FLINT, Mich. – On June 8, 1953, disaster struck the north side of Flint and the northern suburb of Beecher when the Flint-Beecher tornado, Michigan’s worst natural disaster in terms of deaths and injuries, tore through the area.
The Flint-Beecher tornado remains the only tornado to strike Southeast Lower Michigan rated F5 on the Fujita scale.
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According to the National Weather Service, an F5 tornado produces “incredible damage,” with winds estimated between 261 and 318 mph -- powerful enough to level strong frame houses, hurl automobile-sized debris more than 100 meters and debark trees.
The scale of the storm was staggering. At 800 yards wide, the tornado didn’t just destroy homes -- it erased entire blocks, entire neighborhoods, entire chapters of people’s lives in the span of minutes. Winds are believed to have exceeded 200 mph.
The tornado traveled 27 miles at approximately 35 mph, killing 116 people and injuring 844 others in its path.
For those in its way, there was little warning and almost nowhere to go.
It stands as the deadliest natural disaster in Michigan history and the 10th deadliest in United States history.
The aftermath
So many people were killed that the National Guard Armory and other buildings were temporarily converted into morgues. More than 100 people -- families and friends of victims -- waited outside in the rain for hours before they could enter to identify the bodies.
State Police Captain James Berardo warned the people outside that the tornado had horribly battered some victims and that the scene inside would be gruesome.
The Flint-Beecher tornado claimed lives ranging from as young as 5 months to as old as 80.
Of the 116 killed, 55 were under 20 years old -- and five of those were less than a year old. Of the 844 injured, the last two survivors to be hospitalized were not discharged until five months after the tornado.
At least 20 families reported losing more than one member. The Gensel and Gatica families each lost five people.
Community response
In the wake of the disaster, state troopers, the National Guard and the Red Cross quickly mobilized to assist. Within 12 hours of the tornado, they provided first aid, food and clothing to survivors.
The National Weather Service noted in their Beecher 50th Anniversary Commemoration that the Flint-Beecher Tornado was one of eight tornadoes that occurred that evening across the eastern portion of the Lower Peninsula, resulting in an additional nine deaths and 52 injuries.
The tornado destroyed nearly 340 homes, with 107 sustaining major damage and 153 experiencing minor damage. An additional 50 businesses and other buildings were damaged, totaling an estimated $19 million -- nearly a quarter of a billion dollars in today’s money.
Rebuilding the community
Beecher was able to rebuild thanks to the broader Flint community, which rallied around a “Red Feather” campaign to gather relief and rebuilding funds. Combined with Red Cross support, the effort helped the community get back on its feet.
In the late summer of 1953, a community-supported “Builder Bees” project brought volunteers together to help rebuild homes lost in the tornado.