| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Rehobeth, Massachusetts tornado |
August 1671 |
Massachusetts |
- |
0 fatalities |
Earliest known U.S. tornado |
| Cambridge, Massachusetts tornado |
July 8, 1680 |
Massachusetts |
- |
1 fatality |
Earliest known U.S. killer tornado |
| War of 1812 Washington D.C. tornado |
August 25, 1814 |
Washington, D.C. |
- |
- |
Killed several British soldiers occupying city |
| Great Natchez Tornado |
May 7, 1840 |
Southeastern U.S. |
>1 |
>317 fatalities, >109 injuries |
2nd deadliest tornado in U.S. history |
| Mid-Mississippi Valley tornado outbreak of June 1860 |
June 3, 1860 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
≥148 fatalities, ≥409 injuries |
Exceptionally violent outbreak |
| 1871 St. Louis tornado |
March 8, 1871 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
≥1 |
9 fatalities, 60 injuries |
Struck St. Louis-East St. Louis |
| Southeast tornado outbreak of March 1875 |
March 20, 1875 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
≥93 fatalities, ≥367 injuries |
(7 violent, ≥11 killer) |
| Southeast tornado outbreak of May 1875 |
May 1, 1875 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
58 fatalities, 195 injuries |
(1 violent, 7 killer) |
| Central Plains tornado outbreaks of May 1879 |
May 29 - May 30, 1879 |
Central Great Plains |
- |
≥36 fatalities, ≥186 injuries |
(≥15 significant, 6 violent, ≥9 killer) |
| April 1880 tornado outbreak |
April 18, 1880 |
Mississippi Valley - Great Plains |
- |
≥165 fatalities, ≥511 injuries |
(>22 significant, 5 violent, 14 killer) |
| 1881 Minnesota tornado outbreak |
March 22 - 23, 1881 |
Minnesota |
- |
≥77 fatalities, ≥101 injuries |
(>7 significant, 1 violent, 3 killer) |
| Southeast tornado outbreak of April 1883 |
April 22 - 23, 1883 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
≥109 fatalities, ≥755 injuries |
(17 signicant, 3 violent, 13 killer) |
| May 1883 tornado outbreak |
May 18, 1883 |
Middle-Lower Mississippi Valley |
- |
≥64 fatalities, ≥386 injuries |
(≥21 significant, 6 violent, 16 killers) |
| Enigma tornado outbreak |
February 19 - 20, 1884 |
Central - Eastern U.S. |
>41 |
>178 fatalities, ≥1056 injuries |
Among largest known outbreaks (>37 significant, ≥4 violent, ≥28 killer) |
| Mississippi Valley tornado outbreak of April 1886 |
April 14, 1886 |
Middle-Upper Mississippi Valley |
- |
87 fatalities, 319 injuries |
(4 violent, 6 killer) |
| 1890 St. Louis tornado outbreak |
January 12, 1890 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
16 fatalities, 91 injuries |
(≥1 violent, 3 killer) |
| Mid-Mississippi Valley Tornado Outbreak of March 1890 |
March 27, 1890 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
≥146 fatalities, ≥847 injuries |
76 killed in downtown Louisville, KY (≥24 significant, 6 violent, 16 killer) |
| Upper Mississippi Valley tornado outbreak of September 1894 |
September 21 - 22, 1894 |
Upper Mississippi Valley |
- |
>63 fatalities, >253 injuries |
(>9 significant, 4 violent, 5 killer) |
| Sedgwick, Kansas-Hull, Iowa tornado outbreaks of 1895 |
May 1 - 3, 1895 |
Central-Northern Great Plains |
- |
>18-35 fatalities, >67 injuries |
7 killed in schools in Ireton-Hull, IA (2 F5s, 3 killer) |
| Sherman, Texas tornado outbreak |
May 15, 1896 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
85 fatalities, ≥291 injuries |
|
| Central Plains tornado outbreak of 1896 |
May 17, 1896 |
Central Great Plains |
- |
25 fatalities, ≥260 injuries |
|
| Late-May 1896 tornado outbreak |
May 24 - 25, 1896 |
Upper Mississippi Valley - Great Lakes (Ontario) |
- |
≥79 fatalities, >215 injuries |
|
| St. Louis-East St. Louis Tornado |
May 27 - 28, 1896 |
Missouri - Illinois / Mid-Atlantic |
- |
≥305 fatalities, >1236 injuries |
