Tornadoes Hit Loudoun County
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Tornado off of Route 28 [Photo Leesburg Today]
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A series of news reports about the tornadoes spawned by Hurricane
Ivan.
Tornadoes Reported In Loudoun
Yolanda Reyes
Leesburg Today
Sep 17, 2004. Up to four tornadoes were reported locally as the remnants
of Hurricane Ivan moved across Loudoun County this evening, causing
damage to numerous homes and a fire at Leesburg Executive Airport. According
to the National Weather Service's Baltimore/Washington forecast office
located in Sterling, four separate tornadoes swept through the area
Friday night, affecting Hughesville, Lovettsville, Hamilton, and Dulles.
Flights were grounded at Dulles International Airport, where the first
tornado touched down at 6:11 p.m., and for an hour and a half as airport
personnel waited for the tornado to pass and staff members at the Sterling
weather station said that they could see the tornado just outside their
windows.
"We're located about a mile from the airport," said Luis
Rosa of the National Weather Service. "We actually saw it from
here in the office."
Although there were widespread accounts of damage to homes and buildings
and many residents were without power, no injuries were reported. Loudoun
County Fire and Rescue crews began scrambling shortly after 5 p.m.
when severe storms began moving in from the south, heading in a northwest
direction across the area. By 6 p.m., the visibility on Rt. 7 was about
15 percent.
The storm cell, which spurred tornadoes in the Opal and Warrenton
areas of Fauquier County, moved quickly through western Loudoun. Downed
trees and power lines forced the closing of Rt. 704 west of Leesburg
and the storm’s path could be followed with a line of twisted and broken
tree limbs to Hamilton. The Hamilton Orchard subdivision was hardest
hit, with several homes damaged by falling trees and limbs. That cell
continued north, causing damage in Lovettsville before crossing the
Potomac River.
In some areas, rush hour traffic came to a stop as motorists watched
for funnel clouds and dangerous weather. Those driving along Rt. 28
and Rt. 7 got an up close view of a tornado that moved up the west
side of Rt. 28, passing behind the Wegmans store before dissipating
and moving across the river into Maryland.
Meanwhile, one of the numerous lightning strikes that occurred during
the storm is believed to have caused a fire at the Justice Hangar at
Leesburg Executive Airport. The flames and heavy smoke were reported
at the facility and the large front door had buckled outward. One plane
inside appeared to be severely damaged.
By 8:30 p.m. that evening, though the worst of the weather seemed
to have passed, the National Weather Service has extended the tornado
watch until midnight in response to the unpredictable system and Loudoun
County's Emergency Operations Center did not stand down until 1:10
a.m. By 8 a.m. that following morning, NWS recorded a total of 2.34
inches of precipitation due to the storm.
"It was moving pretty fast—50 miles and hour—so it didn't have
the chance to dump a lot of rain," said Rosa. "If it had
been going, say 15 miles and hour, we would have seen about 10 inches
of rain."
Weather Service report: One tornado, "intermittent" damage
in western Loudoun
By Emily Tjelmeland
Loudoun times
Sept 23, 2004. One F1 tornado swept through parts of western Loudoun
Aug. 17, according to a preliminary report released Wednesday by the
National Weather Service's Sterling office. The damage caused by the
tornado, while noted as significant, was "intermittent." The
Fujita, or F, Scale is used to measure how much damage a tornado causes.
F1 tornadoes have wind speeds of 73 to 112 mph, and cause moderate
damage.
The report said the tornado - which migrated north from Fauquier County,
where it was an F3 - first touched down in Loudoun south of Hamilton,
with most of the damage south of Route 7. The path of the tornado's
damage extended along a 10-mile path, which stretches from south of
Hamilton to Lovettsville. The storm continued north into Frederick
and Washington counties.
Residents Survey Damage From Blast of Tornadoes, Heavy Rain
By Karin Brulliard
Washington Post Staff Writer
September 23, 2004. After the tornado peeled off half of Donna and
Joe Rogers's roof and tossed it a quarter-mile across their Hamilton
farm Friday, the couple slept under a plastic tarp to avoid the rain
that dripped on them through the ceiling.
