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Huntsville is located in the north-central part of Alabama in
southern Madison County. While the 1980 census listed the
population of Huntsville as 142,513, the city has undergone
substantial growth in the last decade with the expansion of high-tech
and space-related industry and business. As a result, the
current population is nearly 180,000. Huntsville is the county
seat of Madison County and the home of the Redstone Arsenal.
Tornadoes are reasonably well known to the people of north-
central Alabama. The historic April 3-4, 1974, tornado outbreak
devastated a large part of northern Alabama including Madison County.
The tornado database from the National Severe Storms Forecast
Center (NSSFC) in Kansas City and 1989 Storm Data records indicate
that 25 tornadoes have occurred in Madison County from 1950 through
October, 1989. This places Madison County with the 5th highest
number of tornado occurrences by county in Alabama. Those 25
tornadoes were responsible for 17 fatalities.
On the afternoon of Wednesday, November 15, 1989, around 4:30
pm, a tornado struck the southern portion of the city of Huntsville
cutting a swath of destruction from southwest toward the northeast
through a business section and a heavily populated residential
area. Twenty one people died as a result of the tornado and 463
were injured. Eighteen people died in the tornado, and two other
people died in early December and one in January from injuries
sustained in the tornado (see Appendix F). Total damage estimates
were placed around $100 million.
The tornado struck during the beginning of rush hour and
touched down initially on Redstone Arsenal and then moved into a
business area crossing two major north-south highways. Twelve of
the 21 deaths (57 percent) occurred in automobiles, a striking
similarity to the 1979 Wichita Falls, Texas, tornado. In the
Huntsville tornado, most of those killed in cars were in the
process of performing normal tasks as opposed to seeking
automobiles for safety.
As the thunderstorm moved into the southwest corner of Madison
County at 4:15 pm, the staff on duty at the WSO at Huntsville
International Airport observed a wall cloud and rain-free base with
the thunderstorm. The wall cloud showed no signs of rotation and
dissipated shortly after being spotted.
Shortly after this, between 4:20 and 4:30 pm, meteorologists
working for NASA on the Redstone Arsenal observed a wall cloud and
rain-free base with the thunderstorm as it moved across the
southern portion of the Arsenal. Around 4:25 pm, they observed
rotation in the wall cloud.
According to information shared with the National Weather
Service by Duane Stiegler with Dr. Ted Fujita's group from the
University of Chicago, the initial point of damage occurred 1 mile
southsouthwest of Madkin Mountain on the Redstone Arsenal near the
intersection of Fowler Road and Mills Road. Trees were downed and
some roof gutters damaged. From eyewitness accounts of the wall
cloud, circulating air may have reached the ground without a
visible funnel.
The tornado continued on a northeast track passing northeast of
Building 5250 on the Arsenal. Little damage was done to that
building. The storm then moved into a sparsely developed area, but
it did do about $1 million in damage to Huntsville's garbage-burning
plant which was nearing the end of construction.
At this point, the tornado began to cross the old Huntsville
Airport and a large portion of the adjacent municipal golf course.
It was here that the tornado struck the Huntsville Police Academy
which generated one of the first reports of the existence of the
tornado. Two officers were injured at the Police Academy.
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From the golf course, the tornado entered a business and
heavily populated area of Huntsville. The tornado crossed Memorial
Parkway (US 231 and State Highway 53), a major north-south traffic
artery. The tornado destroyed a number of shopping complexes,
office buildings, an apartment complex, and churches as it slowly
crossed Airport Road. It crossed Whitesburg Road, another
relatively major north-south highway.
Nineteen of the twenty-one fatalities occurred in the area
between the intersection of Airport Road and Memorial Parkway and
the intersection of Airport Road and Whitesburg Road. Eleven of
the deaths occurred in automobiles, four in apartments, and four in
commercial buildings.
From the intersection of Whitesburg Road and Airport Road, the
tornado moved up Garth Mountain, as it continued on a northeast
course. This took the tornado into a heavily wooded section. As
it crossed the top of Garth Mountain and moved down the east side,
it struck Jones Valley Elementary School on Garth Road.
Thirty-seven children, five teachers, and seven painters were
in the school when the tornado struck. The children were part of
an Extended Daycare Program conducted at the school. The lead teacher
of the day-care program moved the children from the second
floor of the school building into a small open area under the
stairway on the first floor. This action, first suggested by the
school principal as she left for the day, saved the lives of the
children. These actions are detailed in Appendix E.
One woman was killed in an automobile driving along Garth Road
en route to the school.
From the school, the tornado crossed Garth Road and moved
across a portion of Jones Valley Subdivision, a development of
well-constructed single family homes. The tornado severely damaged
or destroyed a number of homes in the Jones Valley subdivision. It
continued across Jones Valley moving up Huntsville Mountain. The
area from Huntsville Mountain to the end of the tornado path is
rural with only scattered structures. The tornado continued to
destroy or severely damage whatever structures it encountered.
The tornado topped Huntsville Mountain and moved down the east
side crossing US 431. It traveled through this valley in the
vicinity of Dug Hill before moving up and over Chestnut Knob. From
Chestnut Knob the tornado traversed the Flint River valley referred
to as Salty Bottoms, crossing the Flint River and US 72 (Lee
Highway). It crossed US 72 one mile southeast of Brownsboro.
The tornado continued on an east-northeast track over Reed
Mountain to a small lake at the headwaters of the Killingsworth
Cove Branch, a small creek which feeds into the Flint River. The
tornado path ended at the southeast tip of this small lake.
The total path length was 18.5 miles from the initial beginning
on the Redstone Arsenal to it's end at the headwaters of
Killingsworth Cove Branch. The damage path was generally about one
half mile wide; however, it reached nearly one mile in width
in the Flint River/US 72 area. The tornado was classified as
an F4 on the Fujita Tornado Scale.
A summary of damage from reports gathered by the Huntsville Times included:
| 259 | Homes destroyed |
| 130 | Homes with major damage |
| 148 | Homes with minor to moderate damage |
| 80 | Businesses destroyed |
| 8 | Businesses damaged |
| 3 | Churches heavily damaged |
| 2 | Schools destroyed |
| 10 | Public buildings destroyed or heavily damaged |
$1.9 Million in public utility damage
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