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1929 Rye Cove tornado outbreak

Weather event in the United States


Summary

Weather event in the United States

FieldValue
name1929 Rye Cove tornado outbreak
durationMay 1–2, 1929

The 1929 Rye Cove tornado outbreak was a deadly tornado outbreak that swept from southwest to northeast along the Appalachian Mountains from Oklahoma to Maryland in early May 1929. This outbreak, which killed at least 42 people and injured at least 323, is notable as one of the worst to affect the states of Maryland and Virginia. It is also one of the most intense tornado outbreaks to affect Appalachia. The F2 tornado that struck Rye Cove, Virginia, is the deadliest tornado in Virginia history and tied for the thirteenth-deadliest to hit a school in the United States, with all 13 deaths in a school building. Western Virginia was particularly hard hit, with additional tornadoes confirmed in Alleghany, Bath, Culpeper, Fauquier and Loudoun Counties. One of these tornadoes, near Culpeper, also destroyed a school, but the storm struck during the evening after classes had been dismissed for the day.

Confirmed tornadoes

May 1 event

F#LocationCountyTime (UTC)Path lengthDamage
Oklahoma
cat2}}F2Tucker to SE of Van Buren, ARLeFlore, Sequoyah, Sebastian (AR), Crawford (AR)201530 miThis tornado first touched down close to Moffett, Oklahoma, where it injured three structures. Observers witnessed four funnel clouds passing over the south fringe of Fort Smith, Arkansas, causing damage to three factories and 17 houses. The tornado razed six houses along the shores of Hollis Lake before dissipating.
Arkansas
unk}}FUJethroFranklin202512 miHenry1929p=216}}
cat2}}F2RexVan Buren21305 miThis tornado struck the entire community of Rex, tearing off roofs and damaging every structure in its path.
cat3}}F3W of Brinkley to N of WheatleyMonroe, St. Francis004515 mi9 deaths – This deadly tornado struck several plantations, damaging or leveling 45 small houses, though some larger ones were razed as well, and other structures, along with crops, were reportedly damaged.
Texas
unk}}FUFrankstonAnderson2100unknownTornado damage reported.
Sources: Grazulis, Monthly Weather Review

May 2 event

F#LocationCountyTime (UTC)Path lengthDamage
Tennessee
unk}}FUW of NewportCockeunknownunknownThis first member of a tornado family developed 15 mi west of Newport.
cat2}}F2Embreeville areaWashington, Unicoi1700unknown2 deaths – This was another member of the tornado family previously listed. The tornado struck 15 mountaintop houses - with six of them leveled - near the Washington–Unicoi county line.
Virginia
cat2}}F2NW of Gate City (Rye Cove area)Scott17554 mi13 deaths – See section on this tornado
cat3}}F3S of Woodville to Flint HillRappahannock203013 mi200ydmsigfig=3abbr=on}} away from the school. Two other people were killed when the tornado destroyed houses in Flint Hill.
cat2}}F2NE of Iron GateAlleghany, Bath230017 miA tornado struck several small, rural communities, including Coronation, Sitlington, and Nimrod Hall where it damaged or destroyed at least 13 farms and small houses near the Cowpasture River.
cat2}}F2Near HamiltonLoudoun00302 miA tornado destroyed at least one house and numerous barns. A brick church and other structures were damaged.
cat3}}F3Lagrange to near CatlettCulpeper, Fauquier010018 mi6+ deaths – A tornado struck a small house at Lagrange, killing two people inside. Four - possibly five - people were killed in two houses that were destroyed, and six other houses were damaged or destroyed in Weaversville. The tornado also destroyed a large, fourteen-room, brick structure.
Ohio
cat2}}F2Galloway area to ColumbusFranklin200010 mi2 deaths – A tornado tore the roofs off several houses as it passed between Galloway and Columbus; in Columbus, the tornado leveled a gas station and killed two people when it partially destroyed a jail.
Florida
cat2}}F2Jacksonville areaDuval21202 mi1 death – A tornado struck Jacksonville Heights and Ortega, on the south side of the Jacksonville, where it destroyed seven houses, damaged 15 others, and killed one person in a barn.
West Virginia
cat2}}F2Morgantown areaMonongalia21204 miA tornado struck the Evansdale and Riverside portions of Morgantown where it demolished 35 houses and caused minor damage to 200 others in addition to multiple factories. Fifteen people reportedly incurred serious injuries occurred.
Maryland
cat3}}F3NW of Adamstown to near TaneytownFrederick, Carroll003033 mi2 deaths – A skipping tornado killed a couple as it leveled a farmhouse 3 mi west of Frederick. Six other homes were damaged with some of them being unroofed.
cat3}}F3Near Laytonsville to BrookevilleMontgomery, Howard023010 mi4 deaths– A tornado destroyed six farmhouses, killing three people in one of the leveled houses. A fourth person died on the second floor of a house that was torn off during the storm.
Source: Grazulis, Monthly Weather Review

Rye Cove, Virginia

At 12:55 p.m. (EDT), as many as 155 students were attending classes at Rye Cove High School, near the town of Clinchport, when a strong thunderstorm approached from the southwest and produced a tornado just 0.5 mi away. As the tornado - referred to as a “dark cloud” - approached the school, it intensified and tore the roofs off many structures. Strong winds lofted lumber for hundreds of yards, leaving pieces lodged in trees. Next to the school, the tornado struck a log house that was built in the 1850s, picking up the entire structure and carrying some of its furniture up to 4 mi away.

A teacher at the seven-room, wooden school heard the wind increasing outside but did not alert her students. Moments later, the tornado struck, reportedly causing it to “explode” and violently spread debris over a wide area. The powerful storm killed one teacher and 12 students, carrying their bodies up to 75 yd from the school’s limestone foundation. After the devastation at the school, the 0.25 mi-wide tornado destroyed five farmhouses before lifting.

The legacy of the tornado lived on in local folklore as A. P. Carter of the Carter Family, having visited the storm-stricken area and assisted in relief efforts, immediately recorded a song about the storm.

References

Bibliography

Notes

References

  1. Schneider, Russell S.. "Tornado Outbreak Day Sequences: Historic Events and Climatology (1875–2003)". [[Storm Prediction Center]].
  2. {{harvnb. Grazulis. 1993
  3. (26 April 2000). "VIRGINIA: Tornadoes causing three or more deaths". The Tornado Project.
  4. "Rye Cove Cyclone". Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.
  5. "The Ten Worst Tornado-Related Disasters In Schools". The Tornado Project.
  6. {{harvnb. Henry. 1929
  7. (7 January 2008). "Tornado History: Virginia Tornadoes". [[Virginia Department of Emergency Management]].
  8. (May 2, 1929). "The Cyclone of Rye Cove: Twister Wrecks Rye Cove School". Kingsport Times.
  9. (May 9, 1929). "Thirteen Killed When Tornado Destroys Rye Cove High School Building Thursday Afternoon". Scott County News.
  10. Clark, Amy D.. (June 1, 2021). "The Cyclone of Rye Cove".
  11. "Deathly Lyrics: "The Cyclone of Rye Cove"". Blue Ridge Institute & Museum.
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