• A friendly and periodic reminder of the rules we use for fostering high SNR and quality conversation and interaction at Stormtrack: Forum rules

    P.S. - Nothing specific happened to prompt this message! No one is in trouble, there are no flame wars in effect, nor any inappropriate conversation ongoing. This is being posted sitewide as a casual refresher.

The Untold Story of The 1984 Minneapolis Tornado.

Joined
Mar 23, 2009
Messages
55
Location
East Bethel, Minnesota
Before I can tell this story, I need to supply a little bit of technical background or you won't understand it. During my teenage years and before, the Twin Cities Metro area had a telephone "dating service" similar to Internet Chat Lines of today. We called it the Jam Line, and I have since discovered that some cities in other parts of the country had them too, but called them by a different term: "Beep Line." Anyway, the cause of the Jam Line was the telephone company's building of the new Electronic Switching (ESS) that we use today. In order for ESS to work correctly, it had to be built in parallel to the old mechanical switching used in the 1950's - 1970's. This created a Loop in the telephone lines allowing people to talk to each other when getting a Busy Signal. Us teens would dial the local radio station's request line, which was always busy, and get the Jam Line; where one would shout out their telephone number between the beeps of the busy signal and the guys/girls would call each other back. If you want to know more about the Jam Line check out this web link: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2012/12/24/arts/jam-line
Now that you've got the background here's the story:


It was about 8:30 pm on April 26, 1984. A teenage girl was standing in a phone booth in the parking lot of the SuperAmerica gas station on 37th Ave. NE, in Minneapolis, MN talking on the Jam Line, when suddenly the telephone line went dead, then was followed by some clicking sounds, went dead again, and just as suddenly the Jam Line was back on. Moments later the power went out all around her, then an F-3 tornado hit the Apache Plaza Shopping Mall about a 1/2 mile away. The resulting damage would trigger the eventual bankruptcy and demolition of the mid-sized indoor mall built in 1961.

For days afterwards the local evening News casts would focus on how there were no warning sirens sounded before this tornado struck the mall. There was a lot of public outcry for a better system to activate the civil-defense warning network. It turned out that the civil-defense sirens were triggered by telephone line, and for some reason the system had failed in the 781/788/789 telephone prefix areas. The sirens worked fine in other areas of the city. The Weather Service was baffled.

The Jam Line that existed on the 781/788/789 prefix was the last ever in the Twin Cities, MN area. It was shut down in 1984, about a month after the tornado, but not before I talked to the teenage girl who was in the phone booth that stormy night. She was one of the last girls I ever talked to off of the Jam Line, and she talked about this strange story of how the tornado had momentarily knocked out the Jam Line, and how she was so close she could see a "green-glow" in the darkness traveling along the ground towards Apache Mall. To her, the NWS, and the TV News Reporters, there was no explanation for the failures that night. To me and a select few others, we knew exactly what had happened.

One of my friend’s mom’s was a NorthWestern Bell Telephone Operator. Both my friend and I were heavily into the Jam Line. We had been told by his mom that the telephone company didn’t like the Jam Line because with so many people calling into a certain prefix, it would over-load the circuits, crash the relay switching station, and block in-coming calls. The phone company would have to try and reroute traffic, but they could only do so much. That teenage girl told me the Jam Line was very busy that night and there were about 20 people screaming on the Line. She had been a bit frustrated trying to dial in because it was hard to get through. It didn’t take an Einstein to figure out what had happened, but the phone company kept it quiet. The Jam Line had overloaded the circuits and blocked the trigger signal for the warning sirens in the area.

Many residents and shoppers lives were put at risk that night because they had no warning. No one could have ever predicted that the Jam Line would have caused such a mess. These events are a true story; but the conclusions are purely speculation on my part.

Here's a web link to some damage pictures of Apache Plaza Shopping Mall:
http://apacheplaza.com/tornado.html
 
Interesting story with (what I can only assume to be) quite the unique set of circumstances. There was an incident in Colorado back in 2008 of some unfortunate and slightly ironic circumstances but I'll save that for a different thread.

Thanks for sharing!
 
Wow, I managed to track down a recording of a Jam Line. Really weird listening to it.

http://vintagerotaryphones.com/images/jamline.mp3

The fact that people called those things makes me realize how much we take Internet forums & social media for granted these days.

Tim


There are also some Jam Line sound clips in the MPR Radio Story. To hear them click on the "Listen" tab near the top of the story page.
http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2012/12/24/arts/jam-line

Finally, for an in depth history of the Jam Line and all things phone phreak related check out this book:
http://explodingthephone.com/

Sorry about getting off topic here, but telephones are intricately linked to modern weather reporting, etc. :)
 
I remember in Southern Minnesota there were Severe Thunderstorm Warnings and as a result the firearms safety class I was taking was postponed. We got to the small legion hall where the class was being held and the lead instructor told us the class was cancelled that night. He didn’t want to hold because in the case of a Tornado Warning there wasn a real great place to shelter over 20 people. I also remember the Tornado in the Twin Cities hitting about the time the North Stars hockey game was ready to start. They were in the playoffs against Edmonton and the game started shortly after 8:30 PM CT and was televised on KMSP.
 
I remember in Southern Minnesota there were Severe Thunderstorm Warnings and as a result the firearms safety class I was taking was postponed. We got to the small legion hall where the class was being held and the lead instructor told us the class was cancelled that night. He didn’t want to hold because in the case of a Tornado Warning there wasn a real great place to shelter over 20 people. I also remember the Tornado in the Twin Cities hitting about the time the North Stars hockey game was ready to start. They were in the playoffs against Edmonton and the game started shortly after 8:30 PM CT and was televised on KMSP.

It had been up around 80°F that day in the Twin Cities, and the next day after the tornado had ripped a bunch of roofs off buildings, over a foot of snow fell. I remember hearing that the snow caused more damage to the roofless buildings than the tornado did!
 
Very interesting, especially about the jam lines.

I've read about people doing various phone system hacks, but not that one.
 
It had been up around 80°F that day in the Twin Cities, and the next day after the tornado had ripped a bunch of roofs off buildings, over a foot of snow fell. I remember hearing that the snow caused more damage to the roofless buildings than the tornado did!
It was actually Sunday when the snowstorm hit. I remember that on May 1 we had snow on the ground and no school the Monday after this due to the heavy snowfall
 
Back
Top