Open in App
  • Local
  • Headlines
  • Election
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • AccuWeather

    Huge hailstorm causes extensive damage, could challenge records in the Carolinas

    By Jesse Ferrell,

    2024-04-22

    Storms caused extreme hail damage not often seen in the Carolinas including ripped-off siding, stripped trees and shredded fences. The largest preliminary hail spotter reports were 4.5 inches in diameter.

    Severe thunderstorms crept across the Carolinas Saturday evening, dropping accumulating small hail and large hailstones that damaged homes and cars.

    Extreme hail damage, not often seen in the Carolinas, was caused by the storms, including ripped-off siding, leaves stripped from trees and shredded vinyl fences. Sunday morning, piles of hail had not yet melted in some of the hardest-hit areas.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3vfKNE_0sZvRGE000

    The largest preliminary hail spotter reports were 4.5 inches in diameter at Lumberton, North Carolina, and 4.0 inches at Rock Hill, South Carolina. "This is a storm that will go down in history," one X user from Rock Hill said.

    The National Weather Service also confirmed that a swath of 90-mph straight-line winds from the same storm caused damage from York, South Carolina, to Rock Hill and onto the Lancaster County line.

    Corey Davis, from the North Carolina Climatologist's office, told AccuWeather that, if confirmed, the 4.5-inch report would tie the unofficial state record for the largest hailstone diameter.

    "Based on the Storm Prediction Center (SPC)'s official records for North Carolina dating back to 1955, there have been seven other hailstones with a diameter of 4.5 inches, but none larger than that. The most recent of these occurred on May 24, 2000, in Burke County," Davis said.

    The day after that record was set on May 25, 2000, storms from the same weather system moved into South Carolina, dropping another 4.5-inch hailstone in the town of Florence, causing over $6 million in damage. The state record was tied again on May 10, 2011, in several counties. Saturday's report of 4 inches would not challenge that South Carolina state record.

    As residents surveyed the damage Saturday evening, hail fog, a rare phenomenon after heavy hail during warm temperatures, was also documented in Rock Hill.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2v44bF_0sZvRGE000
    Expand All
    Comments / 8
    Add a Comment
    Angie Rogers Britt
    04-24
    Maybe some folk can cash in on their high insurance premiums we’ve all been paying !!
    Mark Kuhn
    04-24
    Well so much for the green Joe Biden solar panels!
    View all comments
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local News newsLocal News

    Comments / 0