Deadly Tennessee tornadoes that hit Nashville and Cookeville rated EF-3 and EF-4



TENNESSEE -- Severe thunderstorms began moving through Tennessee with damaging winds, hail, and tornadoes late Monday night, March 2. Just before midnight, one storm cell began to develop strong rotation west of Nashville. Shortly thereafter, that storm spawned two EF-2 tornadoes about 100 miles west of Nashville as the storm continued charging toward Tennessee's largest city.


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As the storm approached Nashville, it started weakening before re-strengthening a few miles west of the city. Once the storm made it to Nashville, it had developed strong rotation that produced another EF-2 tornado in the vicinity of John C. Tune Airport in Nashville. That tornado would later intensify to an EF-3 and go on to carve a path of damage 50-plus miles through Nashville to Gordonsville, about the same distance as Fort Atkinson to Milwaukee.

After that long-track, intense tornado, the storm wasn’t finished. Later that night, a stronger tornado touched down west of Cookeville, Tennessee and quickly reached EF-4 intensity with winds over 175 mph.

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The Cookeville tornado was the strongest the nation has seen in nearly three years; this comes after a slightly less intense EF-4 tornado that narrowly missed Kansas City last year.

In total, 24 deaths were recorded from both the Nashville and Cookeville tornadoes, with the storm that caused them leaving millions of dollars in damage across the state.

Stoughton, WI Tornado 2005 - Photo by Colin McDermott



Could this happen in Wisconsin?

The answer -- yes. Wisconsin has had several tornado outbreaks in its history, even during the middle of the night. The most recent and notable outbreaks were in June 2014 and August 2005, with both EF-3 and EF-2 tornadoes touching down in the state. During the Barneveld tornado outbreak in 1984, several tornadoes touched down in Wisconsin overnight, including the F-5 tornado that hit Barneveld.

Although tornado season doesn’t peak until June, it is important to prepare for the upcoming season by having multiple alert options ready, including our free FOX6 Storm Center app, testing batteries in weather radios, practicing severe weather plans, and getting a safety kit together in the basement of your home or safe room.