Aight so I happened to stumble on this post and out of curiosity I referred to the ol' Google and looked up the event. It led me to this article, which I'm not sure of the validity of it, but the author does appear to have at least done his research. And if it's correct, I think Grazulis was right on at least the "strongest in Colorado history" part.
Article written by Jonah Bailey, a 14 year old who has invested years into researching historical weather events, especially violent tornadoes, in the US State of Colorado. This study or reanalysis of this event is meant to make important information on this tornado and it’s impacts more easily...
tornado-database.fandom.com
First, a photo of the tornado itself:
View attachment 42587
Anywho, this
was a farmstead owned by Marvin Felzein. Apparently it was a pretty large building judging by the size of the foundation but it didn't matter, the building was still quite literally smashed to splinters.
View attachment 42595
Photo documentation ends there, but textual evidence (if fully truthful, take it with a grain of salt) fills in a number of gaps. Among the most impressive claims:
- Essentially every single structure on all of the eight (!) farmsteads it directly hit was swept completely away. Apparently photos exist for most if not all of the other farmsteads, although if they do the author didn't put them in the article.
- Judging by the rural location, it is likely that no debris loading was involved in the above sweep-aways.
- At the Heist Farmstead, the owner described everything over 2 feet tall as completely gone, which implies the farmstead was essentially vaporized and also may imply that very little debris was left over.
- Not only was large and possibly heavy farm equipment carried (not thrown, carried) away into the tornado at multiple locations, but there was no documentation stating that any of it was found, possibly implying that the farm equipment was either deposited in inaccessible locations Buttermilk 5/23/08-style or completely destroyed.
All in all, I am fairly convinced that this was an F5 and the strongest in Colorado state history. Not the largest (the author of this article has an entire database on strong-violent Colorado tornadoes and he estimated the 1925 Wray tornado as being
two miles wide at minimum), but still over a mile wide, and the distance involved between the relevant structures proves it.
In conclusion, I think Grazulis was right calling the 1947 Logan County tornado the strongest in Colorado state history, and it rounds out the 1947 "Terrible Trio" of F5s along with Leedey and Woodward.