This week, the glorious fall sunshine -- aided by a temporary roof
-- has kept the Rogerses and their Colonial home on Harmony Church
Road dry. It also has shed light on the extent of damage to their farm,
one of the spots hardest hit by the torrential rains, strong winds
and tornadoes that swept through Loudoun and Fauquier counties from
about 5:15 to 11 p.m. that night.
Damage in Loudoun County alone was estimated at $3.5 million. There
were no serious injuries.
When the storm raced westward across 1,100-acre Hillbrook Farm, which
has been in Joe Rogers's family since 1792, it damaged hundreds of
trees and uprooted several. It tore off parts of the roofs on two barns
and knocked down fences that separated their 30 horses from their 150
head of cattle and kept them all from getting loose. Two of their thoroughbred
horses were cut by flying debris. One chimney on their stately stone
house was ruined, and upstairs windows were shattered. A treasured
family coat of arms was soaked beyond repair.
"You just can't believe it until you see it," Donna Rogers
said of the scene at the farm, which early this week was littered with
massive branches. Oriental rugs were hung to dry on fences. Big sections
of crumpled metal roof lay next to the house, shingles next to the
barn. "We lost a lot of very valuable things that are just irreplaceable," she
said.
The couple were home Friday night when they got a call from Donna
Rogers's brother, William Truslow, who lives in Vienna. Truslow told
them that a major storm was headed their way and that they should run
for the basement.
Rogers said she looked out her bedroom window and all looked calm.
Suddenly, the sky darkened, and a howling, twisting wind came rushing
from the east.
"Stuff was just whirling by," she said. "It's sort
of like 'The Wizard of Oz.' Everything that could move was rumbling."
Later that night, neighbors, friends and some strangers began showing
up with flashlights, tarps and chainsaws to cut fallen branches into
smaller pieces. The next day, more friends showed up to help clear
branches and debris from the long driveway to the Rogerses' house.
"The outpouring from the community has just been unbelievable," Donna
Rogers said.
Tornadoes Touch Down
by Lila Arzua
Washington Post
Remnants of Hurricane Ivan spawned at least three tornadoes in Loudoun
and several in Fauquier, according to emergency officials in both counties.
The strongest was between 200 and 450 yards wide, measured F3 on the
zero-to-five Fujita scale -- meaning wind speeds were 158 to 206 mph
-- and traveled at least 20 miles through Fauquier. The Meadows subdivision
in the southern Fauquier town of Remington "took
a direct hit," said Fire Chief Philip Myer of the county's Fire
and Emergency Services Department, with seven homes destroyed and 18
severely damaged. One home was pushed slightly off its foundation.
A new pickup parked in a driveway on Sumerduck Road was lifted by the
wind and hurled more than 75 yards over trees and a power line before
crashing upside down in a field.
The tornado weakened to an F2, with winds between 113 to 157 mph,
as it moved north of Remington but grew to almost a quarter-mile wide
as it crossed Beach Road and Route 15. South of Broad Run, the tornado
regained strength and destroyed trees, firing branches into buildings,
before heading into western Loudoun.
"It's on the higher end of what we usually see in this part of
the country," said Steve Rogowski, a meteorologist at the National
Weather Service, noting that most tornados in the mid-Atlantic are
F2 or below. "It doesn't take an F4 or F5 tornado to inflict a
lot of damage. Even the smaller tornados can inflict damage and be
life-threatening."
In Loudoun, an F2 tornado touched down in the Ashburn area, and two
less powerful tornadoes touched down in western Loudoun. The first
tornado came into eastern Loudoun from Fairfax near Dulles International
Airport and passed a half-mile from the National Weather Service's
office in Sterling, where employees took cover in a concrete-reinforced "safe
room."
The tornado then headed north, just west of Route 28, where 22 employees
of a building in the Beaumeade Corporate Park were evacuated after
their building was damaged and suffered a gas leak. The employees took
shelter in a Loudoun County school bus, according to Mary Maguire,
spokeswoman for Loudoun fire and rescue.
Seven buildings in the park suffered a total of $2.6 million in damages,
said the Loudoun County Office of Emergency Management. The roofs of
several buildings were damaged, air conditioning units were ripped
out, one wall collapsed and two cars were driven into the side of one
building.
In western Loudoun, an F1 tornado struck south of Hamilton in the
Shelbourne Glebe Road area. Another tornado struck south of Lovettsville
near Rickert and Rodeffer roads. Damage in those areas was estimated
at $940,000.
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