By far costliest tornado in history, 3rd deadliest in U.S. history (10 significant, 4 violent, 7 killer (27th)) |
| Arkansas tornado outbreak of January 1898 |
January 11, 1898 |
Lower Mississippi Valley |
- |
≥56 fatalities, ≥119 injuries |
(1 violent, 2 killer) |
| Mississippi Valley tornado outbreaks of May 1898 |
May 17 - 18, 1898 |
Middle-Upper Mississippi Valley |
- |
55 fatalities, ≥380 injuries |
(5 violent, 10 killer) |
| New Richmond Tornado |
June 11 - 12, 1899 |
Upper Midwest |
- |
≥124 fatalities, ≥203 injuries |
(2 violent, 3 killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Kansas "Forgotten" tornado outbreak |
May 6, 1900 |
Central U.S. |
- |
≥3 fatalities, ≥16 injuries |
Large outbreak with little known information (≥17 significant, 2 killer) |
| Goliad, Texas Tornado Outbreak |
May 18, 1902 |
South Central U.S. |
- |
114 fatalities, ≥279 injuries |
(1 violent, 3 killer; tied with Waco Tornado as deadliest in Texas history) |
| St. Louis tornado of 1904 |
August 19, 1904 |
Missouri - Illinois |
≥1 |
3 fatalities, ≥10 injuries |
Heavy damage in downtown St. Louis |
| Snyder, Oklahoma tornado |
May 10, 1905 |
Oklahoma |
≥1 |
97 fatalities, ≥150 injuries |
F5 largely destroyed Snyder |
| Southeast tornado outbreak of April 1908 |
April 23 - 25, 1908 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
324 fatalities, ≥1,720 injuries |
(≥41 significant, 6 violent, 19 killer) |
| Late-April 1909 tornado outbreak |
April 29 - May 1, 1909 |
Mississippi - Tennessee Valley |
- |
≥165 fatalities, ≥696 injuries |
(35 significant, 4 violent, 24 killer) |
| Owosso, Michigan tornado |
November 11, 1911 |
Owosso, Michigan and Shiawassee County, Michigan |
- |
2 dead, 9 injured |
Occurred at 11:11 PM, on 11-11-11 (November 11, 1911), named "Tornado Of The Elevens". |
| April 1912 tornado outbreak sequence |
April 20 - 29, 1912 |
Southern-Central Great Plains - Middle Mississippi Valley - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
≥104 fatalities, ≥630 injuries |
(≥59 significant, 17 violent, ≥34 killer) |
| Mid-March 1913 tornado outbreak |
March 13 - 14, 1913 |
Southeastern U.S. - Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
78 fatalities, ≥492 injuries |
(20 significant, 3 violent, 16 killer) |
| Easter Weekend 1913 tornado outbreak sequence |
March 20 - 24, 1913 |
Southeastern U.S. - Central Great Plains - Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
48 fatalities, ≥1,535 injuries |
Omaha Easter Sunday Tornado (1913) on 23rd (≥26 significant, 7 violent, 18 killer) |
| June 1916 tornado outbreak |
June 5 - 6, 1916 |
Mississippi Valley - Southern U.S. |
- |
112 fatalities, 741 injuries |
(34 significant, 1 violent, 23 killer) |
| Southeast tornado outbreak of February 1917 |
February 23, 1917 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
17 fatalities, 81 injuries |
|
| New Albany, Indiana tornado outbreak of March 1917 |
March 23, 1917 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
47 fatalities, 311 injuries |
|
| May - June 1917 tornado outbreak sequence |
May 25 - 7, 1917 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
>224 fatalities |
(>34 significant, >7 violent, >25 killer) |
| May 1918 tornado outbreak sequence |
May 18 - 21, 1918 |
Central-Northern Great Plains - Upper Midwest |
- |
44 fatalities, 340 injuries |
(≥34 significant, 5 violent, 13 killer) |
| March 1919 tornado outbreak |
March 14 - 16, 1919 |
Central U.S. |
- |
53 fatalities, 219 injuries |
(4 violent, 18 killer) |
| April 1919 tornado outbreak |
April 8 - 9, 1919 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
92 fatalities, 412 injuries |
(4 violent, 10 killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of 1920 |
March 28, 1920 |
Midwest - Southeast |
- |
≥380 fatalities, ≥1215 injuries |
