Flint-Worcester tornado outbreak sequence

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Flint-Worcester tornado outbreak
An F4 tornado near Erie, Michigan.Photo courtesy of NOAA
An F4 tornado near Erie, Michigan.
Photo courtesy of NOAA
Date of tornado outbreak: June 7 - June 9, 1953
Duration1: 3 days
Maximum rated tornado2: F5 tornado
Tornadoes caused: 46
Damages: $2.56 billion (2006 USD)
Fatalities: 243
Areas affected: Midwest & Northeast United States

1Time from first tornado to last tornado
2Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita Scale

The Flint-Worcester Tornadoes were two tornadoes, one occurring in Flint, Michigan on June 8, 1953, the other in Worcester, Massachusetts on June 9, 1953. These tornadoes are among the deadliest in United States history and were caused by the same storm system that moved eastward across the nation. The tornadoes are also related together in the public mind because, for a brief period following the Worcester Tornado, it was debated in the U.S. Congress whether recent atomic bomb testing in the upper atmosphere had caused the tornadoes. Congressman James E. Van Zandt (R-Penn.) was among several members of Congress who expressed their belief that the June 4th bomb testing created the tornadoes, which occurred far outside the traditional tornado alley. They demanded a response from the government. Meteorologists quickly dispelled such an assertion, and Congressman Van Zandt later retracted his statement.

The Flint-Worcester Tornadoes were the most infamous storms produced by a larger outbreak of severe weather that began in Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin, before moving across the Great Lakes states, and then into New York and New England. Other F3 and F4 tornadoes struck other locations in Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire and Ohio.

Contents

[edit] Confirmed tornadoes

Confirmed
Total
Confirmed
F0
Confirmed
F1
Confirmed
F2
Confirmed
F3
Confirmed
F4
Confirmed
F5
46 11 9 13 7 5 1

This chart shows the number of tornadoes spawned from the initial storm system.

[edit] June 7, 1953 event

List of confirmed tornadoes - June 7, 1953
F#
Location
County
Time (UTC)
Path length
Damage
Kansas
F1 E of Morland Graham 1900 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F2 S of Hill City Graham 1900 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F0 S of Edmond Graham 1900 10.9 miles
(17.4 km)
F0 NE of Tampa to SW of Herington Marion, Dickinson 0445 12.6 miles
(20.2 km)
Colorado
F1 W of Julesburg Sedgwick 2000 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F1 N of Julesburg Sedgwick 2000 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F0 SW of Julesburg (1st tornado) Sedgwick 2200 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F0 SW of Julesburg (2nd tornado) Sedgwick 2200 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F0 NW of Julesburg Sedgwick 2200 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
Nebraska
F2 NE of Mason City Custer, Sherman, Valley 2030 6.6 miles
(10.6 km)
F2 NW of Giltner Hamilton 2100 6.6 miles
(10.6 km)
F0 S of Phillips Hamilton 2100 4.1 miles
(6.6 km)
F1 NE of Rising City to NW of Linwood Butler 2100 22.7 miles
(36.3 km)
F4 NW of Loup City to SW of Ord Sherman, Valley 2115 15 miles
(24 km)
11 deaths
F2 E of Scotia to SW of Spalding Greeley 2200 20.1 miles
(32.2 km)
F2 NE of Octavia Butler 2200 6.9 miles
(11 km)
F3 NW of Albion Boone 2215 8 miles
(12.8 km)
F0 SE of Upland Franklin 2230 9 miles
(14.4 km)
F1 E of Macon Franklin 2300 15 miles
(24 km)
F2 SW of Battle Creek to S of Pierce Madison 2300 16.6 miles
(26.6 km)
F2 SW of Pierce to SW of Laurel Pierce, Cedar 2300 31 miles
(49.6 km)
F1 N of Breslau Pierce 2310 8.2 miles
(13.1 km)
F0 SW of Martinsburg Dixon 2340 1.5 miles
(2.4 km)
F2 NW of Blair Washington 0045 4.1 miles
(6.6 km)
F0 S of Hooper Dodge 0100 1 miles
(1.6 km)
South Dakota
F0 N of Mitchell Davison 2345 1.5 miles
(2.4 km)
Iowa
F2 NE of Westfield Plymouth 0015 11.3 miles
(18.1 km)
F2 N of Ida Grove to E of Fenton Ida, Sac, Pocahontas, Kossuth 0130 49.2 miles
(78.7 km)
F2 N of Gowne to SW of Olaf Webster, Hamilton, Wright 0300 49 miles
(78.4 km)
F3 W of Pomeroy to SE of Bode Calhoun, Pocahontas, Humboldt 0315 30.7 miles
(49.1 km)
F2 NE of Winterset to E of Walford Madison, Warren, Polk, Jasper, Poweshiek, Iowa, Johnson 0315 116 miles
(185.6 km)
F1 E of Boxholm Boone, Hamilton 0330 2.3 miles
(3.7 km)
Minnesota
F1 SE of Trimont to SE of Grogan Martin, Watonwan 0100 19.1 miles
(30.6 km)
Source: Tornado History Project - June 7, 1953 Storm Data

