I would put the Tristate at #1 on my list because the uniformity and longevity of intense (F3+), 3/4-mile-wide damage for one-hundred-plus miles, coupled with numerous, hence well-substantiated, descriptions of extreme damage, i.e., deep ground scouring, debris granulation, heavy Model Ts stripped down to motors, etc., even if photographic evidence is lacking, all points to its likely being one of the most intense tornadoes on record, period. Towns from Annapolis, MO, to Princeton, IN, plus numerous farms in between settlements, all sustained damage consistent with F3+ impacts, with no clear indication of a reformation for most of this path, except the possible report of twin mergers near Biehle, MO, so the 157-to-174-mile-long segment from easternmost MO to southwestern IN was likely a single tornado per Thomas P. Grazulis’
The Tornado (2001) and the recently published reanalysis. So the Tristate event was basically Hackleburg “on steroids,” so to speak, and in fact may have been even a bit more intense along the way. On the other hand, the soils in northern AL were/are likely harder to dislodge than those along the alluvial confluence-delta regions of the Mississippi/Ohio River Valleys, so the lesser degree of ground scouring in Hackleburg relative to Tristate does not necessarily imply a significantly weaker tornado in the former. In fact, besides Tristate, only Hackleburg really comes close in terms of the amount of EF3+/4+ damage proportional to its total path length and average width, not to mention the extreme damage to the industrial Wrangler plant, concrete-roofed storm shelter, trees/shrubbery, vehicles, and so on. Both Hackleburg and Tristate had relatively low, comparable, above-ground survival rates as well. Considering both tornadoes’ rapid forward speed, owing to their parent storms’ motion within the synoptic-scale flow, I would say that both are fairly similar in terms of their extreme intensities, compensating for local factors such as soil etc.
Along with Tristate and Hackleburg, I would put three other events alongside them in terms of intensity. One is the Ortonville, MI, F5 tornado of 05/25/1896. Even official accounts in the
Monthly Weather Review indicate that this tornado produced extreme damage to trees and shrubs, many having been completely debarked and reduced to stubs, with even small twigs having had their bark removed as if by skilled artisans. Also, photographs and descriptions elsewhere seemingly suggest that intense ground scouring occurred near empty foundations and that low-lying shrubs were blown away or uprooted. If I recall correctly, Ortonville is still MI’s second-deadliest tornado on record, behind only the Beecher F5 of 06/08/1953. Like Beecher, Ortonville also had a rather high above-ground fatality rate, with large numbers of fatalities in several different homes/families. It is interesting to note that all three of MI’s well-known F5s, Ortonville, Beecher, and Hudsonville, are competitive with the worst of Dixie and Plains events in terms of intensity, based on reported and verified effects in each. MI doesn’t often see violent tornadoes, but when it does, they tend to be extremely violent. (I might also add the first of the Coldwater Lake F4s on Palm Sunday 1965 to this consideration, though evidence is lesser in this case.) Alongside Ortonville I would also list the New Richmond, WI, F5 of 06/12/1899. That tornado probably produced more debarked, stubbed, mature trees than most violent tornadoes of the late nineteenth century, literally reduced multi-story brick-and-stone structures with interior walls to rubble, hurled a heavy safe a full block, turned an entire section of town into finely granulated debris, and produced an extremely high fatality rate despite its high visibility and advance warning. Finally, I would be hard pressed to find industrial damage more extreme than the snapping of numerous steel rebars in Tianjin on 08/29/1969. No other tornado produced industrial damage on the scale of the Tianjin event, to not mention the extreme vegetative and vehicular damage, along with debris granulation, reported during that event.
So, for me, Tristate would be tied with Hackleburg, Ortonville, New Richmond, and Tianjin for #1 all-time. #2 would go to Sherman, Pomeroy, Bakersfield Valley, Jarrell, and Harper. Sherman and Pomeroy are notable for their extremely high fatality rates despite being narrow and highly visible, diurnal events that were not moving particularly quickly, besides the extreme instances of damage they did to trees/shrubbery, the ground scouring and granulation they produced, and unconventional indicators such as railway tracks being ripped up and steel bridges being mangled and hurled. Harper produced damage on a scale unseen in most other events besides Bakersfield Valley and Jarrell. #3 would be Smithville, Camanche, Plainfield, Loyal Valley, and El Reno 2011. Loyal Valley’s damage to mature mesquite trees, several of which were literally torn up by their roots and tossed some distance, easily ranks as some of the most notable tree damage on record, given the strength and durability of deeply rooted mesquite trees, to not mention the gruesome impacts to vehicles and head of cattle. As for Plainfield, I still think its cycloidal ground scouring and obliteration of mature corn
down to the rootstock count for something, given that similarly slow-moving violent tornadoes in the same general region did not produce destruction on its level, while El Reno ‘11’s damage to the Cactus 117 rig, plus its level of granulation, ground scouring, debarking/stubbing of trees and low-lying shrubs, illustrates one of the most impressive tornado-driven feats on record. #4 would go to Moore 2013, Guin, Niles/Wheatland, Stratton, and Vilonia. Guin’s ground scouring is perhaps the most impressive on record in AL, and stands out even more considering the tornado’s extremely compact core and fast forward speed, locally exceeding 70 knots (80 mph). Finally, the title of #5 would go to Parkersburg, Colfax, Brandenburg, Bridge Creek, and Joplin. I think Moore ‘13 produced more intense damage indicators over open country than Bridge Creek did, and may have had comparable or greater winds at or near ground level, but went unrecorded. Parkersburg, Brandenburg, and Joplin actually snapped or toppled poured concrete basement walk-in walls.
- Tri-State: MO–IL–IN (18 March 1925)
- Ortonville, MI (25 May 1896) tied with #1
- New Richmond, WI (12 June 1899) tied with #1
- Tianjin, Tianjin Municipality, China (29 August 1969) tied with #1
- Hackleburg–Phil Campbell–Tanner, AL (27 April 2011) tied with #1
- Sherman, TX (15 May 1896)
- Pomeroy, IA (6 June 1893) tied with #2
- Bakersfield Valley, TX (1 June 1990) tied with #2
- Jarrell, TX (27 May 1997) tied with #2
- Harper, KS (12 May 2004) tied with #2
- Smithville, MS (27 April 2011)
- Camanche, IA (3 June 1860) tied with #3
- Plainfield, IL (28 August 1990) tied with #3
- Loyal Valley, TX (11 May 1999) tied with #3
- Calumet–El Reno–Piedmont, OK (24 May 2011) tied with #3
- Moore, OK (20 May 2013)
- Guin, AL (3 April 1974) tied with #4
- Niles, OH/Wheatland, PA (31 May 1985) tied with #4
- Stratton, NE (15 June 1990) tied with #4
- Vilonia, AR (27 April 2014) tied with #4
- Parkersburg–New Hartford, IA (25 May 2008)
- Colfax, WI (4 June 1958) tied with #5
- Brandenburg, KY (3 April 1974) tied with #5
- Bridge Creek–Moore, OK (3 May 1999) tied with #5
- Joplin, MO (22 May 2011) tied with #5