(31 significant, 8 violent, 19 killer) |
| Mississippi-Alabama tornado outbreaks of April 1920 |
April 19 - 21, 1920 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
243 fatalities, 1374 injuries |
(6 violent, 9 killer) |
| April 1921 tornado outbreak |
April 15 - 16, 1921 |
Southern U.S. |
- |
90 fatalities, 676 injuries |
(34 significant, 1 violent, 17 killer) |
| Great Plains tornado outbreak of November 1922 |
November 4, 1922 |
Great Plains |
- |
17 fatalities, 68 injuries |
(1 violent, 4 killer) |
| April 1924 tornado outbreak |
April 30, 1924 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
110 fatalities, 1133 injuries |
7 killed at school in Horrell Hill, SC (24 significant, 2 violent, 16 killer) |
| Sandusky-Lorain, Ohio tornado outbreak |
June 28, 1924 |
Eastern Great Lakes |
- |
90 fatalities, 349 injuries |
(≥6 significant, 1 violent, 4 killer) |
| Tri-State Tornado |
March 18, 1925 |
Middle Mississippi - Ohio Valley |
≥9 |
≥747 fatalities, ≥2298 injuries |
Deadliest and 3rd costliest U.S., longest path and duration in world (≥9 significant, 3 violent, 8 killer) |
| La Plata, Maryland tornado of November 1926 |
November 9, 1926 |
Mid-Atlantic |
- |
17 fatalities, 65 injuries |
17 killed at schools |
| Late-November 1926 tornado outbreak |
November 25 - 26, 1926 |
Southern U.S. |
- |
107 fatalities, 451 injuries |
(27 significant, 2 violent, 18 killer) |
| Southern Plains-Midwest tornado outbreaks of April 1927 |
April 18 - 19, 1927 |
Southern Great Plains - Midwest |
- |
146 fatalities, ≥235 injuries |
(16 significant, 3 violent, 5 killer) |
| May 1927 tornado outbreak |
May 8 - 9, 1927 |
Great Plains - Mississippi Valley |
- |
217 fatalities, 1156 injuries |
(32 significant, 8 violent, 17 killer) + 1 F5 with 10 fatalities and 300 injuries in Kansas on May 7 |
| St. Louis tornado outbreak of 1927 |
September 29, 1927 |
Middle-Lower Mississippi Valley |
- |
82 fatalities, 620 injuries |
Second costliest tornado in history (11 significant, 1 violent, 3 killer) |
| Upper Plains-Midwest tornado outbreak of September 1928 |
September 13 - 14, 1928 |
Upper Great Plains - Midwest |
- |
23 fatalities, 197 injuries |
(15 significant, 3 violent, 3 killer) |
| Mid-Mississippi Valley tornado outbreak of January 1929 |
January 18, 1929 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
10 fatalities, 46 injuries |
(7 significant, 5 killer) |
| Slocum, Texas-Statesboro, Georgia tornado outbreaks |
April 24 - 25, 1929 |
Great Plains - Midwest - Southeast |
- |
63 fatalities, 567 injuries |
(15 significant, 4 violent, 7 killer) |
| Rye Cove, Virginia tornado outbreaks |
May 1 - 2, 1929 |
Southern - Eastern U.S. |
- |
44 fatalities, 349 injuries |
13 killed at school in Rye Cove, VA (17 significant, 10 killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| May 1930 tornado outbreak sequence |
May 1 - 2 & 5 - 6, 1930 |
Great Plains - Mississippi Valley |
- |
94 fatalities, 520 injuries |
(51 significant, 11 violent, 15 killer) |
| Southern Plains tornado outbreak of November 1930 |
November 19, 1930 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
24 fatalities, 162 injuries |
(8 significant, 1 violent, 2 killer) |
| Deep South tornado outbreak of 1932 |
March 21 - 22, 1932 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
≥330 fatalities, 2145 injuries |
(36 significant, 10 violent, 27 killer) |
| Nashville tornado outbreak of March 1933 |
March 14, 1933 |
Tennessee Valley |
- |
44 fatalities, 461 injuries |
Destructive killer tornado through downtown Nashville (5 significant, 1 violent, 4 killer) |
| Late-March 1933 tornado outbreak |
March 30 - 31, 1933 |
Southeast |
- |
87 fatalities, 620 injuries |
(30 significant, 1 violent, 16 killer) |
| Greensboro, North Carolina tornado outbreak |
