The 1929 Rye Covetornado outbreak was a deadly tornado outbreak that swept from southwest to northeast along the Appalachian Mountains from Oklahoma to Maryland in early May 1929. This outbreak, which killed at least 42 people and injured at least 323, is notable as one of the worst to affect the states of Maryland and Virginia. It is also one of the most intense tornado outbreaks to affect Appalachia. The F2 tornado that struck Rye Cove, Virginia, is the deadliest tornado in Virginia history and tied for the thirteenth-deadliest to hit a school in the United States, with all 13 deaths in a school building. Western Virginia was particularly hard hit, with additional tornadoes confirmed in Alleghany, Bath, Culpeper, Fauquier and Loudoun Counties. One of these tornadoes, near Culpeper, also destroyed a school, but the storm struck during the evening after classes had been dismissed for the day.
Confirmed tornadoes
May 1 event
May 2 event
Rye Cove, Virginia
At 12:55 p.m. local time, students attending Rye Cove High School, northeast of Clinchport, were resuming class after recess when a strong thunderstorm approached from the southwest. The storm produced a tornado, described as a dark cloud, that touched down southwest of the school. As it approached the school, the tornado intensified and tore the roofs off many structures. Strong winds lofted lumber for hundreds of yards, leaving pieces lodged in trees. Next to the school, the tornado struck a log home dating to about the 1850s, carrying away the entire structure and dispersing furniture up to away. A teacher at the school heard the wind increasing outside but did not alert her students. The tornado then struck the school, which was the fourth-largest in Scott County and served 250 students, about 155 of which were in the building at the time. The building—which contained seven rooms, was of wood frame construction, and stood on a limestone foundation—collapsed and "exploded," flinging debris over a wide area. Winds moved the bodies of the dead up to from the foundation. The tornado continued past the school, destroying a total of five farmhouses before lifting, and reached a width of. All of the 13 deaths—12 students and one teacher—occurred at the school. Total losses reached $100,000. The legacy of the tornado lived on in local folklore as A. P. Carter of the Carter Family, having visited the storm-stricken area and assisted in relief efforts, immediately recorded a song about the storm.