1944 Appalachians tornado outbreak

The 1944 Appalachians tornado outbreak was a deadly tornado outbreak that hit the Midwest and Middle Atlantic regions of the United States on June 22–23, 1944. The outbreak produced several strong tornadoes in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Maryland—areas that were falsely believed to be immune to tornadoes.[1] Particularly hard hit was the town of Shinnston in Harrison County, West Virginia, which was destroyed by a violent F4 tornado before 9:00 PM EDT on June 23. Thirty people died at Shinnston and at least 104 were killed in the state of West Virginia by this and two other intense tornadoes.[2] The outbreak itself was and still remains the deadliest tornado outbreak ever to hit the state of West Virginia.[3] The Shinnston tornado was and is the only tornado to produce violent damage in West Virginia.[4] No violent (F4–F5) tornado has hit West Virginia before or since the 1944 outbreak.[1]

Meteorological synopsis

Tornado table

Confirmed tornadoes by Fujita rating
F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
? ? 1 3 3 0 ≥ 7

June 23

June 23, 1944
F#
Location
County
Time (UTC)
Path length
Comments/Damage
Pennsylvania
F3 Rural Valley to Twin Rocks Armstrong, Indiana, Cambria 2230 30 miles (48 km) 2 deaths – A long-tracked tornado damaged about 50 homes or farmsites in Armstrong County, though only a single home was destroyed; three people were injured. In Indiana County, the tornado destroyed 15 homes, killing two people.[2] Damage in Cambria County may have been caused by downburst winds. Total losses reached $2 million (1944 USD).[2]
F4 S of Pittsburgh to NW of Somerset Allegheny, Westmoreland, Somerset 2330 50 miles (80 km) 17 deaths – This major tornado affected what is now part of the Pittsburgh metropolitan area, beginning only 8 mi (13 km) south of Pittsburgh. The tornado killed 17 people in Allegheny County, near McKeesport, mainly in the communities of Dravosburg, Port Vue, Versailles, Boston, and Greenock.[2] In these communities, the tornado destroyed almost 88 homes and damaged 306. Many multi-story dwellings were leveled or torn apart, some single-story residences were also leveled, and more than 400 other structures were damaged or destroyed.[2] As the tornado paralleled the Pennsylvania Turnpike, it destroyed six more homes near Donegal and two near Somerset. 200 people were injured.[2]
Ohio
F2 S of Edinburg to S of Palmyra Portage, Mahoning 2300 8 miles (13 km) Two farmhouses sustained near-F3 damage and eight others were reported damaged. The tornado killed livestock and damaged barns and outbuildings.[2]
West Virginia
F4 Wellsburg to N of Oakland, MD Brooke, Washington (PA), Greene (PA), Fayette (PA), Preston (WV), Garrett (MD) 2311 85 miles (137 km) 30 deaths – The first of three major, long-lived, violent tornadoes was probably a tornado family that began in West Virginia. The tornado touched down in Wellsburg, unroofing 20 homes and fatally injuring a girl on a farm nearby.[2] The tornado killed 22 people in 15 mi (24 km) of path across Greene County, leveling numerous homes, including 53 in the mining community of "Chartiers" (10 deaths), east of Clarksville. The tornado killed eight more people at "Dry Tavern," near Rices Landing, and destroyed a total of 86 homes in Pennsylvania.[2] After striking Dry Tavern, the tornado passed near Smithfield (then also called Smithville) before lifting for some time. Debris from the storm fell in nearby Uniontown.[2] The tornado may have dissipated and redeveloped into a new tornado that crossed into Maryland, killing three people, injuring 25, and destroying seven homes.[2]
F4 NW of Wyatt to Shinnston to Cheat Mountain Marion, Harrison, Taylor, Barbour, Tucker, Randolph 0030 60 miles (97 km) 100+ deaths[1] – At about 8:30 p.m. EDT,[5][6][7] a powerful tornado touched down in Marion County, West Virginia, northwest of Wyatt. It quickly intensified as it moved to the southeast, killing three people in four homes that were destroyed in Joetown.[2] Over the next 10 mi (16 km), the tornado widened to 1 mi (1.6 km) across and killed at least 72 people. First, the funnel devastated the town of Shinnston, killing about 30 people in the "Pleasant Hill" part of town.[2] Numerous homes in Pleasant Hill were leveled and had their debris blown into the West Fork River.[6][7] In the Shinnston area, bark was peeled from trees, a steel radio tower was broken off, vehicles were moved almost 100 feet (30 m) from where they originated, and a large gas plant was leveled.[6][7][8] After striking Shinnston, the tornado killed three people at "Peora Hill" and also hit the "Wyatt" farming community, both southeast of Shinnston.[2][7] In Taylor County, the tornado killed nine more people, including seven in one family at Simpson. The tornado produced nine other deaths in and near Meadowville, Nestorville, and Philippi.[2] The path passed near Montrose (seven deaths) and ended north of Alpena, on the slopes of Cheat Mountain. 381 people were injured.[2] The death toll was at least 100: some sources indicate that 103 rather than 100 people died in this tornado.[4]
F3 Thomas Tucker 0325 1 mile (1.6 km) 3 deaths – A tornado damaged or destroyed about 50 homes.[2]
Maryland
F3 Cambridge to Delmar, DE Dorchester, Sussex (DE) 0415 28 miles (45 km) 2 deaths – This possible tornado family destroyed a gas station, two barns, three warehouses, and 13 homes at Cambridge. Two people died there, near the beginning of the path. Damages reached $1 million (1944 USD) at Cambridge. Only F1 damage occurred in Delaware as the tornado broke windows, chimneys, and fences.[2]
Sources: Grazulis, Significant, p. 915

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Grazulis, The Tornado, 235.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Grazulis, Significant Tornadoes, 915.
  3. Dietz, Leah (2007-09-14). "Quiet Montrose Community Was Marked By Tragic Tornado". The Inter-Mountain. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  4. 1 2 "West Virginia Hazardous Weather Awareness Week February 28-March 6, 2010" (PDF). Charleston, West Virginia: National Weather Service. March 30, 2010. p. 8. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  5. "CATASTROPHE: They Hoped for a Storm". Time. July 3, 1944. Retrieved April 20, 2010.
  6. 1 2 3 McCormick, Kyle. Shinnston Tornado, Charleston, West Virginia, West Virginia Department of Archives and History, 1958.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "Shinnston buries her beloved dead" (PDF). The Shinnston News. June 29, 1944. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  8. "Images of the Shinnston Tornado". West Virginia Division of Culture and History. 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2014.

Bibliography

External links

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