April 1 - 2, 1936 |
Southeast |
- |
45 fatalities, 568 injuries |
(8 significant, 2 violent, 8 killer) |
| Tupelo-Gainesville Outbreak |
April 5 - 6, 1936 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
454 fatalities, 2498 injuries |
(12 significant, 3 violent, 11 killer) |
| Bakerville, Missouri tornado outbreak |
March 15, 1938 |
Mississippi Valley |
- |
24 fatalities, 200 injuries |
(14 significant, 2 violent, 6 killer) |
| Late-March 1938 tornado outbreak |
March 30 - 31, 1938 |
Southern Plains - Mississippi Valley |
- |
40 fatalities, 548 injuries |
(26 significant, 3 violent, 9 killer) |
| Oshkosh, Nebraska tornado outbreak |
April 26, 1938 |
Great Plains |
- |
6 fatalities, 39 injuries |
Oshkosh completely destroyed killing students at leveled school (8 significant, 2 violent, 2 killer) |
| Charleston, South Carolina tornadoes |
September 29, 1938 |
South Carolina |
- |
32 fatalities, 100 injuries |
(2 killers) |
| April 1939 tornado outbreak sequence |
April 14 - 17, 1939 |
Great Plains - Mississippi Valley |
- |
57 fatalities, 316 injuries |
(25 significant, 3 violent, 11 killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| February 1942 tornado outbreak |
February 5 - 6, 1942 |
Southeast |
- |
22 fatalities, 330 injuries |
(22 significant, 9 killer) |
| March 1942 tornado outbreak |
March 16, 1942 |
Central - Southern U.S. |
- |
148 fatalities, ≥1284 injuries |
(26 significant, 5 violent, 18 killer) |
| April-May 1942 tornado outbreak sequence |
April 27 - 30 & May 2, 1942 |
Great Plains |
- |
123 fatalities, ≥839 injuries |
(20 significant, 11 violent, 17 killer) |
| May 1943 tornado outbreak |
May 15, 1943 |
Great Plains |
- |
≥6 fatalities, ≥222 injuries |
(21 significant, 4 violent, 2 killer) |
| Oklahoma tornado outbreak of January 1944 |
January 26. 1944 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
2 fatalities, 40 injuries |
(8 significant, 2 killer) |
| Appalachians Outbreak |
June 22 - 23, 1944 |
Great Lakes - Mid-Atlantic |
- |
163 fatalities, ≥1044 injuries |
(≥9 significant, 4 violent, 7 killer) |
| April 1945 tornado outbreak |
April 12, 1945 |
- |
- |
128 fatalities, 1001 injuries |
(17 significant, 5 violent, 10 killer) |
| January 1947 tornado outbreak |
January 29 - 30, 1947 |
Mississippi Valley - Southeast |
- |
8 fatalities, 155 injuries |
(15 significant, 1 violent, 5 killer) |
| Glazier-Higgins-Woodward Tornadoes |
April 9 - 10, 1947 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
181 fatalities, 980 injuries |
(8 significant, 2 violent, 1 killer) |
| New Year's Eve tornado outbreak of 1947 |
December 31, 1947 |
Southern U.S. |
- |
20 fatalities, 256 injuries |
(7 significant, 1 violent, 3 killer) |
| Alton-Bunker Hill-Gillespie tornado outbreak |
March 18 - 19, 1948 |
Great Plains - Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
43 fatalities, ≥566 injuries |
(25 significant, 3 violent, 5 killer) |
| Late-March 1948 tornado outbreak |
March 25 - March 27, 1948 |
Central U.S. |
- |
37 fatalities, 321 injuries |
(19 significant, 3 violent, 5 killer) |
| Warren, Arkansas tornado outbreak |
January 3, 1949 |
South Central U.S. |
- |
60 fatalities, 504 injuries |
(12 significant, 1 violent, 5 killer) |
| May 1949 tornado outbreak |
May 20 - 21, 1949 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
≥56 fatalities, ≥552 injuries |
Perhaps 2nd most intense known outbreak (≥29 significant, ≥5 violent, ≥2 killer) |
| October 1949 tornado outbreak |
October 9 - 10, 1949 |
Great Plains |
- |
2 fatalities, 6 injuries |
(11 significant, 2 killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Arkansas-Tennessee tornado outbreak of 1952 |
March 21 - 22, 1952 |
Lower-Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
208 fatalities |