[edit] June 8, 1953 event

List of confirmed tornadoes - June 8, 1953
F#
Location
County
Time (UTC)
Path length
Damage
Michigan
F4 NE of Temperance Monroe 2315 5.4 miles
(8.6 km)
4 deaths
F3 SW of Ann Arbor Washtenaw 0030 11.3 miles
(18.1 km)
1 death
F3 W of Milford Livingston, Oakland 0030 9.1 miles
(14.6 km)
F2 E of Sand Lake to N of Oscoda Iosco 0040 16.6 miles
(26.6 km)
4 deaths
F3 S of Spruce Alcona 0108 1.8 miles
(2.9 km)
F5 N of Flushing to N of Columbiaville Genesee, Lapeer 0130 18.9 miles
(30.2 km)
116 deaths
F0 SW of Caseville Huron 0300 0.1 miles
(0.16 km)
F4 N of Kingshill to N of Port Huron Lapeer, St. Clair 0330 33.8 miles
(54.1 km)
Ohio
F4 N of Deshler to Cleveland Henry, Wood, Sandusky, Erie, Lorain, Cuyahoga 0000 118 miles
(188.8 km)
17 deaths
Source: Tornado History Project - June 8, 1953 Storm Data

[edit] June 9, 1953 event

List of confirmed tornadoes - June 9, 1953
F#
Location
County
Time (UTC)
Path length
Damage
Massachusetts
F4 SE of Petersham to N of Cordaville Worcester 2025 34.9 miles
(55.8 km)
90 deaths
F3 E of West Millbury to SE of Foxborough Worcester, Norfolk, Bristol 2130 28 miles
(44.8 km)
New Hampshire
F3 SW of Exeter Rockingham 2120 1.5 miles
(2.4 km)
F1 W of South Berwick Strafford 2200 1 miles
(1.6 km)
Source: Tornado History Project - June 9, 1953 Storm Data

[edit] Flint tornado

tornado track map, showing the times and paths of the June 8, 1953 tornadoes in the Flint, Michigan area, and around Lake Erie, in northern Ohio.
tornado track map, showing the times and paths of the June 8, 1953 tornadoes in the Flint, Michigan area, and around Lake Erie, in northern Ohio.

An F5 tornado hit Flint, Michigan on June 8, 1953.[1] The tornado moved east-northeast 2 miles north of Flushing, Michigan and devastated the north side of Flint and Beecher. The tornado first descended about 8:30 p.m. on a humid evening near a drive-in movie theater that was flickering to life at twilight time. Motorists in the drive-in began to flee in panic, creating many auto accidents on nearby roads. The tornado dissipated near Lapeer, Michigan. Nearly every home was destroyed on both sides of Coldwater Road. Multiple deaths were reported in 20 families. It is, as of March 2007, the last single tornado to kill more than 100 people in the United States. One hundred and sixteen were killed,[2] making it the ninth deadliest tornado in U.S. history. It is also one of only three F5 tornadoes ever to hit in Michigan. Another F5 would hit in Hudsonville on April 3, 1956.

[edit] Worcester tornado

The storm system that created the Flint tornado moved eastward over southern Ontario and Lake Erie during the early morning hours of June 9. As radar was still relatively primitive in 1953, inadequate severe weather predictions resulted: the Weather Bureau in Buffalo, New York merely predicted thunderstorms and said that "a tornado may occur." As early as 10 A.M., the Weather Bureau in Boston anticipated the likelihood of tornadic conditions that afternoon but feared that the word "tornado" would strike panic in the public, and refrained from using it. Instead, as a compromise, they issued New England's first-ever severe thunderstorm watch. Several hours later and virtually without warning (to the public at least), a strong F4 tornado struck central Massachusetts in the late afternoon hours on June 9, 1953. The tornado descended over the Quabbin Reservoir in Petersham, Massachusetts at 4:25 P.M., and was witnessed by boaters on the reservoir. It then slammed into the rural towns of Barre and Rutland, followed by suburban Holden, before killing 60 in heavily populated northern Worcester. The towns of Shrewsbury and Westborough each suffered numerous fatalities. The tornado did its final destruction at the Fayville post office on Route 9 in Southborough, and dissipated nearby over the Sudbury Reservoir (in the Framingham area), 84 minutes after it formed.

Ninety-four people were killed.

Coincidentally, residents of central Massachusetts were coming home from work in the minutes before impact and picked up their evening newspapers to read the front-page headlines of the tornado that had just struck Flint, Michigan the previous evening. Some wondered if it was exactly the same tornado that was now bearing down on them.

