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Tornado Anniversaries

You know what fair enough. It really is a tie for them honestly. One day I might say Smithville, and the next day I might say Piedmont.


However, one thing I will forever hold the opinion on until the day I die is the fact that no other EF5 since the scale was implemented has produced such extraordinary debarking like El Reno/Piedmont did at it’s peak.

What's the most intense tree from El Reno/Piedmont you know of?

This from Smithville is insane, El Reno managed to top it?
 

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The most major May 26th event I'll be discussing today is...

5/26/1917: A major tornado outbreak took place across the Midwest. The most notable tornado of the event was the Charleston-Mattoon tornado. Initially considered a single 293 mile long tornado, with windspeeds over 400 mph, the main Charleston-Mattoon is now considered to have tracked 155 miles or even less. Nonetheless, the tornado was still particularly deadly and destructive, and its family is still the longest tracked on record. Other violent tornadoes took place in the Chicagoland area and in Indiana.


There was also the Keefeton, OK F4 in 1973 that killed 6 members of one family, and another F4 tornado on the same day in Jonesboro, AR.


The map:

 
One of the craziest tornadoes ever. First responders who responded to the aftermath needed counseling because what was seen was so disturbing. The F5 stalled right over the subdivision it hit for 3 minutes with incomprehensible damage and killing 27. Human remains unrecognizable.

Check this one out @Atlantic
 

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Oh man. May 27th.

1896: The St. Louis, MO F4. Putting an end to "perhaps the most violent single week of tornado activity in US history" according to Tommy G., this tornado killed at least 255 people and caused 12 million dollars in damage along its 12 mile path. Damage in East St. Louis, IL neared F5 intensity. This tornado, if it happened today, would be the costliest on record with $5.92 billion in damages. Multiple other F4 tornadoes occurred across Missouri and Illinois, including one in New Minden which would later be hit again in 2013.


1973: A "very long track" tornado destroyed much of Brent and Centreville, Alabama. The NWS office in Centreville took a direct hit. Brent experienced near F5 damage, and the windspeed range for the tornado breaks into F5 territory. This tornado is the "longest tracked tornado in Alabama state history". (Yeah, bulls:mad:t.)


1997: A tornado that needs no introduction. Though its extraordinary damage was likely compounded by its slow forward speed, the Jarrell, Texas F5 was most certainly one of the strongest tornadoes on record and the strongest landspout/landspout-adjacent tornado ever recorded. Another F4 tornado took aim at Lake Travis, followed by a wispy, debris-filled F3 in the city of Cedar Park.






https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8hrhxlAXkNo&pp=ygUPamFycmVsbCB0b3JuYWRv
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PtZsp3lxXqk&pp=ygUPamFycmVsbCB0b3JuYWRv
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gBauRBN-8As&t=1793s&pp=ygUPamFycmVsbCB0b3JuYWRv
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IheMRo9QYfk&pp=ygUPamFycmVsbCB0b3JuYWRv
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=AQodRB8vLCs
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=N_NFPVHHCZY
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=v3ks5P16B04
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eWt7KrV0Shw
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=K9ydtb74dpI
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rfDkyEpk3_I&pp=ygUXY2VkYXIgcGFyayB0b3JuYWRvIDE5OTc=
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4GxtO8QlMA&pp=ygUXY2VkYXIgcGFyayB0b3JuYWRvIDE5OTfSBwkJsAkBhyohjO8=
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=09COikvb9Ow&pp=ygUXY2VkYXIgcGFyayB0b3JuYWRvIDE5OTc=

2019: A major tornado outbreak unfolded across Indiana and Ohio. The city of Dayton, Ohio was hit by an EF3 and an EF4, causing major destruction but miraculously no deaths. Another tornado near Roll and Montpelier, Indiana also could have plausibly reached EF4 intensity.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bUMp0e09Tgw&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI3IDIwMTkgaW5kaWFuYQ== (Fairly certain this is the Roll-Montpelier tornado)

Several other notable events have occurred on this date, including an F4 in Jefferson and Blount Counties in Alabama in 1917.

The map:
 
And now we enter May 29th.

