1956 Birmingham tornado: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(New page: The '''April 1956 Birmingham tornado''' was a deadly tornado that took place during the afternoon of April 15, 1956 across the [[Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman Combined Statistical Area...)
 
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:1956 Jeffco tornado damage.jpg|right|thumb|450px|View of tornado damage by Earnest Hardin for ''The Birmingham News''.]]
The '''April 1956 Birmingham tornado''' was a deadly tornado that took place during the afternoon of [[April 15]], [[1956]] across the [[Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman Combined Statistical Area|Greater Birmingham]] area. Later rated an F4 on the Fujita scale (not invented until 1971), the tornado killed 25 and injured about 200 people.  
The '''April 1956 Birmingham tornado''' was a deadly tornado that took place during the afternoon of [[April 15]], [[1956]] across the [[Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman Combined Statistical Area|Greater Birmingham]] area. Later rated an F4 on the Fujita scale (not invented until 1971), the tornado killed 25 and injured about 200 people.  


While only two tornadoes touched down across the southeastern United States on that day, the Birmingham tornado produced major devastation across portions of [[Jefferson County]], west of downtown Birmingham. The tornado started shortly after 3:00 PM CDT near the [[Pleasant Grove]] area and followed a 21-mile long path through [[McDonald Chapel]], [[Edgewater]], [[Pratt City]], [[Village Creek]], and [[Tarrant]] before lifting near [[Trussville]] near the Jefferson-[[St Clair County|St Clair]] County line. The tornado passed just one to two miles north of [[downtown]] Birmingham as well as the [[Birmingham International Airport]]. About 400 homes across northern Jefferson County were either damaged or destroyed. Many homes were swept away due to their poor construction.[http://www.tornadoproject.com/]
While only two tornadoes touched down across the southeastern United States on that day, the Birmingham tornado produced major devastation across portions of [[Jefferson County]], west of downtown Birmingham. The tornado started shortly after 3:00 PM CDT near the [[Pleasant Grove]] area and followed a 21-mile long path through [[McDonald Chapel]], [[Edgewater]], [[Pratt City]], [[Village Creek]], and [[Tarrant]] before lifting near [[Trussville]] near the Jefferson-[[St Clair County|St Clair]] County line. The tornado passed just one to two miles north of [[downtown]] Birmingham as well as the [[Birmingham International Airport]]. About 400 homes across northern Jefferson County were either damaged or destroyed. Inferior construction was blamed for the destruction of nearly 125 homes in the McDonald Chapel community.


The tornado event is similar to other deadly tornadoes on [[1977 Smithfield tornado|April 4, 1977]] and [[1998 Oak Grove tornado|April 8, 1998]]. Those two tornadoes which were rated F5 killed 22 and 32 people respectively across most of the same areas that were hit in 1956.  However, more solidly built homes were also swept off their foundation. With 25 fatalities, it was the deadliest tornado of 1956 surpassing the Grand Rapids Metro Area F5 that killed 18 on April 3.[http://www.tornadohistoryproject.com/tornado.php?p=1&s=6&d=asc&yr=1956&mo=%&day=%&st=%&fu=%&co=Any&l=500&format=basic&submit=Table&dcom=&dpho=&dvid=&ddat=on&dtim=&dsta=on&dfuj=on&dfat=on&dinj=on&dwid=&dlen=&dcou=on&dong=&dare=&dfar=&drot=&ddam=&dpl=&dpw=&dtyp=&drem=&dtlat=&dtlon=&dllat=&dllon=&dstt=&dtor=]
The tornado event is similar to other deadly tornadoes on [[1977 Smithfield tornado|April 4, 1977]] and [[1998 Oak Grove tornado|April 8, 1998]]. Those two tornadoes which were rated F5 killed 22 and 32 people respectively across most of the same areas that were hit in 1956.  However, more solidly built homes were also swept off their foundation. With 25 fatalities, it was the deadliest tornado of 1956 surpassing the Grand Rapids Metro Area F5 that killed 18 on April 3.
 
[[Taft Epstein]] donated plots at his newly-opened [[Carver Memorial Gardens]] for the 13 Black victims of the tornado. Two mass services were held at graveside on Sunday, [[April 22]].


==References==
==References==
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=April_1956_Birmingham_tornado&oldid=275956969 April 1956 Birmingham tornado]. (March 9, 2009). Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed March 31, 2009.
* "[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=April_1956_Birmingham_tornado April 1956 Birmingham tornado]" (March 9, 2009) Wikipedia - accessed March 31, 2009
* Gray, Jeremy (April 15, 2021) "One of Alabama’s deadliest tornadoes killed 25 people 65 years ago today." {{BN}}


[[Category:1956 events]]
[[Category:1956 events]]
[[Category:Weather events]]
[[Category:Weather events]]

Latest revision as of 15:53, 4 July 2023

View of tornado damage by Earnest Hardin for The Birmingham News.

The April 1956 Birmingham tornado was a deadly tornado that took place during the afternoon of April 15, 1956 across the Greater Birmingham area. Later rated an F4 on the Fujita scale (not invented until 1971), the tornado killed 25 and injured about 200 people.

While only two tornadoes touched down across the southeastern United States on that day, the Birmingham tornado produced major devastation across portions of Jefferson County, west of downtown Birmingham. The tornado started shortly after 3:00 PM CDT near the Pleasant Grove area and followed a 21-mile long path through McDonald Chapel, Edgewater, Pratt City, Village Creek, and Tarrant before lifting near 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 International Airport. About 400 homes across northern Jefferson County were either damaged or destroyed. Inferior construction was blamed for the destruction of nearly 125 homes in the McDonald Chapel community.

The tornado event is similar to other deadly tornadoes on April 4, 1977 and April 8, 1998. Those two tornadoes which were rated F5 killed 22 and 32 people respectively across most of the same areas that were hit in 1956. However, more solidly built homes were also swept off their foundation. With 25 fatalities, it was the deadliest tornado of 1956 surpassing the Grand Rapids Metro Area F5 that killed 18 on April 3.

Taft Epstein donated plots at his newly-opened Carver Memorial Gardens for the 13 Black victims of the tornado. Two mass services were held at graveside on Sunday, April 22.

References