolor=# F4Pleasant Grove to NW of TrussvilleJeffersonAL210021.3miles25 deaths – See section on this tornado – At least 200 people were injured. 48 people were still listed as hospitalized on April 17, two days after the tornado. Total damage reached $1.5 million.
bgcolor=# F2SW of Dallas to CummingPaulding, Cobb, Cherokee, ForsythGA233046.8milesAbout 25 homes were damaged, and others were unroofed near Dallas and Cumming. 29 broiler houses were damaged or destroyed as well. F1 damage occurred south of Acworth and north of Woodstock. Widespread downburst activity was reported along the path.
Sources: NCDC Storm Events Database, Grazulis 1993

McDonald Chapel/Sayreton, Alabama

McDonald Chapel/Sayreton, Alabama
Fujitascale:F4
Casualties:25 fatalities, 200 injuries
Enhanced:no

The tornado started shortly before 3:00 PM CDT in Pleasant Grove, where a tornado "roar" was heard. Damage between Pleasant Grove and McDonald Chapel indicated that trees were felled in a single direction, so the damage was not listed as tornadic at first, but was considered part of the tornado in posthumous analysis. Next, the tornado struck McDonald Chapel, with a path 200yd wide, devastating the community. Almost total destruction occurred in a swath 150– wide. As it passed through McDonald Chapel, eyewitnesses described the tornado funnel as appearing filled with fire and smoke. Many homes in McDonald Chapel were leveled, several of which were swept completely away. The most intense damage appeared to be F5 in intensity, but an F4 rating was rewarded because the homes were very poorly constructed. One of the homes reportedly had almost all of its brick foundation swept away, and a few larger homes were also leveled. The tornado continued across parts of Edgewater, Pratt City, Fultondale, Village Creek, and Tarrant before lifting northwest of Trussville, near the Jefferson-St. Clair County line. The tornado passed just one to two miles north of downtown Birmingham as well as the Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport. About 400 homes across northern Jefferson County were either damaged or destroyed. Most of the 25 deaths occurred at McDonald Chapel.

The tornado event was similar to other deadly tornadoes on April 4, 1977, April 8, 1998, and April 27, 2011. The 1977 and 1998 tornadoes were rated F5, and killed 22 and 32 people, respectively, across most of the same areas that were hit in 1956. The 2011 event was rated high-end EF4, and killed 20 people in the area along with 44 others in Tuscaloosa earlier along its path. With 25 fatalities, the McDonald Chapel F4 was the deadliest tornado of 1956, surpassing the Grand Rapids F5 that killed 18 people on April 3.

See also

Notes

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McDonald Chapel F-4 Tornado - Jefferson County April 15, 1956. National Weather Service. 12 June 2014. Birmingham, Alabama. 13 February 2013.
  2. Web site: North America Tornado Cases 1950 to 1959 . bangladeshtornadoes.org . 21 April 2022.
  3. Storm Data and Unusual Weather Phenomena. Climatological Data National Summary. 1956. 7. 4. 120–122. United States Department of Commerce. Asheville, North Carolina.