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UA

An EF4 Tornado Killed 6 Students and Changed How Alabama Builds: The Day Tuscaloosa Was Cut in Half

ALtornadoemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On April 27, 2011, an EF4 tornado with winds exceeding 190 mph struck Tuscaloosa, Alabama, cutting a mile-wide path directly through the city. The tornado killed 64 people in the Tuscaloosa area, including 6 University of Alabama students. Despite over an hour of advance warning, the campus had no dedicated storm shelters. The disaster led the university to construct 9 storm shelters across campus in the following years.

Alerts
3
Response
min
Killed
6
Injured
12
Institution
The University of Alabama
Public R1 · AL
~38,000 studentsUA Alerts
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction205 chars
UA Alert: TORNADO WARNING for Tuscaloosa County. A confirmed tornado is on the ground and moving toward Tuscaloosa. Seek shelter immediately in an interior room on the lowest floor. Stay away from windows.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed from university and National Weather Service communications
The tornado struck Tuscaloosa at approximately 5:13 PM CDT, giving over an hour of lead time from initial warnings
UA Alerts was a relatively new system at the time, having been implemented after the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007
UPDATESMS+1h 15m
Approximate reconstruction237 chars
UA Alert: TAKE SHELTER NOW. Large, extremely dangerous tornado approaching Tuscaloosa. Go to the lowest floor of a sturdy building immediately. Get under a desk or heavy furniture. Protect your head. This is a life-threatening emergency.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed from emergency communications and survivor accounts
The campus had no dedicated storm shelters at this time; students sheltered in building hallways, basements, and bathrooms
Some professors moved classes to interior hallways and basement areas as warnings escalated
ALL CLEARSMS+3 h
Approximate reconstruction265 chars
UA Alert: The tornado warning has expired. A major tornado has struck Tuscaloosa with significant damage and casualties reported. Stay off roads. Emergency services are responding. Classes are canceled until further notice. Check on your neighbors if safe to do so.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed from university post-tornado communications
The tornado carved a path over a mile wide through Tuscaloosa, destroying entire neighborhoods near campus
Communication was severely hampered as cell towers were damaged and power was lost across much of the city
Context

Background

April 27, 2011 was one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in American history, with over 360 tornadoes touching down across the southeastern United States in a single day. The most devastating of these was the EF4 tornado that struck Tuscaloosa, Alabama at 5:13 PM CDT, carving a mile-wide, 80-mile-long path of destruction through the heart of the city. The tornado passed less than a mile from the University of Alabama campus, destroying apartment complexes and neighborhoods where many students lived off campus. Six UA students were among the 64 people killed in the Tuscaloosa area. Despite the National Weather Service issuing tornado warnings more than an hour before the tornado struck, the university had no dedicated storm shelters at the time. Students and staff sheltered in hallways, basements, and interior bathrooms of campus buildings. Professors who were still in class moved students to the safest available locations. The disaster exposed a critical gap in campus infrastructure. In the years following, the University of Alabama invested in constructing 9 purpose-built storm shelters across campus, capable of protecting thousands of students and staff. The April 27 tornado became a defining event for the university and for campus emergency preparedness in tornado-prone regions nationwide. The broader outbreak killed 324 people across six states and caused over $11 billion in damage.
Analysis

Key Findings

Over an hour of warning time was available, but the absence of dedicated storm shelters on campus limited protective options
Six students died, all in off-campus locations where building construction offered less protection
The disaster directly led to the construction of 9 campus storm shelters in subsequent years
The event became a national case study in campus tornado preparedness and shelter infrastructure
Outcome
Six UA students killed. Twelve students injured. Widespread destruction in neighborhoods adjacent to campus. The university subsequently built 9 campus storm shelters.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. Source
  4. News
Tags
tornadomass-casualtyef4no-storm-sheltersalabamafounding-event-for-shelter-construction
Added April 2026Updated April 2026Via ingestion