(19 significant, 8 violent, 13 killer) |
| April - May 1953 tornado outbreak sequence |
April 28 - May 2, 1953 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
37 fatalities, 366 injuries |
(17 significant, 5 violent, 9 killer) |
| Mid-May 1953 tornado outbreak sequence |
May 9 - 11, 1953 |
Southern-Central Great Plains / Upper Mississippi Valley |
33 |
144 fatalities, 903 injuries |
Waco Tornado occurred during Texan outbreak of May 11 (19 significant, 6 violent, 7 killer), tied for deadliest in Texas history |
| Flint-Worcester Tornadoes |
June 7 - 9, 1953 |
Central Great Plains - Great Lakes - New England |
48 |
246 fatalities |
(11 significant, 1 violent killer on 7th; 10 significant, 4 violent, 8 killer on 8th; 3 significant, 1 violent killer on 9th; 24 significant, 6 violent, 10 killer for sequence) |
| Vicksburg, Mississippi tornado outbreak |
December 5, 1953 |
Louisiana - Mississippi |
- |
38 fatalities |
(4 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| Commerce Landing, Mississippi tornado outbreak |
February 1, 1955 |
Mississippi - Alabama |
- |
23 fatalities |
23 killed at school in Commerce Landing, MS (>2 significant) |
| Plains Outbreak of May 1955 |
May 25 - 26, 1955 |
Great Plains - Midwest - Mississippi Valley |
47 |
102 fatalities |
Last 75 fatality single tornado in the U.S. (8 significant, 3 violent, 3 killer) |
| February 1956 tornado outbreak |
February 24 - 25, 1956 |
Central U.S. |
- |
6 fatalities |
(14 significant, 2 violent killers) |
| April 1956 tornado outbreak |
April 2 - 3, 1956 |
Central U.S. |
- |
40 fatalities |
(33 significant, 7 violent, 8 killer) |
| Dallas tornado outbreak of April 1957 |
April 2, 1957 |
Texas - Oklahoma |
28 |
17 fatalities |
(16 significant, 2 violent, 5 killer) |
| Southeastern tornado outbreak of April 1957 |
April 8, 1957 |
Alabama - Georgia - North Carolina - South Carolina - Tennessee - Virginia |
15 |
4 fatalities |
(6 significant, 1 violent, 1 killer) |
| Lubbock Area tornado outbreak of April 1957 |
April 21, 1957 |
Texas |
- |
0 fatalities |
(4 significant, 2 violent) |
| Silverton, Texas tornado outbreak |
May 15, 1957 |
Texas |
- |
21 fatalities |
(6 significant, 1 violent, 2 killer) |
| Kansas City tornado outbreak of May 1957 |
May 20 - 21, 1957 |
Central Great Plains - Middle-Upper Mississippi Valley |
- |
59 fatalities |
(32 significant, 4 violent, 3 killer) |
| Fargo Tornado of 1957 |
June 20, 1957 |
Northern Great Plains |
- |
11 fatalities |
(4 significant, 2 violent, 2 killer) |
| November 1957 tornado outbreak |
November 7 - 8, 1957 |
Southeastern U.S. |
20 |
12 fatalities |
(12 significant, 1 violent, 5 killer) |
| Murphysburo, Illinois tornado outbreak |
December 18, 1957 |
Missouri - Illinois |
23 |
17 fatalities |
(18 significant, 3 violent, 5 killer) |
| Colfax, Wisconsin tornado outbreak |
June 4, 1958 |
Minnesota - Wisconsin |
- |
28 fatalities |
(6 significant, 3 violent killers) |
| November 1958 tornado outbreak |
November 17, 1958 |
Southern U.S. - Great Plains |
34 |
0 fatalities |
(16 significant) |
| St. Louis tornado outbreak of 1959 |
February 10, 1959 |
Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
21 fatalities |
Destructive tornado in downtown St. Louis (7 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| May 1959 tornado outbreak |
May 4 - 5, 1959 |
Central U.S. |
49 |
0 fatalities |
(8 significant) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| May 1960 tornado outbreak |
May 5 - 6, 1960 |
Southern Great Plains |
- |
33 fatalities |
(25 significant, 4 violent, 8 killer) |
| Hurricane Carla |
September 1961 |
Southern U.S. |
≥8 |
- |
1 F0, 6 F1's, 8 F2's , 7 F3's 2 Killer, 1 F4 Killer Tornado |
| Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of 1965 |
April 11 - 12, 1965 |
Central U.S. |
