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Public Information Statement
Statement as of 8:00 am CST on November 12, 2009
... 20 year anniversary of devastating Huntsville F4 tornado...
This Sunday /November 15th/ Marks 20 years since a destructive tornado ripped across Airport Road and other parts of southeast Huntsville... killing 21 people and injuring 463.
At approximately 4:37 PM CST on November 15 1989... powerful winds associated with the tornado initially hit the city's new garbage-burning steam plant just off Triana Boulevard. The tornado then smashed into the Municipal Golf course just west of the Memorial Parkway and Airport Road intersection. The first confirmed report of the tornado came at this location. The most destructive damage occurred along a mile-long west-to-east path lining Airport Road where shopping centers... churches... schools... restaurants and numerous apartment complexes were heavily damaged to completely destroyed.
Locations that sustained significant damage include: * Waterford square apartments * Crestwood hospital * Westbury Plaza shopping center * Village on Whitesburg * Whitesburg center * holy spirit catholic church
Moving east... the tornado roared up Garth Mountain overlooking Whitesburg drive... following in its climb the newly opened Carl T Jones drive. Heading into the Woods... the tornado snapped TVA power poles and tall trees like toothpicks. Across the mountain lay Jones Valley elementary where 37 students remained after school in an extended-day program. The tornado slammed into the school reducing the structure to rubble in a matter of seconds... with supplies later found as far away as southern Tennessee. Incredibly... all of the students/teachers and staff would survive.
Most eye-witnesses described a wall of darkness... wind and rain that descended on the city like a quickly drawn curtain. Winds were so intense that a wooden splinter was found embedded in the Concrete wall of one church Sanctuary.
The tornado remained on the ground for 16 miles across Madison County with the strongest winds estimated in excess of 200 mph. The damage swath was at its widest /around a half-mile/ along Airport Road. The storm system responsible for this tornado would cause a quarter-of-a-billion dollars in damage to 16 states... with nearly 50 million of that amount in Madison County alone.
Damage statistics: * 259 homes destroyed * 1000 cars destroyed (additional 2000 in Morgan County due to hail) * 80 businesses destroyed * 240 miles of power lines knocked down (according to tva) * 60 power structures lost (according to tva) * 432 acres of trees destroyed or damaged (based on aerial survey)
Note: information and statistics taken from "a diary of destruction" on the (1989) Huntsville tornado -- produced by the Huntsville times/Huntsville news and from the National Weather Service southern region natural disaster survey report published July 1990.
For more information on the 1989 Huntsville tornado... visit the Huntsville National Weather Service webpage at: http://weather.Gov/Huntsville (all lower case)