1924 Lorain–Sandusky tornado
Date(s) | June 28, 1924 |
---|---|
Confirmed tornadoes | ≥? |
Casualties | ≥85 |
The 1924 Lorain-Sandusky was a deadly tornado which struck the towns of Sandusky and Lorain, Ohio on June 28, 1924. At least 85 people were killed by the tornado, with others killed by tornadoes that struck the northern and eastern half of the state. It is the deadliest single tornado and tornado outbreak ever in Ohio history, killing more people than the more famous 1974 Xenia Tornado during the Super Outbreak and the 1985 United States-Canadian tornado outbreak respectively.
Event summary
On that day, a low pressure system moved from Iowa towards Michigan and Ontario with temperatures were in the lower 80s across most of northern Ohio which are typically normal late-June temperatures across that area.
The tornado formed over the Sandusky Bay during the late afternoon hours and hit the city of Sandusky killed eight and destroying 100 homes and 25 businesses. After moving east over Lake Erie for several miles, the tornado then struck the town of Lorain just west of Cleveland, killing 72 including 15 inside a collapsed theater which makes it the worst tornado-related death toll from a single building in Ohio. Eight people were also killed inside the Bath House nearly the location where the tornado came onshore.
Over 500 homes were destroyed and 1000 others were damaged in the Lorain area as well as every business in the downtown area. Damage amounts was estimated at the time at $12 million and adjusted for wealth the figure jumps to $1 billion (1997 dollars) which ranks it 10th costliest ever ahead of the Oklahoma City area tornado in 1999. A total of 85 were killed with additional deaths outside the two cities and 300 others were injured. While the Fujita scale was not existent at the time, the damage was estimated to be at around F4.[1][2][3]
There are still some uncertainties on whether the Sandusky-Lorain tornado was a single tornado event due to the 25-mile path of the storm across Lake Erie between Sandusky and Lorain, however many eyewitnesses showed a single severe storm crossing the Lake before coming on-shore again just after 5:00 PM.[4]
At the time, it was the second deadliest tornado ever in the northern United States behind the New Richmond Tornado in northern Wisconsin in 1899 and 13th overall. Today, it is still ranked as the fourth deadliest tornado in the northern States and 22nd overall.
Other tornadoes hit the Castalia (Sandusky County), Huron Township (Erie County) and Geauga Lake (Portage County); additional tornadoes struck northwestern Pennsylvania, producing damage near Erie and Meadville. At least five other people were killed by tornadoes other than the Sandusky-Lorain storm including three others in Ohio.[3]
See also
References
External links
25 deadliest US tornadoes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Rank | Name (location) | Date | Deaths | |
1 | "Tri-State" (Missouri, Illinois and Indiana) | March 18, 1925 | 695 | |
2 | Natchez, Mississippi | May 6, 1840 | 317 | |
3 | St. Louis, Missouri and East St. Louis, Illinois | May 27, 1896 | 255 | |
4 | Tupelo, Mississippi | April 5, 1936 | 216 | |
5 | Gainesville, Georgia | April 6, 1936 | 203 | |
6 | Woodward, Oklahoma | April 9, 1947 | 181 | |
7 | Joplin, Missouri | May 22, 2011 | 162 | |
8 | Amite, Louisiana and Purvis, Mississippi | April 24, 1908 | 143 | |
9 | New Richmond, Wisconsin | June 12, 1899 | 117 | |
10 | Flint, Michigan |
June 8, 1953 |
116 | |
11 - - - |
Waco, Texas Goliad, Texas |
May 11, 1953 May 18, 1902 |
114 114 | |
13 | Omaha, Nebraska | March 23, 1913 | 103 | |
14 | Mattoon, Illinois | May 26, 1917 | 101 | |
15 | Shinnston, West Virginia | June 23, 1944 | 100 | |
16 | Marshfield, Missouri | April 18, 1880 | 99 | |
17 - - - |
Gainesville and Holland, Georgia Poplar Bluff, Missouri |
June 1, 1903 May 9, 1927 |
98 98 | |
19 | Snyder, Oklahoma | May 10, 1905 | 97 | |
20 | Worcester, Massachusetts | June 9, 1953 | 94 | |
21 | Camanche, Iowa | June 3, 1860 | 92 | |
22 | Natchez, Mississippi | April 24, 1908 | 91 | |
23 | Starkville, Mississippi and Waco, Alabama | April 20, 1920 | 88 | |
24 | Lorain and Sandusky, Ohio | June 28, 1924 | 85 | |
25 | Udall, Kansas | May 25, 1955 | 80 | |
Sources: Storm Prediction Center: The 25 Deadliest U.S. Tornadoes, SPC Annual U.S. Killer Tornado Statistics, Tornado Project |