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U.S. Tornadoes
Find a list of the most deadly and intense tornadoes in the U.S. with casualty information.
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1840
- May 6, Natchez, Miss.: tornado struck heart of the
city, killing 317 and injuring over 1,000.
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1880
- April 18, Marshfield, Mo.: series of 24 tornadoes
demolished city, killing 99 people.
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1884
- Feb. 19, Miss., Ala., N.C., S.C., Tenn., Ky., Ind.:
series of 60 tornadoes caused estimated 800 deaths.
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1890
- March 27, Louisville, Ky.: twister hit community
and caused 76 deaths.
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1896
- May 27, eastern Mo. and southern Ill.: series of 18
tornadoes; 1 tornado destroyed large section of St. Louis, Mo., killing
255.
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1899
- June 12, New Richmond, Wis.: tornado struck while
circus was in town, causing 117 deaths.
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1902
- May 18, Goliad, Tex.: tornado killed 114.
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1903
- June 1, Gainesville, Holland, Ga.: twister caused
98 deaths.
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1905
- May 10, Snyder, Okla.: tornado killed 97.
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1908
- April 24–25, La., Miss., Ala., Ga.: 18 tornadoes
resulted in 310 deaths (143 of these caused by 1 tornado that moved from
Amite, La. to Purvis, Miss.).
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- April 24, Natchez, Miss.: twister struck, causing
91 deaths.
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1913
- March 23, eastern Nebr. and western Iowa: Easter
Sunday: 8 tornadoes resulted in 181 deaths (103 in Omaha, Nebr.).
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1917
- May 26, Mattoon, Ill.: tornado smashed area,
causing 101 deaths.
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1920
- April 20, Starkville, Miss.; Waco, Ala.: tornado
killed 88.
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1924
- June 28, Lorain, Sandusky, Ohio: tornado swept
through cities, causing 85 deaths.
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1925
- March 18, Mo., Ill., Ind.: the “Tri-State Tornado”
was the most violent single twister in U.S. history. It caused the
deaths of 695 people and injured over 2,000. Property damage was
estimated at $16.5 million.
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1927
- May 9, Poplar Bluff, Mo.: twister killed 98.
- Sept. 29, St. Louis, Mo.: a five-minute tornado
ripped through the city and caused 79 deaths.
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1932
- March 21–22, Ala., Miss., Ga., Tenn.: outbreak of
33 tornadoes killed 334 (268 in Ala.).
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1936
- April 5–6, Deep South: series of 17 tornadoes; 216
killed in Tupelo, Miss., and 203 killed in Gainesville, Ga.
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1944
- June 23, W. Va., Pa., Md.: 4 tornadoes caused 153
deaths.
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1947
- April 9, Woodward, Okla.: tornado demolished town,
killing 181.
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1952
- March 21–22, Ark. and Tenn.: 28 tornadoes caused
204 deaths.
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1953
- May 11, Waco, Tex.: a single tornado killed
114.
- June 8, Flint, Mich.: tornado killed 115.
- June 9, Worcester, Mass.: tornado hit town, killing
90.
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1955
- May 25, Udall, Kans.: tornado killed 80.
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1965
- April 11–12, Midwest–Great Lakes region: tornadoes
in Iowa, Ill., Ind., Ohio, Mich., and Wis. caused 256 deaths.
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1967
- April 21, northern Ill., also Mo., Iowa, lower
Mich.: series of 52 tornadoes caused 58 deaths.
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1971
- Feb. 21, Miss., La., Ark., Tenn.: series of 10
tornadoes resulted in 121 deaths.
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1974
- April 3–4: a series of 148 twisters within 16 hours
comprised the deadly “Super Tornado Outbreak” that struck 13 states in
the East, South, and Midwest. Before it was over, 330 died and 5,484
were injured in a damage path covering more than 2,500 mi.
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1979
- April 10, northern Tex. and southern Okla.: 11
tornadoes caused 59 deaths.
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1984
- March 28, N.C. and S.C.: 22 tornadoes caused 57
deaths.
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1985
- May 31, Pa. and Ohio: 27 tornadoes resulted in 75
deaths. Estimated damages were $450 million.
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1990
- Aug. 28, northern Ill.: fast-moving tornado struck
the southwest suburbs of Chicago, killing 29 and injuring more than
300.
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1992
- Nov. 21–23, southeast Tex. to Mid-Atlantic and Ohio
Valley: total of 94 tornadoes caused 26 deaths and $291 million
in damage.
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1994
- March 27, Ala., Ga., and N.C.: Palm Sunday tornado
outbreak resulted in 42 deaths and 320 injuries. Property damages
reached $107 million. Twenty people died and 90 were injured when a
tornado caused the roof of a church near Piedmont, Ala., to
collapse.
