Nature sure has been giving it to Petersburg NB lately. How're things looking down there, Emmanuel?
Tornado/High Winds Cause Damage to Park
At 1 p.m. yesterday afternoon, what was evidently a tornado touched down in the park’s City Point Unit. There were no injuries, but an as yet not fully determined amount of damage was inflicted on buildings and vegetation. A 1916 Sears & Roebuck shed behind the Bonnacord building – reportedly one of the first of its kind available from the Sears catalogue – was completely destroyed. Appomattox Manor suffered some damage when four heavy cast iron columns supporting the west facing porch were blown down. One column slammed so hard against the side of the manor that it broke through the building’s wooden siding; another was thrown off its base and onto the walkway below. Quick action by maintenance staff in shoring up the sagging porch roof prevented further damage to the historic structure. No artifacts in the manor were harmed, and no other damage occurred to the building’s interior. Many trees, shrubs and signs were blown down or uprooted, including a historic boxwood tree that was a wedding gift to the Eppes family from Brandon Plantation in 1870. Two huge trees fell on either side of General Grant’s cabin, just barely missing the structure. Windows were blown out of the Naldara building and the carriage house. All windows have been boarded up and secured. A newly rebuilt wooden staircase, destroyed by Hurricane Isabel last September, was partially destroyed again. Heavy rains were still falling at the time of the report, causing bluff erosion, particularly along the north and west facing side of the peninsula.
Tornado/High Winds Cause Damage to Park
At 1 p.m. yesterday afternoon, what was evidently a tornado touched down in the park’s City Point Unit. There were no injuries, but an as yet not fully determined amount of damage was inflicted on buildings and vegetation. A 1916 Sears & Roebuck shed behind the Bonnacord building – reportedly one of the first of its kind available from the Sears catalogue – was completely destroyed. Appomattox Manor suffered some damage when four heavy cast iron columns supporting the west facing porch were blown down. One column slammed so hard against the side of the manor that it broke through the building’s wooden siding; another was thrown off its base and onto the walkway below. Quick action by maintenance staff in shoring up the sagging porch roof prevented further damage to the historic structure. No artifacts in the manor were harmed, and no other damage occurred to the building’s interior. Many trees, shrubs and signs were blown down or uprooted, including a historic boxwood tree that was a wedding gift to the Eppes family from Brandon Plantation in 1870. Two huge trees fell on either side of General Grant’s cabin, just barely missing the structure. Windows were blown out of the Naldara building and the carriage house. All windows have been boarded up and secured. A newly rebuilt wooden staircase, destroyed by Hurricane Isabel last September, was partially destroyed again. Heavy rains were still falling at the time of the report, causing bluff erosion, particularly along the north and west facing side of the peninsula.
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