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Public Information Statement
National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC
108 PM EDT Fri Sep 3 2021

...NWS Damage Surveys for 09/01/21 Central Maryland Tornadoes...

.Overview...The remnants of Hurricane Ida moved over the 
Mid Atlantic on Wednesday September 1st, and spawned two tornadoes
in central Maryland. The Annapolis tornado is documented first, 
followed by the Edgemere tornado.

.Annapolis/Anne Arundel County MD Tornado...

Rating:                 EF-2
Estimated Peak Wind:    125 mph
Path Length /statute/:  11.5 miles
Path Width /maximum/:   200 yards
Fatalities:             0
Injuries:               0

Start Date:             Sep 1 2021
Start Time:             02:01 PM EDT
Start Location:         Owensville, MD
Start Lat/Lon:          38.850 / -76.596

End Date:               Sep 1 2021
End Time:               02:23 PM EDT
End Location:           1 mile north of Annapolis, MD 
End Lat/Lon:            39.001 / -76.509

Survey Summary:

THE INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS PRELIMINARY AND SUBJECT TO 
CHANGE PENDING FINAL REVIEW OF THE EVENT(S) AND PUBLICATION IN NWS
STORM DATA. 

The remnants of Ida produced one of the strongest tornadoes in the 
past decade of Maryland's history. Only four other EF2 or stronger 
tornadoes have occurred in the state in the past 10 years. On 
Wednesday afternoon, a tornado that peaked in intensity with winds 
estimated at 125 mph traveled northeast along a path through Anne 
Arundel County and the City of Annapolis. It not only snapped 
numerous trees, but also produced significant structural damage to 
homes, businesses, and a school. Fortunately, there were no injuries 
reported, even though it tracked through a heavily populated area. 
Several eyewitnesses to the event reported getting the NWS Tornado 
Warning through their cell phone in advance, and sheltering in 
response to the warning.

From the NWS storm survey, the first damage noted, and recorded 
touchdown point was in Owensville, Maryland, in southern Anne 
Arundel County, near the intersection of Sudley Road and Owensville 
Road. This included a large limb from a tree top over Sudley Road 
and several portions of large cedar trees snapped along Owensville 
Road.

The tornado moved northeast across rural southern Anne Arundel 
County before crossing Mill Swamp Road. Here, about a quarter of a 
mile east of the intersection with Dove Farm Road, dozens of trees 
and large branches were snapped and uprooted in a path from 
southwest to northeast as far as you could see in either direction 
from the road. While the dominant direction of the tree damage was 
being blown down to the north or northeast, there were trees downed 
in multiple directions, and many were topped. 

The tornado intensified further as it moved into the South River 
Colony community. Dozens of trees were downed along the easternmost 
portions of Monarch Drive. Homes near the intersection of Monarch 
Drive and Red Admiral Court were particularly hard hit by some of 
the strongest winds of the entire tornado path. Several had 
significant portions of their roof damaged or removed, and one home 
in the middle of the track was unroofed entirely. One resident in 
this area reported seeing the tornado as it approached.

The tornado then crossed South River Golf Links before moving into a 
campus of school buildings that includes South River High School and 
the Center of Applied Technology South. There it damaged the upper 
parts of the football field grandstands and concessions stand, 
damaged the roof, and caused cosmetic damage to some of the upper 
portions of the Center of Applied Technology South. The schools were 
left structurally sound, and the staff and some students that were 
there, were able to shelter without injury.

The tornado crossed Central Avenue around 2:11 PM and moved into 
Edgewater. Here it crossed the communities of Woodland Beach, 
Londontowne, and Edgewater Park. Dozens of trees and large branches 
were snapped, portions of 5 to 10 roofs were noted to have been 
damaged. One home near the intersection of Millstone Drive and 
Oakwood Road had only damaged roof trusses remaining of its roof.

