1961 St. Petersburg, Florida, tornado explained

1961 St. Petersburg, Florida, tornado
Formed:May 5, 1961, 5:15 p.m. EST
Fujitascale:F2
Fatalities:None, 0 injuries
Damages:$25,000 (1961 USD)
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Enhanced:no
Partof:the Tornado outbreak sequence of May 3–9, 1961, and the tornadoes and tornado outbreaks of 1961

On Friday, May 5, 1961, a strong tornado impacted the city of St. Petersburg, Florida. The tornado, which only touched down briefly, was estimated to have produced F2 damage on the Fujita scale. It struck the Northeast High School and the nearby Meadowlawn neighborhood in the extreme northern part of St. Petersburg, traveling NaNabbr=onNaNabbr=on and producing a 50adj=midNaNadj=mid path. The tornado was part of a much larger outbreak sequence that produced 73 tornadoes. The parent thunderstorm that spawned the tornado was also attended by NaNinches hail.

Meteorological synopsis

On Friday, May 5, 1961, weather forecasters and surface weather maps indicated that a warm front was to lift northward over the Florida peninsula. As the front moved north, a warm, moist air mass expanded over the southern two-thirds of the state. Forecasters predicted that afternoon high temperatures over Central Florida would reach well into the 80s° F. By early afternoon, temperatures exceeded expectations, reaching a high of 93abbr=onNaNabbr=on in the St. Petersburg area, creating atmospheric instability conducive to thunderstorm development. At 5:00 p.m. local time, severe storms developed over the Tampa Bay Area.[1]

Storm development, track, and impact

Shortly after 5:00 p.m., a tornado touched down at 1155 53rd Avenue North in northern St. Petersburg. There, the tornado unroofed a home, bending a television antenna and dropping it on an automobile. Next, the tornado moved northwestward to 5445 16th Street North, where it unroofed a second home. After striking the two homes, the tornado hit the campus of Northeast High School. According to then school principal John Sexton, the tornado unroofed a triangular portion of the tar paper roof that covered the north wing of the school, exposing three rooms to rain. Up to 2abbr=onNaNabbr=on of water covered the floor inside, and school supplies which had been prepared over seven years were ruined. However, because school had ended for the day, no students were inside, and no injuries were reported. Nearby observers reported garbage cans and beach balls flying through the air. The tornado apparently dissipated after hitting the school, as no further damage was noted, though power in the nearby Meadowlawn neighborhood was out at 5:30 p.m. Losses were estimated at $25,000.[2]

Non-tornadic effects

In addition to the tornado, severe thunderstorm winds unroofed a home at 245 78th Avenue North, near Fossil Park. Additionally, widespread hail, ranging up to NaNinches in diameter, was reported everywhere in St. Petersburg except in the Greater Pinellas Point and Jungle Terrace sections.[3]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Multiple sources:
  2. Multiple sources:
    • News: All Hail Breaks Loose In St. Petersburg Area. St. Petersburg Times. May 6, 1961. St. Petersburg, Florida. 1B.
  3. News: All Hail Breaks Loose In St. Petersburg Area. St. Petersburg Times. May 6, 1961. St. Petersburg, Florida. 1B.