April 1945 tornado outbreak
Type | Tornado outbreak |
---|---|
Duration | April 12, 1945 |
Tornadoes confirmed | ≥ 17 |
Max rating1 | F5 tornado |
Damage | Unknown |
Casualties | ≥ 128 deaths, ≥ 999 injuries |
Areas affected | Midwestern United States |
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale |
The April 1945 tornado outbreak occurred on April 12, 1945 in the Midwestern United States, producing numerous strong tornadoes and killing at least 128 people.[1]
Confirmed tornadoes
Confirmed Total |
Confirmed F? |
Confirmed F0 |
Confirmed F1 |
Confirmed F2 |
Confirmed F3 |
Confirmed F4 |
Confirmed F5 |
≥ 22 | ? | ? | ? | 7 | 5 | 4 | 1 |
April 12 event
F# | States | Location | County | Time (UTC) | Path length | Damage |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F4 | OK | SE side of Oklahoma City to nearChoctaw | Oklahoma | 1525 | 20 miles | 8 fatalities, 200 injuries Started near Cleveland County line and moved through SE Oklahoma City and destroyed over 160 homes in communities of Valley Brook, Dell City, and Choctaw. Most fatalities were family members of military personal at Tinker Air Force Base |
F3 | OK | SE of Wilburton to NE of Red Oak | Latimer | 1615 | 12 miles | 3 fatalities, 15 injuries Boggy community hit, three children died when a home was destroyed |
F3 | OK, AR | Near Roland OK to N of Dora AR | Sequoyah OK, Crawford AR | 1630 | 20 miles | 7 fatalities, 40 injuries Five deaths in OK, two in AR |
F4 | OK | NE from eastern edge of Muskogee | Muskogee | 1650 | 3 miles | 13 fatalities, 200 injuries Violent tornado touched down in eastern part of Muskogee and damaged many buildings. A school for the blind was hit, killed 13 on campus. |
F2 | OK | Hulbert area | Cherokee | 1700 | 4 miles | 4 fatalities, 8 injuries Short duration but very damaging tornado destroyed 81 buildings in town of Hulbert |
F5 | OK | 5m SW of Antlers to SW of Nashoba | Pushmataha | 1740 | 28 miles | 69 fatalities, 353 injuries Catastrophic tornado obliterated one third of town of Antlers and injured 10% of residents. 600 buildings were obliterated with another 700 damaged. Damages totaled US$1.5 million not adjusting for inflation. Some witness claim to have seen two tornadoes, could have been either twin tornadoes or multi vortex. Tornado continued into rural areas NE of town. Town suffered 40% population loss in 1950 census and remains far below its peak pre tornado population of 3,200. |
F2 | AR | S of Harrison to SE of Bellefonte | Boone | 1850 | 5 miles | 2 injuries, tourist cabins and gas station destroyed |
F3 | MO | W of Pineville to S of Stella | McDonald | 1900 | 13 miles | 1 fatalities, 15 injuries Several homes destroyed N of Pineville |
F2 | AR | Gage Mountain to E of Berryville | Carroll | 2000 | 6 miles | Home destroyed in Cisco community |
F3 | AR | Crosses to E of Metalton | Madison, Carroll | 2000 | 30 miles | 9 fatalities, 30 injuries, damage to six rural communities |
F2 | MO, IL | Palmyra MO to Loraine IL | Marion MO, Adams IL | 2015 | 30 miles | 19 injuries, likely a combination of tornado family and downburst winds; destroyed much of downtown Quincy, including the courthouse[2] |
F4 | MO | SW to NE of Morrisville | Polk | 2045 | 8 miles | 4 fatalities, 19 injuries, Northern part of Morrisville had major damage |
F2 | IL | Plymouth | Hancock, McDonough | unk | unk | Damage in Plymouth area |
F3 | MO | S of Bradleyville to NE of Mansfield | Taney, Douglas, Wright | 2050 | 32 miles | 20 injuries, intense tornado passed through several rural communities |
F4 | AR | 8M SW of Booneville to Minnow Creek | Logan, Johnson | 2100 | 50 miles | 10 fatalities, 70 injuries, many homes swept away in rural communities |
F2 | IL | Industry area | McDonoug | 2100 | 4 miles | 20 buildings damaged on west side of town of Industry |
F2 | MO | Palmyra MO | Marion MO | 2200 | 1 mile | 11 injuries, second tornado to hit Palmyra that day. 100 buildings in NW part of town damaged |
See also
References
- ↑ Grazulis, 1993 & pp313
- ↑ Weiser, Dennis. Illinois Courthouses: An Illustrated History. Virginia Beach: Donning, 2009, 15.
Bibliography
- Grazulis, Thomas (1993), Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991: A Chronology and Analysis of Events, St. Johnsbury, Vermont: Environmental Films, ISBN 1-879362-03-1
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