The tornado crossed the South River and moved through western 
portions of the City of Annapolis at peak intensity with winds 
estimated at 125 mph at 2:20 PM. Several trees were snapped along 
the path as it crossed Aris T. Allen Boulevard just east of the 
Annapolis Harbour Center shopping area. It crossed Forest Drive at 
the intersection of Parole Street. Several homes there sustained 
roof damage, and one home was unroofed entirely. As it crossed the 
area near the intersection of West Street and Lee Street, the most 
substantial structural damage was noted. A large warehouse building 
had the winds enter the south side of the building and blow out a 
large portion of the west side cinder block wall. The roof with 
large metal trusses was largely removed. A fast food restaurant had 
its sign entirely removed from its post. Another commercial building 
had its roof removed, significant upper portions of the cinder block 
building removed, and its large commercial sign post blown over. A 
strip mall across the street had its windows blown out and flat roof 
damaged. All the telephone poles and attached wires along this 
stretch of West Street were downed. Another commercial building had 
its windows blown out. Several eyewitnesses saw the tornado as it 
passed. Additional residential roof damage occurred as the tornado 
moved north over Bowman Court.

From here, the tornado crossed into the community of Admiral 
Heights. Affected were areas along Halsey Road and adjacent Cedar 
Park Road. Here, the wind did not directly cause any structural 
damage, but about a dozen trees were snapped. That included one 
large, healthy tree about two and a half feet in diameter. The 
tornado crossed Weems Creek and Rowe Boulevard, and then snapped 
several trees along Riverview Avenue.

Finally the tornado crossed US Route 50/301 a few hundred yards west 
of the Severn River Bridge, snapping trees on both sides of the 
highway. The final damage noted occurred at the end of Acorn Drive 
at the last residential property that sits on the shore of the 
Severn River. Several trees were snapped here. The tornado 
dissipated here, or as it crossed the Severn River. The survey team 
was not able to find any damage north of the Severn River, and video 
evidence from social media indicates the funnel dissipated here.

The National Weather Service Baltimore/Washington thanks the 
first responders and the Offices of Emergency Management of the 
City of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County, who all provided 
invaluable support for this storm survey.


.Edgemere Tornado in eastern Baltimore County MD...

Rating:                 EF-0
Estimated Peak Wind:    85 mph
Path Length /statute/:  6.9 miles
Path Width /maximum/:   75 yards
Fatalities:             0
Injuries:               0

Start Date:             Sep 1 2021
Start Time:             2:48 PM EDT
Start Location:         Fort Howard, MD
Start Lat/Lon:          39.197 / -76.442

End Date:               Sep 1 2021
End Time:               3:00 PM EDT
End Location:           Holly Beach, MD
End Lat/Lon:            39.285 / -76.388

Survey Summary: 

THE INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS PRELIMINARY AND SUBJECT TO 
CHANGE PENDING FINAL REVIEW OF THE EVENT(S) AND PUBLICATION IN NWS
STORM DATA. 

A NWS storm survey team determined that a EF-0 tornado occurred 
near Edgemere in Baltimore County Maryland on Wednesday afternoon 
September 1 2021. This tornado produced scattered minor tree 
damage spawned across an approximate 6.7 mile path. This tornado 
was produced by the same supercell that produced the Anne Arundel 
County/Annapolis tornado roughly a half hour prior to this. 

The first damage noted was near Fort Howard Park . . . where 
there were broken tree branches and a hardwood tree snapped. As 
the tornado progressed to the northeast . . . hardwood and 
softwood trees were snapped and uprooted along Fort Howard Park 
Road. The tornado continued its northeast trek through North Point
State Park . . . where more broken tree branches and softwood 
trees were found snapped. Sporadic damage continued throughout the
park before the tornado crossed the Black River. 

As the tornado moved northeast over Rocky Point, leaf debris and 
small branches covered Rocky Point Golf Course. The northeast 
track continued just west of Browns Creek . . . where hardwood 
trees were sheared on the tree line and tree branches were broken.
The last of the damage was found near Holly Beach. 

The National Weather Service Baltimore/Washington thanks 
Baltimore County’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency 
Management for their assistance with locating damage.

EF Scale: The Enhanced Fujita Scale classifies tornadoes into the
following categories:

EF0.........65 to 85 mph
EF1.........86 to 110 mph
EF2.........111 to 135 mph
EF3.........136 to 165 mph
EF4.........166 to 200 mph
EF5.........>200 mph

$$