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1997
- May 27, central Tex.: multiple tornadoes, including
one particularly strong twister that devastated the town of Jarrell,
caused 29 deaths and an estimated $20 million in damage.
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1999
- Jan. 17–22, Tenn. and Ark.: a series of tornadoes
left 17 dead. Damages were estimated at $1.3 billion.
- May 3, Okla. and Kans.: unusually large twister,
thought to have been a mile wide at times, killed 44 people and injured
at least 748. A separate tornado killed another 5 and injured about 150
in Kans. Damages totaled at least $1 billion.
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2000
- Feb. 14, southwest Ga.: at least 5 tornadoes struck
southwest Ga., killing 19 people and injuring over 100.
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2002
- Nov. 9–11, central and southeast U.S.: series of
more than 70 tornadoes across 9 states from Miss. to Pa. killed 36
people.
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2003
- May 1–10, southern and midwestern U.S.: more than
400 tornadoes in 10 days killed 42.
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2006
- March–April, plains, Tenn, and Ohio valley, U.S.:
more than 500 tornadoes killed 47 people in the 2–month period.
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2007
- March 1, Ala., Minn., Miss., and Ga.: a series of
tornados killed about 20 people, including eight high school
students.
- May 7, Kans.: ten people died in a Category F-5
tornado that completely wiped out a small Kansas farming town.
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2008
- Jan. 7–8, Ark., Ill., Mo., and Wis.: a series of
tornados caused by record-breaking temperatures killed at least six
people, including two children, destroyed houses, and flooded
roads.
- Feb. 5–6, Tenn., Ark., Ala., Ky., and Mo.: 47
people are killed and hundreds more injured after violent tornadoes rip
through the southern United States. According to emergency officials,
the victims include 24 people in Tenn., 13 in Ark., 7 in
Kentucky, and 3 in Ala..
- March 14–15, Ga.: two people are killed and at
least 30 people are injured when violent tornadoes strike Atlanta and
northwestern counties of Georgia including Polk County and Floyd County.
The storms cause damage to the CNN Center, the Georgia Dome, and the
Convention Center in Atlanta, and leave thousands of homes without power
statewide.
- May 1–2, Ark.: seven people are killed and 13
more injured in Arkansas when storms hit 16 counties Thursday night and
Friday morning.
- May 11, Okla., Mo., Ga.: more than 20 people die
and hundreds more are injured when tornadoes hit Missouri, Oklahoma, and
Georgia. Racine, a town about 170 miles south of Kansas City, Missouri
saw the most damage, leaving about 9,000 people without electricity for
over three days.
- May 22-23, Co., Kans.: one person dies when a tornado hits
an RV park, west of Greeley, Colorado. People hide in a cement block restroom as
one man tries to outrun the tornado in his RV. The tornado rips the RV in half,
throwing at 100 feet. A couple dies on their way from Colorado to a Kansas
family reunion when a tornado sweeps their car from a road 13 miles east of Pratt,
Kansas.
- May 25, Ia., Minn.: a tornado rips through the southern and eastern half of Parkersburg, Iowa, killing 5 die in Parkersburg and 2 others one mile north of New Hartford. At least 50 people are hospitalized and 400 homes are destroyed. Also on May 25th, a tornado moves east across the northern tip of Hugo, Minnesota. It rips apart 25 homes, killing a two-year-old child and injuring the rest of the family.
- June 11, Ia., Kans.: a tornado plows through a Boy Scout camp in Monona County, Iowa. Four scouts, ages 13 -14, die and at least 42 other people are injured. About an hour and a half later, a series of tornados hit northeast Kansas. One strikes the town of Chapman, Dickinson County, and kills a 21-year-old woman. About half the town is damaged or destroyed, including both schools. Another tornado touches down and causes $20 million damage at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas. Another hits Soldier, Kansas, destroying 32 homes and killing a 62-year-old-man in a mobile home east of town.
- July 24, N.H.: the second most intense tornado in New Hampshire history touches down in Deerfield. It moves north-northeast for nearly 50 miles, pulling up thousands of trees and ripping apart more than 100 homes in 11 towns. A 57-year-old woman dies protecting her 3-month-old grandson, who is uninjured. The most intense tornado to hit New Hampshire happened on September 9, 1821, killing 6 people.
- Sept. 3, La.: Hurricane Gustav causes at least 25 tornados. One of them destroys a mobile home near Mamou, Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, killing a man and a woman.
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2009
- Feb. 10–11, Okla., Ark., Tex., Ala., Miss, Ga., Tenn., Ind.: a series of tornados strike killing 8 people.
