Gainesville-Stoneville tornado outbreak

Gainesville-Stoneville tornado outbreak

Infobox tornado outbreak|name=Gainesville-Stoneville tornado outbreak
date=March 20, 1998
image location=Nc_full_reports.png

duration=~15 hours
fujitascale=F3
tornadoes=12
total damages (USD)= unknown
total fatalities=14
areas affected= Southeastern United States

The Gainesville-Stoneville tornado outbreak was a deadly tornado outbreak that struck portions of the southeastern United States on March 20, 1998. Particularly hard hit was the Gainesville, Georgia region where at least 12 people were killed in an early morning F3 tornado. The entire outbreak killed 14 people and produced 12 tornadoes across three states with the town of Stoneville, North Carolina being also hard hit by the storms.

Meterologial synopsis

Prior to March 20, several days of severe weather dumped heavy amounts of rain in the Southeast, particularly in North Carolina. On the day of the severe weather outbreak, temperatures were in the 40s across the Appalachian Mountains and the North Carolina Piedmont region, while temperatures in the 60s and 70s further south creating a sharp contrast between air masses across the Southeast. [ [http://www4.ncsu.edu/~nwsfo/storage/cases/19980320/ March 20, 1998 Severe Weather Outbreak ] ]

A strong storm cell moved across northern Georgia during the early morning hours. This supercell produced the Gainesville tornado, before producing scattered reports of large hail and high wind damage farther northeast in Appalachian North Carolina. As this first bout of severe weather slowly dissipated, a line of storms rapidly developed east of the mountains over the western Carolinas during the early afternoon.

Moving into a warmer environment where CAPE values were high (over 1000 j/kg), the line of storms evolved into several supercells, including two particularly prolific storms that moved across central and northern North Carolina from Charlotte to the Virginia border. [ [http://www4.ncsu.edu/~nwsfo/storage/cases/19980320/kfcxloop/loop.html Base reflectivity radar imagery from KFCX WSR-88D from 1837Z March 20, 1998 through 2032Z March 20, 1998 ] ]

Gainesville area tornado event

Touching down at around 6:25 A.M. EST in northwestern Hall County the storm traveled into southern White County, leaving a 13-mile long damage path, before dissipating at around 6:40 EST. It heavily damaged Lanier Elementary School and unroofed North Hall High School while damaging several businesses. The school system did not fully recover until the next fall while at North Hall, the gymnasium was used as a temporary classroom until the end of the school year while students at Lanier were temporarily relocated in three other area schools that were not affected by the tornado. [ [http://www.accessnorthga.com/detail.php?n=207899 Pre-dawn Killer: The 1998 Tornado Remembered | AccessNorthGa ] ] About 40 homes were completely destroyed and another 130 damaged to varying degrees. 45 mobile homes were also damaged or destroyed with 11 of the fatalities who were inside those structures. The other fatality occurred when a tractor-trailer was carried by the funnel and slammed into a school killing the driver. Eight chicken houses were also destroyed and about 100,000 chickens were killed. 40 cattle were also killed by the storm. [ [http://www.tornadoproject.com/past/pastts98.htm 1998 Tornadoes ] ] [ [http://www.accessnorthga.com/detail.php?n=207899 Pre-dawn Killer: The 1998 Tornado Remembered | AccessNorthGa ] ]

In addition to the 12 fatalities, over 150 people were injured. A police officer was also killed after been hit by a car while assisting a motorist who was involved in an accident during the storm. The fatality was not directly attributed to the tornado itself. [ [http://www.accessnorthga.com/detail.php?n=207899 Pre-dawn Killer: The 1998 Tornado Remembered | AccessNorthGa ] ] Since recordkeeping began, this storm stands as the second deadliest Georgia tornado since 1950 and the deadliest since an F4 killed 18 on April 30, 1953 south of Macon. [ [http://www.tornadohistoryproject.com/tornado.php?p=3&s=6&d=asc&yr=%&mo=%&day=%&st=Georgia&fu=%&co=Any&l=500&format=basic&submit=Table&dcom=&dpho=&dvid=&ddat=on&dtim=on&dsta=on&dfuj=on&dfat=on&dinj=on&dwid=&dlen=on&dcou=on&dong=&dare=&dfar=&drot=&ddam=&dpl=&dpw=&dtyp=&drem=&dtlat=&dtlon=&dllat=&dllon=&dstt=&dtor= Tornado Database, Tornado Maps, Tornado Paths ] ] The damage figures were estimated at between $15 million and $20 million with the majority of the damage in Hall County. [ [http://www4.ncdc.noaa.gov/cgi-win/wwcgi.dll?wwevent~ShowEvent~332710 NCDC: Event Details ] ]

The immediate Gainesville area is no stranger to deadly tornadoes. It was the site of the fifth deadliest tornado in United States history on April 6, 1936 during the Tupelo-Gainesville tornado outbreak, where two tornadoes merged into a very large F4 killing 203 including 70 at the Coopers Plant Factory. The tornado occurred only 12 hours after an F5 struck Tupelo, Mississippi killing at least 216 (with others being unaccounted for), making it the fourth deadliest tornado on record including storms before 1950. Another tornado hit Gainesville in 1903 killing at least 100. [ [http://www.accessnorthga.com/detail.php?n=207899 Pre-dawn Killer: The 1998 Tornado Remembered | AccessNorthGa ] ]

The 1998 season, an El Nino year, had several deadly tornado outbreaks in addition to the Gainesville tornado including the Kissimmee Tornado Outbreak in Florida on February 23, the Birmingham, Alabama tornado on April 8, the Mississippi and Tennessee Valley outbreak on April 16 and the Spencer, South Dakota/Eastern tornado outbreak and derecho on May 30-31.

toneville tornado event

A second significant tornado struck Stoneville, North Carolina, killing two people and injuring 27. This storm - part of a three-tornado family - destroyed or damaged most of the town. Leaving strong F3 damage in its' wake, the Stoneville tornado left a 12 mile long damage path through parts of Rockingham County, beginning around 3:25 PM EST, producing a total of $34 million in damage. $25 million of the damage tally was a result of the destruction of a large building in the nearby town of Mayodan.

500 to 600 residences were affected, along with numerous businesses; while several vehicles (including a fire truck) were also tossed some distance. In addition to the destruction in Stoneville, the storm also unroofed a textile factory (where 100 people were working at the time) in the Madison-Mayodan area. Canceled checks were found over 50 miles away in Huddleston, Virginia, while other debris was found scattered in and around the Martinsville area. [ [http://www.tornadoproject.com/past/pastts98.htm 1998 Tornadoes ] ] [ [http://www4.ncdc.noaa.gov/cgi-win/wwcgi.dll?wwevent~ShowEvent~332710 NCDC: Event Details ] ]

As this tornado dissipated 6 miles northwest of the town of Eden, the parent supercell almost immediately produced an additional long-track F1 tornado, which continued a northeastward track through two southern Virginia counties, passing just northwest of the city of Danville.

Tornado table

Confirmed tornadoes

ee also

* Tupelo-Gainesville tornado outbreak
* List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks

References

External links

* [http://www4.ncsu.edu/~nwsfo/storage/cases/19980320/ NWS Raleigh Storm Summary of the March 20, 1998 tornado outbreak]


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