48 |
256 fatalities |
Among most intense recorded outbreaks (38 significant, 19 violent, 21 killer) |
| May 1965 Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
May 5, 6, 8, 9, 15, 1965 |
Upper Midwest |
- |
18 fatalities |
(39 significant, 10 violent, 5 killer) |
| Late-May 1965 tornado outbreak |
May 25 - 26, 1965 |
Great Plains |
51 |
0 fatalities |
(9 significant) |
| Topeka Tornado of 1966 |
June 8 - 9, 1966 |
Kansas - Illinois |
- |
18 fatalities |
(5 significant, 2 violent, 3 killer) |
| 1967 St. Louis Tornado Outbreak |
January 24, 1967 |
Midwest |
- |
7 fatalities |
(18 significant, 2 violent, 4 killer) |
| Belvidere-Oak Lawn Tornado Outbreak |
April 21, 1967 |
Midwest |
45 |
58 fatalities |
Large school and traffic death tolls (20 significant, 4 violent, 3 killer) |
| Southern Minnesota Tornado Outbreak of 1967 |
April 30, 1967 |
Minnesota |
9 |
13 fatalities |
Only one tornado below F2 strength |
| Hurricane Beulah |
September 19 - 23, 1967 |
Texas - Mexico |
>115 |
5 fatalities |
|
| Wheelersburg, Ohio tornado outbreak |
April 23, 1968 |
Ohio Valley |
- |
14 fatalities |
(7 significant, 3 violent killers) |
| May 1968 tornado outbreak |
May 15 - 16, 1968 |
Mississippi Valley |
46 |
74 fatalities |
(20 significant, 4 violent (including two F5's), 8 killer) |
| Georgia tornado of 1969 |
April 4, 1969 |
Georgia |
- |
About 50 Injures |
|
| Minnesota Tornado Outbreak of 1969 |
August 6, 1969 |
Minnesota |
13 |
15 fatalities, 106 injuries |
(1 violent, 8 significant, 3 killers ) |
| Cincinnati tornado outbreak of August 1969 |
August 9, 1969 |
Indiana - Ohio |
- |
4 fatalities |
(2 significant) |
| Hazelhurst, Mississippi tornado outbreak |
January 23, 1969 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
32 fatalities |
(2 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| April 1970 tornado outbreak |
April 17 - 18, 1970 |
Southern Great Plains |
15 |
23 fatalities |
(7 significant, 4 violent, 3 killer) |
| Lubbock Tornado |
May 11, 1970 |
West Texas |
- |
28 fatalities |
(1 violent killer) |
| Mississippi Valley tornado outbreak of February 1971 |
February 21, 1971 |
Southern Mississippi Valley |
14 |
119 fatalities |
(4 violent, 5 significant, 4 killer) |
| Springfield, Missouri tornado outbreak of 1971 |
December 14 - 15, 1971 |
Central U.S. |
40 |
2 fatalities |
(10 significant, 2 killer) |
| 1972 Portland-Vancouver Tornado |
April 5, 1972 |
Pacific Northwest |
4 |
6 fatalities |
4 strong tornadoes, deadliest in West Coast history |
| Georgia-South Carolina outbreak of March 1973 |
March 31, 1973 |
Georgia - South Carolina |
3 |
10 fatalities |
Extremely destructive tornadoes, costliest natural disaster in Georgia history (3 violent killers) |
| May 1973 tornado outbreak |
May 26 - 29, 1973 |
Southern U.S. |
99 |
22 fatalities |
(26 significant, 3 violent, 8 killer) |
| April 1-2 1974 tornado outbreak |
April 1 - 2, 1974 |
Southern U.S. - Mississippi Valley |
23 |
4 fatalities |
Outbreak ended only 17 hours before Super Outbreak began in same areas (10 significant, 3 violent, 4 killer) |
| Super Outbreak |
April 3 - 4, 1974 |
Eastern U.S. - Ontario |
148 |
315 fatalities |
Largest and most intense recorded outbreak (95 significant, 30 violent (6 F5), 49 killer) |
| June 1974 Great Plains tornado outbreak |
June 8, 1974 |
Southern U.S. Plains |
39 |
22 Fatalities |
(22 Significant, 4 Violent, 4 Killer) |
| Great Storm of 1975 |
January 9 - 12, 1975 |
Southeastern U.S. |
45 |
12 fatalities |
(10 significant, 1 violent, 4 killer) |
| Omaha Tornado of 1975 |
May 6, 1975 |
Nortern Great Plains |
12 |
3 fatalities |
(6 significant, 2 violent, 1 killer) |
| Canton, Illinois Tornado of 1975 |
July 23, 1975 |
Illinois |
- |
2 fatalities |
|
| March 1976 tornado outbreak |
March 20 - 21, 1976 |