- April 9–10, Okla., Tex., Mo., Ark., La., Miss., Tenn., Ky., Ala., Ga., S.C., N.C.: sixty-six tornados are confirmed, and 111 are reported. Three peopled die in Mena, Arkansas, and two people are killed in Murfreesboro, Tenn.
- May 8, Kan., Mo., Ill., Ky., Tenn., Va., N.C.: a series of 39 tornados strike, killing 6 people.
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2010
- March 28, N.C.: a series of tornados hit, causes substantial damage to the Piedmont Triad (Greensboro, Winston-Salem, and High Point) area of North Carolina.
- April 22–24, Miss., La: ten people die in Mississippi as a series of tornados hit, including the 4th longest in the state's history.
- April 30– May 2, Ark., Miss., Tenn.: five people are killed as a series of tornados hit.
- May 10–11, Ark., Kans., Okla.: three people die as a series of tornados hit. Major damage is caused to areas near Norman, Moore, Choctaw and Little Axe, Oklahoma.
- June 5–6, Ill., Ind., Oh., Mi.: a series of tornados hit, killing 8 people. One tornado in Ohio alone causes 7 of the fatalities, making it the second deadliest in 2010.
- June 17, N.D., Minn. Iowa: a series of tornados roar across the Midwest. Four of them cause substantial damage throughout Minnesota.
- Dec. 31– Jan. 1, Okla., Ark., Mo., Ill.: a series of tornados strike on New Year's Eve, killing 9 people.
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2011
- April 4–5, Ark., Ky., Tenn., Oh., La, Miss., Ga., N.C., Md.: several tornados hit southern and eastern states, causing six deaths.
- April 14–16, various southern states: one of the largest outbreaks of tornados on record, killing 38 people. This is also the deadliest U.S. tornado outbreak since 2008.
- April 19– ongoing, various southern and midwestern states: more than 100 tornados strike, killing at least 213 people. One tornado hits the St. Louis area, including the airport, briefly causing it to shut down.
- May 22– Joplin, MO: about one-third of the city is leveled and some 2,000 buildings are destroyed in the tornado that registered 200-mile-an-hour winds. More than 120 people are killed and 1,500 are missing. It is the deadliest tornado in more than 60 years.
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2012
- Jan. 22–23, Ark., Tenn., Miss., Ala.: two dozen confirmed tornados hit southern states, causing severe damage. Two people were killed. The damage in just the state of Alabama was at least $30 million.
- Feb. 28–29, Oh., Ind., Ill., Kans., Nebr., Mo., Ark., Ky., Tenn.: twenty-six tornados struck across the Central Plains, Mid-South and Ohio Valley regions, causing 15 casualties and an estimated $475 million in damages.
- March 2–3, the Ohio Valley and various Southern states: seventy confirmed tornados touched down in the South and Ohio Valley region, causing 42 casualties and an estimated $1.5 billion in damages.
- March 18–24, various Southern and Midwestern states: sixty-three confirmed tornados caused one casualty and an estimated $325 million in damages.
- April 3, Tex., La.: twenty-two confirmed tornados cause an estimated $1 billion in damages. The Dallas-Fort Worth area was hit and more than 1,100 homes were damaged. Despite striking heavily populated areas, there were no casualties.
- April 13–16, Great Lakes region, central United States: one hundred fourteen confirmed tornados caused six casualties and an estimated $283 million in damages in Wichita alone.
- June 4, Mo., Ark., Tex.: three tornados touched down briefly. One hit a mobile home, killing three.
- June 23–26, Fla.: twenty-five confirmed tornados caused one casualty and an estimated $1.8 million in damages. The tornados were caused by Tropical Storm Debby.
- Aug. 27–Sept. 4, Fla., Ala., Miss., La., Ill., Mo.: Hurricane Isaac caused thirty-four confirmed tornados over a period of nine days, but no fatalities are reported.
- Oct. 17–19, Miss., Ark., Md., Pa.: several tornadoes touched down due to a powerful low-pressure system. The most damage was done by the Pennsylvania tornado where 15 people were injured and several structures were damaged.
- Dec. 25–26, Miss., Tex., N.C., Ala., La.: the largest ever tornado outbreak in the U.S. on Christmas happened in 2012 when 30 confirmed tornados touched down in various Southern states. No one was killed, but twenty-four people were injured. The tornados caused at least 140 million in damages.
2013
May 20, Oklahoma: an enormous category 5 tornado hits Oklahoma City, Moore, and Newcastle. Moore is hardest hit. The city's Plaza Towers Elementary School is flattened. About 25 people are killed in the storm, including seven children. The tornado, stretching more than a mile wide, was on the ground for 40 minutes. Wind speeds reach 210 mph.
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