The Birmingham Tornado

BOOK WEST MIDLANDS HOTELS

The Birmingham Tornado

Birmingham, West Midlands The 28th of July 2005 AD

Strangely Britain has more tornadoes reported than any other country other than... the Netherlands. Yet most of them are very weak and very short-lived affairs that cause little or no damage, indeed many probably happen where nobody sees them, in open country. That was certainly not the case with the twister that hit the Sparkbrook, Moseley, and King’s Heath areas of Birmingham on July 28 2005.
Winds are thought to have reached up to 130mph as the tornado devastated a corridor getting on for a mile long, uprooting more than 1000 trees and injuring about 30 people, including three seriously. The strongest known twister in the UK, by the way, happened in Portsmouth on December 14 1810, where wind-speeds may have got as high as 240mph.
Damage estimated at £40 million was caused in the furious progress of the storm, a very rare event as normally a built-up environment stops the formation of twisters. Roofs were lifted; a church so badly damaged that it was later felt necessary to demolish it; cars thrown in the air: it was miraculous that no fatalities occurred.

More famous dates here

8633 views since 12th July 2010

Brit Quote:
If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants - Isaac Newton
More Quotes

On this day:
Benjamin Franklin Arrives in London - 1724, First Bomb Dropped on English Soil - 1914
More dates from British history

click here to view all the British counties

County Pages