Mississippi Valley |
66 |
3 fatalities |
(18 significant, 3 violent, 3 killer) |
| Birmingham Tornado of April 1977 |
April 4, 1977 |
Southeastern U.S. |
15 |
22 fatalities |
(1 violent, 4 significant, 1 killer) F5 tornado strikes northern Birmingham. Outbreak extends from MS to NC. |
| Sarasota, Florida tornadoes |
May 4, 1978 |
Florida |
- |
3 fatalities |
(2 significant, 1 killer) |
| Bossier City, LA Tornado |
December 2 - Decmber 3, 1978 |
Southern Great Plains - Southern U.S. |
- |
2 fatalities |
Occurred at 1:52 AM leaving little warning as most were asleep |
| Red River Valley Tornado Outbreak |
April 10 - 11, 1979 |
Southern Great Plains - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
56 fatalities |
Wichita Falls Tornado on 10th (28 significant, 2 violent, 5 killer) |
| Windsor Locks, Connecticut Tornado |
October 3, 1979 |
New England |
- |
3 fatalities |
(2 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Central tornado outbreak of April 1980 |
April 7 - 8, 1980 |
Central U.S. |
- |
3 fatalities |
(30 significant) |
| Grand Island, Nebraska Tornado Outbreak |
June 2 - 3, 1980 |
Central - Eastern U.S. |
- |
6 fatalities |
(15 significant, 1 violent, 3 killer; best known for forming three rare anticyclonic tornados in one system) |
| Hurricane Allen |
August 1980 |
Mexico - Texas |
≥29 |
- |
Costliest tropical cyclone related tornado in history struck Austin vicinity |
| April 1982 tornado outbreak |
April 2 - 3, 1982 |
Southern Plains - Mississippi Valley |
61 |
29 fatalities |
(24 significant, 4 violent, 10 killer) |
| May 1982 tornado outbreak |
May 11 - 12, 1982 |
Texas - Oklahoma |
70 |
2 fatalities |
(14 significant) |
| Marion, Illinois tornado |
May 29, 1982 |
Illinois |
- |
10 fatalities |
(2 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| Early-December 1982 tornado outbreak |
December 2 - 3, 1982 |
Lower-Middle Mississippi Valley |
- |
4 fatalities |
(16 significant) |
| Christmas 1982 tornado outbreak |
December 23 - 25, 1982 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
3 fatalities |
(18 significant) |
| Early-May 1983 tornado outbreak |
May 1 - 2, 1983 |
Mississippi Valley - Great Lakes |
- |
6 fatalities |
(22 significant, 5 killer) |
| Mid-May 1983 tornado outbreak |
May 18 - 20, 1983 |
Southeastern U.S. |
48 |
6 fatalities |
(10 significant, 6 killer) |
| Carolinas Tornado Outbreak |
March 28, 1984 |
Carolinas |
24 |
57 fatalities, 1200+ injuries |
11 of 13 very large tornadoes produced by one supercell generated F3/F4 damage; 2 F4's left damage paths +2 miles wide. (19 significant, 7 violent, 10 killer) |
| Philipp-Water Valley, Mississippi tornado outbreak |
April 21, 1984 |
Southeastern U.S. |
- |
15 fatalities |
(3 significant) |
| Morris, Oklahoma tornado outbreak |
April 26 - 27, 1984 |
Great Plains - Mississippi Valley |
- |
16 fatalities |
(20 significant, 8 killer) |
| Mannford-New Prue, Oklahoma tornado outbreak |
April 29, 1984 |
Central U.S. |
42 |
1 fatality |
(4 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| May 1984 tornado outbreak |
May 2 - 3, 1984 |
Southeastern U.S. |
60 |
5 fatalities |
(15 significant) |
| Barneveld, Wisconsin tornado outbreak |
June 7 - 8, 1984 |
Central U.S. |
45 |
13 fatalities |
(26 significant, 2 violent, 4 killer) |
| United States-Canadian Outbreak |
May 31, 1985 |
U.S. - Canadian Eastern Great Lakes |
- |
≥88 fatalities |
Among most intense outbreaks recorded, largest recorded outbreak in the region (≥20 significant, 9 violent, ≥10 killer) |
| Hurricane Danny |
August 1985 |
Southeastern U.S. |
39 |
|
| Saragosa, Texas tornado |
May 22, 1987 |
West Texas |
- |
30 fatalities |
(1 violent killer) |
| Arklatex Outbreak |
November 15-16, 1987 |
Southeastern U.S. |
50 |
11 Fatalities |