Outbreak death toll
State Total County County
total
Massachusetts 94 Worcester 94
Michigan 125 Genesee 116
Iosco 4
Monroe 4
Washtenaw 1
Nebraska 11 Valley 11
Ohio 17 Cuyahoga 6
Erie 2
Henry 5
Lorain 1
Wood 3
Totals 247
All deaths were tornado-related

The massive Worcester tornado was on the ground for nearly an hour and a half. In that period it traveled 46 miles, reached 1 mile in width and injured 1,300 people. Barre suffered the first 2 fatalities. The tornado then renewed its vigor in Rutland center with 2 more deaths, and widened to 1/2 mile in Holden, where 9 were killed, the worst-hit areas being Winthrop Oaks & Brentwood.

At 5:08 P.M., the tornado entered Worcester and grew to an unprecedented width of 1 mile. Damage was phenomenal in Worcester (at that time the second largest city in New England) and in some areas equaled the worst damage seen in the history of U.S. tornadoes. Hard-hit areas included the old Assumption College (which is now Quinsigamond Community College), where a priest and 2 nuns among the facility were killed. The nearby Burncoat Hill neighborhood saw heavy devastation, but it was the Great Brook Valley neighborhood that was utterly leveled, with houses simply vanishing and debris swept clean from their original sites. Forty people died in this particular area. A bus was picked up, rolled over several times and thrown against an apartment building, resulting in the deaths of 2 passengers. The Brookside Home Farm, a city-operated dairy facility and laundry, sustained total damage, with 6 men and most of its 80 Holstein cows killed. Wrecked houses and bodies were blown into Lake Quinsigamond. One victim reportedly perished when suction from the tornado ripped open his chest due to rapid lung expansion.

The funnel maintained a 1-mile width throughout much of Shrewsbury, and was still doing maximum damage when it moved through downtown Westborough, where it began curving towards the northeast in its final leg. Coincidentally, around the time it ended in Southborough at 5:45 P.M., a tornado warning was issued, although by then it was too late. A separate F2 tornado also struck about the same time the warning was issued, in the nearby communities of Sutton, Northbridge, Mendon, Bellingham, Franklin, Wrentham & Mansfield in Massachusetts, injuring 17 persons. Another tornado did minor damage and caused several injuries in Fremont, Salem, & Exeter in Rockingham County, New Hampshire; other smaller tornadoes occurred in Colrain, Mass. & Rollinsford, N.H.

Baseball-size hail was reported in a score of communities affected by the Worcester supercell. Airborne debris was strewn eastward, reaching the Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory 35 mi (56 km) away, and even out over Massachusetts Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. The farthest documented distance of tornado debris was an item that blew from Holden to Eastham (on Cape Cod), a distance of 110 miles. This is one of the greatest such instances in a U.S. tornado.

The Worcester Tornado was a milestone in many regards, not only because of its enormous size and unusual geographic location. It was also the nation's costliest tornado in raw dollars at the time, and its 1,300 injuries still stand as the 4th worst in U.S. history. However, its greatest legacy to the nation at large was that it was the catalyst for the Storm Prediction Center's reorganization on June 17, 1953, and subsequent implementation of a nationwide radar system. In terms of fatalities, it is the last tornado (as of April 2007) to kill more than 90 people, making it the 19th worst on record.

The severity of this epic storm remained in dispute for a long period within the meteorological community. Official observations classified this tornado as F4, but damage was consistent with an F5 tornado in 5 of the affected towns (Rutland, Holden, Worcester, Shrewsbury & Westborough). As a result of this debate, the National Weather Service took an unprecedented step and convened a panel of weather experts during the spring of 2005 to study the latest evidence on the wind strength of the Worcester Tornado. The panel considered whether or not to raise the designation of the storm to F5, but finally decided during the summer of 2005 to keep the official rating as a strong F4. The reasoning for this was that the anchoring techniques used in many of the destroyed or vanished homes could never now be ascertained with certainty, and some of these structures (many of recent postwar construction) were possibly more vulnerable to high winds than older homes.[citation needed] Without a proper engineering qualification, it would be nearly impossible to determine with 100% accuracy which damage was F5 and which was F4, as appearances would be similar.

[edit] 1953 tornado season in perspective

Damage in Beecher, Michigan.
Damage in Beecher, Michigan.

Even though the 1953 tornado season only saw 422 tornadoes (which is half the nationwide average), the year saw some of the deadliest tornadoes, which included the Waco Tornado that hit on May 11.

[edit] References

  • Chittick, William F. (2003). The Worcester Tornado, June 9, 1953. Bristol, RI: Private Publication.
  • Chittick, William F. (2005). What Is So Rare As A Day In June: The Worcester Tornado, June 9, 1953. Bristol, RI: Multimedia Presentation.
  • O'Toole, John M. (1993). Tornado! 84 minutes, 94 lives. Worcester: Chandler House Press. ISBN 0-9636277-0-8

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Southeast Michigan Tornado Climatology. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
  2. ^ 1953 Beecher Tornado. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links