I would strongly doubt it, not least because it occurred at night. And one didn't just go grab a film camera.Is there really actual, honest to god video of the Udall tornado?
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I would strongly doubt it, not least because it occurred at night. And one didn't just go grab a film camera.Is there really actual, honest to god video of the Udall tornado?
While on topic I'd thought I'd bring this up. Is there really actual, honest to god video of the Udall tornado? Or is the newsreel more of the damages left behind?
Also video footage of tornadoes from the 1950s was very rare as not that many people owned video cameras yet especially in a rural Kansas town.I would strongly doubt it, not least because it occurred at night.
Oh, sorry - it's kinda awkwardly worded but I assume he was referring to the damage rather than the tornado itself. Blackwell formed a few minutes before 9pm and was reasonably visible (a few people watched it form from 2-3 miles away), but after that the only people who saw either tornado did so via the incessant lightning flashes.While on topic I'd thought I'd bring this up. Is there really actual, honest to god video of the Udall tornado? Or is the newsreel more of the damages left behind?
There is also another reason why Blackwell could have been visible.Oh, sorry - it's kinda awkwardly worded but I assume he was referring to the damage rather than the tornado itself. Blackwell formed a few minutes before 9pm and was reasonably visible (a few people watched it form from 2-3 miles away), but after that the only people who saw either tornado did so via the incessant lightning flashes.
Also video footage of tornadoes from the 1950s was very rare as not that many people owned video cameras yet especially in a rural Kansas town.
There is also another reason why Blackwell could have been visible.
Simply put, the thing was glowing.
Personally I’m a bit skeptical of historical reports of bizarre electrical activity associated with tornadoes as it is never seen in footage of tornadoes today. I believe the storm was just prolific lightning producer and people witnessed power flashes associated with the Udall/Blackwell tornadoes.
So I was just looking through my files and whatnot and I found the Blackwell-Udall map that I totally forgot I made a while back. It's pretty rough, especially outside of those towns, but it kinda reminds me of the Greensburg family (the tornadoes were probably both wider than I have here at some points). The other interesting thing is, were there really only two tornadoes? There were a few rural homes destroyed roughly around the red mark here [edit: I marked the wrong area - it should be a little further north near the branch in the river], including one in which five kids were killed. The green mark is Udall. As you might be able to tell, that doesn't exactly line up. What's even more confusing is that there's a town (Oxford) south of the red mark that doesn't seem to have been hit, so.. wtf?
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I never did the deaths for Udall at the time (obviously, there were a LOT of them), but I did for Blackwell:
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I’ve got a couple of maps from the 1974 tornadoes sent to me from the NWS in Louisville Ky here’s the Hanover IN F4.Yeah, I'd really like to do Brandenburg too (I've got a fair bit of stuff on it), but I've never liked the idea of doing a single tornado from a major outbreak. For anyone who listens to the Hardcore History podcast, Dan Carlin often says he's addicted to context - I think I have the same problem. I guess I'm gonna have to get over it eventually though, otherwise there are a LOT of tornadoes I'll never realistically be able to cover.
Speaking weird electric phenomenon inside tornado, This video of Pilger around 1:33 worth mentioned. That thing just didn't look likes a normal spark produced by debris hitting.
On today's episode of Do You Recognize This Photo, another one claimed to be Barrie.On today's episode of Do You Recognize This Photo, one that a Barrie based Discord user has said is Barrie.
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The Faith, SD EF2 is my guess.On today's episode of Do You Recognize This Photo, another one claimed to be Barrie.
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The tornado the article refers to occurred on May 14, 1868. According to the Library of Congress the photo is a 1913 tornado from the Harris & Ewing Photo Collection, possibly something from the Omaha outbreak but no exact date is given.Speaking of random photographs, does anyone know anything about this photograph? I found it a few years ago on Alabama Pioneers, a paywalled website, with the heading 'a terrible tornado occurred in St Clair County on May 14th'. As the website is paywalled (if it loads at all!) I can't find out anything more.
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