1909: Zephyr, TX F4:

1953: Fort Rice, ND F5:




1982: Marion, IL F4


https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-UGmipadMXQ&pp=ygUTbWFyaW9uIHRvcm5hZG8gMTk4Mg==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2Pbvr9L3zVY&pp=ygUTbWFyaW9uIHRvcm5hZG8gMTk4Mg==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=fBy9ToJ2_Zc&pp=ygUTbWFyaW9uIHRvcm5hZG8gMTk4Mg==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GnfJvKtpKiA&pp=ygUTbWFyaW9uIHRvcm5hZG8gMTk4Mg==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wLlkD3sGKWk&pp=ygUTbWFyaW9uIHRvcm5hZG8gMTk4MtIHCQmwCQGHKiGM7w==

1995: Great Barrington, MA F4
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=h2E3ePD0utE
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6RhbBIor2Y4

2004: Harper/Sumner Counties, KS tornadoes (including 2 F3s) and Weatherby, MO F4

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jgDHIEi7E1o&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI5IDIwMDQgdG9ybmFkbw==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0HX_L-FDLCc&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI5IDIwMDQgdG9ybmFkbw==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ec2tUpc1qGc&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI5IDIwMDQgdG9ybmFkbw==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=91SZ1D_nzlY&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI5IDIwMDQgdG9ybmFkbw==
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=M_tkbnojZKs&pp=ygUTbWF5IDI5IDIwMDQgdG9ybmFkbw==


Map:
https://www.reddit.com/r/tornado/comments/1kyml9s/this_day_in_tornado_history_by_county_may_29th/
 
Little known fact: There was actually a fifth storm chaser killed in El Reno, as revealed by Skip Talbot on Stormtrack. He didn't name the individual but after looking at all the victims I've concluded that fifth chaser was most likely Dustin Bridges.

Source:
There was a fifth chaser fatality on El Reno. It was not reported in the media as such and he was unknown among most chaser circles as far I can tell. But through our own work with the El Reno Survey, it became apparent he was indeed driving out to the storm with the intent of documenting/witnessing the tornado, and this was not his first chase either. Not sure what criteria we're using for the above list, or if there are privacy concerns, so I'll leave the name off for now. But happy to share what I know if you contact me, and maybe we can add that if there are no pending issues.

This makes me think that there are probably a number of additional fatalities, injuries, and incidents we don't know about because the chaser is not known to the community or it simply went unreported.

And a mention of him in the Oklahoman:
Bonilla survived, helping to free an injured driver, Dustin Heath Bridges, from a nearby pickup.

Bridges, 32, of Wilburton, lasted only a few minutes more. He died of multiple blunt force injuries, the medical examiner reported.
 
Then came the last day of May.



1947: In a year of incredibly powerful tornadoes, what was likely the most violent of them all essentially wiped out the town of Leedey, Oklahoma. Though not as deadly as the ruinous Woodward tornado from earlier that year, what the Leedey storm lacked in victims it made up for in sheer strength. @locomusic01 flat out compared it to Jarrell.


1985: There were, quite literally, only two single days that seemingly prevented 1985 from going down as one of the worst chase seasons ever: May 10th in the Great Plains, and this. In one of the greatest spectacles in weather history, a borderline Super Outbreak unfolded over.....the Northeast US and Ontario, of all places. Officially there are 9 violent tornadoes including an F5, but there is compelling evidence that it actually produced at least 12 violent tornadoes and 2 F5s. An outbreak of this magnitude and location may never occur again in our lifetimes.





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgjM6-mV1ls
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m47QYaISG-w

1998: I forgot about this one initially. A derecho turns back into the tornado outbreak it started from, producing multiple intense tornadoes across New York and Pennsylvania. It remains the only SPC High Risk ever issued for the Northeast.


2013: The darkest day. An erratic, 2.6 mile wide EF3 kills 9 people near El Reno, Oklahoma, including not one, not two, or even three, but five storm chasers. The TWISTEX team -Tim Samaras, Paul Samaras and Carl Young - become the first professional chasers to be killed by a tornado in the field. Two others - Richard Henderson and Dustin Bridges - are also killed in their vehicles. Doppler radar estimates winds over 300 mph in its 175 mph forward speed (!) subvorticies, which are used to rate it EF5, before the NWS changes their minds for some damn reason. Whether it will ever regain its EF5 rating is largely dependent on if the revised EF scale incorporates wind speed observations into final ratings.


Up next: June. Featuring a forgotten Massachusetts violent tornado.....and one of the strongest tornadoes ever.
 
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