Severe weather tore through the southeastern United States on January 8 into January 9, resulting in 4 fatalities, with 2 of them being tornadic: one each in
Alabama and
North Carolina. Additional non-tornadic fatalities occurred in the states of Alabama and
Georgia. The first January EF3 or stronger tornado in Florida history occurred. The tornado outbreak led to a ground stops at
Orlando International Airport.
Confirmed tornadoes January 8 event January 9 event Graceville, Florida/Cottonwood–Gordon, Alabama This large, long-tracked tornado developed over remote swampland north of
Chipley, Florida in
Jackson County and moved north-northeastward along Hickshill Road at EF1 intensity, snapping or uprooting trees and damaging an outbuilding. The tornado then turned northeastward, continuing to damage trees along with the roof of a
double-wide mobile home along Piano Road. Continuing northeastward, the tornado continued to snap and uprooted trees and damaged another outbuilding. South of
Graceville along
SR 77, the tornado damaged homes, blew out the windows of a mobile home, heavily damaged or destroyed outbuildings, and snapped or uprooted countless trees. It also destroyed a pair of concrete
silos along Cliff Road. Southeast of town, more trees were snapped or uprooted and a home along
CR 169 suffered considerable roof damage in this area. Another home along Shiloh Church Loop also suffered significant roof damage to the east of Graceville. The tornado then crossed
SR 2, snapping or uprooting more trees and causing minor roof damage to another home before moving over open terrain, where little if any damage occurred. Right before crossing the
Florida–
Alabama state line, the tornado inflicted minor roof damage to a small business along with minor damage to an outbuilding as it crossed
US 231. Continuing northeastward, the tornado then crossed the state line into
Houston County, Alabama while still at EF1 intensity. South of
Madrid, the tornado struck a large
McLane Company warehouse, which had multiple exterior walls blown out. Many trees were snapped or uprooted, and a power pole was damaged. Beyond this point, several houses, mobile homes, and outbuildings had roofing material torn off, a few power poles were snapped, and countless trees were snapped or uprooted along this segment of the path as well. The tornado briefly reached EF2 intensity as it approached
Cottonwood, completely destroying a well-anchored mobile home. The tornado then moved directly through Cottonwood, where several homes and businesses had major roof damage, and one business in the downtown area sustained a total collapse of its front masonry wall. A couple of churches also had roof and window damage and a metal building was left with a large dent in it and had wall panels removed. Much of the peak damage in Cottonwood was rated EF1, but a small area of EF2 damage occurred along
SR 53, where a two-story house had its roof torn off. Another area of EF2 damage occurred as the tornado left the town when it leveled a cinderblock
Moose Lodge building and a third area of EF2 damage occurred from large trees being snapped. The tornado continued northeastward, continuing to snap trees with a mobile home suffering minor damage. The tornado then briefly reached its peak intensity of high-end EF2 along September Road where a double-wide mobile home was leveled, resulting in a fatality. After moving over another area of open terrain, the tornado caused EF1 tree damage along Creek Church Road. A small outbuilding was also knocked over and at least one power pole was snapped. After crossing
US 84 at EF0 strength, the tornado caused some additional tree damage. One final area of EF1 damage occurred along Ed Tolar Road, where a home suffered minor roof damage before the tornado dissipated as it reached
CR 95 northwest of
Gordon. The tornado traveled and reached a width of . One person was killed, and ten others were injured, with six others being injured indirectly. ==See also==