March 1875 Southeast tornado outbreak
The March 1875 Southeast tornado outbreak was a deadly tornado outbreak that affected portions of the Southern United States from March 19 to 20, 1875. At least nineteen tornadoes were recorded, including seven that were destructive enough to be rated F4 by Thomas P. Grazulis. The worst damage and most of the deaths occurred in Georgia. Most of the damage appears to have been the result of two tornado families that moved along parallel paths apart through parts of Georgia and South Carolina. In all, this outbreak killed at least 96 people and injured at least 367.
List of tornadoes
- Note: Some of the events listed as individual tornadoes were probably tornado families.
F# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start coord. | Date | Time | Path length | Max width | Summary |
F3 | Between Lone Grove and Ray's Point | Winn | LA | 0200 | 3 deaths – A tornado splintered several thousand trees and destroyed six homes in sparsely populated areas. All deaths were in one family. | ||||
F4 | SW of Hamilton to E of Shiloh | Harris, Talbot | GA | 1520 | 11+ deaths – This was the first member in the northernmost of two major tornado families. Touching down in southwest Harris County, the "massive" tornado devastated rural plantations and forests in its path. It completely leveled several plantations and farms, with five deaths on one of them. Up to 15 deaths may have occurred in Harris County alone, but were unconfirmed. Winds from the parent supercell transferred a hat aloft for and a book for. | ||||
F3 | E of Thomastown to S of Forsyth | Upson, Lamar, Monroe | GA | 1600 | This tornado formed from the dissipation of the previous event, but was in the same tornado family. People first sighted a funnel cloud developing over Thomastown, but it did not touch down until east of town. Once on the ground, the tornado "changed shape continuously." | ||||
F? | S of Statesville to S of Mocksville | Iredell, Davie | NC | 1600 | This may have been a tornado, a downburst or a combination of the two. | ||||
F4 | N of Columbus to N of Talbotton | Muscogee, Harris, Talbot | GA | 1630 | 9 deaths – This was the first tornado in the southernmost of the two tornado families. Described as a "large and intense" tornado, it destroyed the village of "Mt. Airy" in the southeast corner of Harris County, killing six people in one home. Winds propelled a board from the home into the stump of a broken pine tree. The tornado destroyed more homes and an academy in or near Baughville in Talbot County, killing three people. | ||||
F3 | N of Gray | Jones, Putnam | GA | 1650 | 1 death – This tornado struck only three farms, but demolished all of them. | ||||
F4 | NW of Sparta, GA to S of Edgefield, SC | Hancock, Warren, McDuffie, Columbia, Edgefield | GA, SC | 1740 | 28+ deaths – See section on this tornado | ||||
F4 | S of Gray to E of Milledgeville | Jones, Baldwin | GA | 1750 | 13+ deaths – This tornado produced a "devastating" swath of damage near Milledgeville, with four deaths in Jones County and nine or more in Baldwin County. Residents of Milledgeville mistook the tornado for a column of smoke from a fire. When surveyors of the U.S. Army Signal Corps arrived three weeks later, a child was still unaccounted for and "presumed dead." | ||||
F4 | ESE of Sparta to S of Gibson | Hancock, Washington, Glascock, Jefferson | GA | 1830 | 8+ deaths – This tornado caused eight deaths in Glascock County, but according to newspapers, the actual toll may have been 30. Some deaths in Hancock County attributed to the Sparta–Edgefield tornado may actually have been from this tornado. | ||||
F4 | W of Keysville, GA to Williston, SC area | Jefferson, Burkek, Richmond, Aiken, Barnwell | GA, SC | 1900 | 6+ deaths – This tornado was likely a series of tornadoes and downbursts. It narrowly missed Augusta, passing southeast of that city before crossing the Savannah River into South Carolina. The tornado critically damaged or razed about 40 homes in Richmond County alone. The tornado left so much debris on farms that they were abandoned. As many as eight people may have died. | ||||
F4 | Opelika, AL area to Whitesville, GA area | Lee, Chambers, Harris | AL, GA | 1930 | 7 deaths – This may have been a multiple-vortex tornado that killed seven people in a single family. This was the last violent tornado to impact Lee County until March 3, 2019. | ||||
F3 | SW of Columbia | Lexington | SC | 1955 | 2 deaths – This tornado wrecked five or more farms in its path. | ||||
F3 | N of Sumter, SC to Tabor City, NC area | Sumter, Lee, Florence, Marion, Horry, Columbus | SC, NC | 2030 | 6 deaths – This tornado family produced a damage swath that varied from to almost wide, with several entire plantations wrecked. The tornado downed or split "tens of thousands" of trees and destroyed buildings on more than 40 farms. | ||||
F? | W of Raleigh | Chatham, Wake | NC | 2200 | Another tornado or downburst dissipated about west of Raleigh. | ||||
F2 | S of Norway to S of Orangeburg | Orangeburg | SC | 2200 | 3 deaths – This smoky-looking tornado leveled numerous little cabins. | ||||
F? | Indiantown area | Williamsburg | SC | 2330 | Details unknown. | ||||
F2 | Dogwood Neck area | Horry | SC | 0000 | This tornado swept a frame home clean to its foundation. | ||||
F? | NW of Conway | Horry | SC | 0000 | Tornado was not surveyed. | ||||
F2 | SW of Sylvania | Bulloch | GA | 0100 | A tornado hit eight cabins, leveling them. |