Cartoon from the editorial page of the May 4, 1929 Richmond Times-Dispatch.

A dreadful cyclone that came this way

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Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

It was the greatest disaster ever known to this Western Virginia mountain village.

On May 2, 1929, the unusually violent storm slammed into the little community of Rye Cove, VA in the mountains of Scott County.

United Press article on Rye Cove Cyclone, May 4, 1929Uniter Press article on Rye Cove Cyclone, May 4, 1929 Sat, May 4, 1929 – 34 · The Springfield Press (Springfield, Missouri) · Click image to read full size at Newspapers.com

During the storm a tornado directly struck the local two-story schoolhouse, with over 150 children and teachers inside. The building was completely leveled, and the debris caught fire from an overturned stove. Thirteen were killed. The dozens of injured were rushed by special train to the hospital in Bristol.

men surveying wreckage of rye cove school after cyclone hit

A. P. Carter, of the famous Carter Family, was in the next valley on the day of the storm. He rushed to Rye Cove to help with the rescue efforts. He was touched by the horror of what he saw and soon composed “The Cyclone of Rye Cove.” The Carter Family recorded the song that same year for RCA Victor.

“The Cyclone of Rye Cove”
Oh, give us a home far beyond the blue sky,
Where storms and cyclones are unknown,
And there by life’s strand, we’ll clasp with our glad hands
God’s children in a heavenly home.

Oh, listen today in a story I tell,
In sadness and tear dimmed eye,
Of a dreadful cyclone that came this way,
And it blew our schoolhouse away.

CHORUS:
Rye Cove, (Rye Cove), Rye Cove, (Rye Cove),
The place of my childhood and home,
Where in life’s early morn I once loved to roam,
But now it’s so silent and lone.

When the cyclone appeared, it darkened the air,
And the lightning flashed over the sky,
And the children all cried, “Don’t take us away,
And spare us to go back home.”

There were mothers so dear and fathers the same,
That came to this horrible scene,
Searching and crying, each found her own child,
Dying on a pillow of stone

The Cyclone Of Rye Cove Carter Family

sources: www.blueridgeinstitute.org/ballads/audio.html
scott.k12.va.us/rci/Transcript.htm

More articles on the Carter Family:

You’ve been fooling me, baby(Opens in a new browser tab)

Filmmaker Beth Harrington discusses the making of her Carter Family documentary(Opens in a new browser tab)

2 comments

  1. Hello,
    I have been researching my husband’s side of the family from Scott County, VA, originating from John B Salling. Would you happen to know anything about a free man of color often called “Free Bob” . Somehow, my husband’s relatives helped him to gain his family. Here is a very interesting court case about the battle of Joseph Carter’s land and slaves, an amazing story thank you http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/full_case_detail.asp?CFN=169-1854-004#img

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