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EF1 Tornado — Union, Mississippi

2025-04-05 · near New Harmony, Union, Mississippi

$150K
Property damage
4.1 mi
Path length
300 yds
Path width

Event narrative

A brief tornado formed just west of the Toyota Plant in New Harmony, MS, near the intersection of County Roads 120 and 205. Mainly tree damage was noted along County Road 120, but several homes sustained damage along County Road 205 and on Cooper Road. Several homes had minor roof damage, with one having a couple of windows blown out. Several outbuildings were destroyed or heavily damaged, and trees were uprooted or snapped. The tornado then weakened as it crossed Interstate 22 just to the north of the Toyota Plant, causing additional, but more sporadic, damage to trees and power lines on Highway 178 E, County Road 209, and County Road 201. A swath of strong winds associated with the rear-flank downdraft produced sporadic tree damage just south of this track. This survey was augmented via drone footage. Estimated peak winds were 90 mph.

Wider weather episode

The front eventually sagged south back into the Mid-South during the early morning hours of April 5th. Strong low-level moisture transport into the frontal zone resulted in heavy rain and training storms across northern sections of the Mid-South, mainly north of I-40. A bow echo developed along and just south of the slowly advancing front. This feature crossed the entire forecast area producing 13 tornadoes, including an EF-2, and wind damage. Heavy rain continued through the morning hours with flash flooding increasing across the Mid-South.

The final round of severe weather occurred during the afternoon and evening of April 5th. The slow-moving cold front combined with an increasingly unstable airmass, strong upper-level divergence, and 0-6 km bulk shear values of 50-60 knots provided the ingredients for more severe storms. A QLCS with a bookend vortex pushed into east Arkansas and West TN with a good deal of wind damage. The southern end of the line became more supercellular during the afternoon and evening and produced seven tornadoes, including an EF-2. The combination of continued abundant moisture with precipitable water values greater than 1.75 inches and strong low-level moisture transport into the frontal zone resulted in very heavy rainfall and considerable flash flooding across much of the Mid-South.

The severe weather threat finally wound down by late evening on April 5th with the flash flood threat ending a few hours later. Total rainfall amounts of 10-15 inches occurred across parts of east Arkansas, the Missouri Bootheel, West Tennessee, and extreme northwest Mississippi during this event. This resulted in widespread river flooding for several days following the event.

View location on OpenStreetMap → (34.3779, -88.9227)


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1257314. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.