Before the Birmingham tornado referred to by Jo - there was a lovely story at the time of a man in a hut being picked up on one side of Kings Heath High Street and put down on the other side, intact, hut and all
- there was quite a violent tornado in the SW suburbs of the city, back around 1966-67 time. Birmingham is renowned as a bit of a tornado alley.
I saw that 1966-67 one. It first landed in Metchley Lane, Harborne, picking up a garden shed and slapping it down 5 houses up the road, before moving onto the University campus where it made a pile of Austin Mini cars in the car park.
Then it cut across my school's playing fields. It was a Friday afternoon and, with my friend P., we were working on cataloguing the school's geology exhibits in the geography room overlooking the sports area. We were being supervised by Mr Burnett, who was generally hoving around by the large windows, when he suddenly said "you'd better both come over and look at this ... ". We went, and saw the trees by the Head Master's house being whipped into a frenzy. Then we saw another young tree being pulled out of the ground and falling across the central reservation of the Bristol Road! A few minutes later, the twister hit a building site somewhere in the direction of Moseley, and they "released" the crane, which started spinning - and debris from the building site was whipped up and we could for the first time clearly see the funnel formation. Not long after that, it petered out. Nobody hurt, plenty of damage (pictures in the local newspaper of the cars), and something I'll never forget!!