Natchez Tornado
Natchez Tornado
Natchez Tornado
Natchez Tornado
Date:
May 7, 1840
Place: Natchez, Mississippi
o The air was black with whirling eddies of walls, roofs, chimneys and huge timbers
from distant ruins shot through the air. Banks, homes, stores, steamboats and other vessels
were completely destroyed. Houses in the towns burst open. "
o Though it seems likely that its devastation would certainly equal an F5, the highest
ever recorded, which carries winds of 207-260 mph. It can liftoff foundations, missiles the
size of automobiles will fly through the air in excess of 100 meters. trees will
be debarked and steel re-enforced concrete structures will be badly damaged.
Damage: (continuation)
The tornado tracked northeast along the Mississippi seven miles south of Natchez,
stripping the forest from both shores. There were no means of communication to
warn the residents of Natchez.
The Natchez tornado of 1840 firmly ranks as the #2 most deadly tornado in U.S.
History, behind the Tri-State Tornado of 1925
Casualities
Today, most government agencies – the National Water Service, Federal
Emergency Management Agency and others – put the death toll at 317 and 109
injured, the only tornado where the dead outnumber the injured.
The official death count is commonly listed as 317+, with the breakdown being 1
in Vidalia, 48 in Natchez, and some 269 on the river. Although the river death
count is uncertain as well.