Tornado outbreak of April 1315 2019

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A significant severe weather and tornado outbreak affected multiple regions of the Eastern United States in mid-April 2019. Over the course of 40 hours, 75 tornadoes touched down. The outbreak produced numerous strong tornadoes throughout portions of the Deep South, while additional significant tornadoes occurred as far north as Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. The most significant tornado of the event was a long-tracked, high-end EF3 tornado that struck Alto, Texas and killed two people. Numerous weak tornadoes were also confirmed, along with numerous reports of hail and damaging straight line winds. As the event itself unfolded, supercell thunderstorms and embedded semi-discrete supercell structures overspread the threat area, resulting in numerous tornadoes. A total of nine people were killed during this outbreak of severe weather, including three fatalities as a result of the tornadoes that struck Texas and Hamilton, Mississippi. A rescue worker in Alabama was struck by a vehicle while clearing debris off a roadway, killing him. An additional fatality occurred on April 15 when a tree fell on a home in Stafford, Virginia, killing an occupant.