| May 1988 tornado outbreak |
May 8, 1988 |
Midwest |
57 |
0 fatalities |
(8 significant) |
| Hurricane Gilbert |
September 1988 |
Central - North America |
≥29 |
- |
|
| November 1988 tornado outbreaks |
November 4 - 5, 15, 19 - 20, 28, 1988 |
Central - Eastern U.S. |
- |
14 fatalities |
44 tornadoes on Nov. 15, Raleigh Tornado on Nov. 28 {29 significant, 6 killer, 1 violent} |
| SC-NC-VA Tornado Outbreak |
May 5, 1989 |
Mid-Atlantic - Southeast U.S. |
- |
7 fatalities |
(9 significant, 3 violent, 3 killer) |
| Northeastern United States tornado outbreak |
July 10, 1989 |
Northeastern United States |
16 |
0 fatalities, 142 injured |
(6 significant, 2 violent (F4), 0 killer) |
| November 1989 Tornado Outbreak |
November 15-16, 1989 |
Southeastern U.S. and Mid-Atlantic States |
40 |
30 fatalities |
(9 significant, 1 violent killer) |
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Central US Tornado Outbreak of 1990 |
March 13, 1990 |
Central U.S. |
59 |
2 fatalities |
(26 significant, 4 violent, 2 killer) |
| Lower Ohio Valley Tornado Outbreak |
June 2 - 3, 1990 |
Central U.S. |
66 |
9 fatalities |
(27 significant, 7 violent, 4 killer) |
| Plainfield Tornado |
August 28, 1990 |
Northeastern Illinois |
3 |
29 fatalities |
Strongest August tornado (1 violent killer) |
| Andover, Kansas Tornado Outbreak |
April 26 - 27, 1991 |
Central-Southern Great Plains |
58 |
21 fatalities |
(32 significant, 5 violent, 5 killer) |
| Central Plains tornado outbreak of May 1991 |
May 16, 1991 |
Central Great Plains |
46 |
0 fatalities |
(4 significant) |
| Mid-June 1992 Tornado Outbreak |
June 15 - 16, 1992 |
Central U.S. |
123 |
1 fatality |
(27 significant, 4 violent, 1 killer) |
| November 1992 Tornado Outbreak |
November 21 - 23, 1992 |
Southern - Eastern U.S. |
95 |
26 fatalities |
(43 significant, 5 violent, 9 killer) |
| Catoosa, Oklahoma tornado outbreak |
April 24, 1993 |
Oklahoma |
- |
7 fatalities |
(1 violent killer) |
| Virginia Tornado Outbreak |
August 6, 1993 |
Virginia |
18 |
4 fatalities |
Largest tornado outbreak in Virgnia history (2 violent) |
| Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of 1994 |
March 27, 1994 |
Southeastern U.S. |
27 |
40 fatalities |
(2 violent, 13 significant, 5 killer) |
| Texas-Oklahoma tornado outbreaks of April 1994 |
April 25 - 27, 1994 |
Southern Great Plains - Midwest |
>67 |
3 fatalities |
(2 violent, 13 significant) |
| June 1994 tornado outbreak |
June 26 - 27, 1994 |
- |
62 |
2 fatalities |
(11 significant) |
| May 1995 tornado outbreak sequence |
May 1995 |
Central U.S. |
>80 |
>4 fatalities |
May 6–7, 8, 9, 13–14, 18–19, 27, 29 |
| Illinois-Ontario Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
April 19 - 22, 1996 |
Texas - Arkansas - Illinois - Indiana - Ontario |
>70 |
- |
|
| Late-October 1996 tornado outbreak |
October 26, 1996 |
West North Central States |
26 |
11 injuries |
Unusual late-season outbreak in Minnesota, South Dakota and Nebraska |
| Benton, Arkansas Tornado Outbreak |
March 1, 1997 |
Mississippi Valley - Ohio Valley |
56 |
26 fatalities |
(18 violent, 16 significant, 5 killers) |
| Miami Tornado |
May 12, 1997 |
Miami, Florida |
- |
- |
|
| Jarrell Tornado |
May 27, 1997 |
Texas |
19 |
27 fatalities |
(5 violent, 2 killers) |
| Southeast Michigan Tornado Outbreak |
July 2, 1997 |
Southeast Michigan - Southwestern Ontario |
13 |
7 fatalities |
One tornado passed through some Detroit neighborhoods, the suburbs of Hamtramck, and Highland Park. One also touched down near Windsor, Ontario |
| Kissimmee Tornado Outbreak |
February 22 - 23, 1998 |
Florida |
11 |
42 fatalities |
(3 violent, 4 killers) |
| Gainesville-Stoneville tornado outbreak |
March 20 - 20, 1998 |
Georgia to Virginia |
12 |
14 fatalities |
(5 significant, 2 violent, 2 killers) |
| Comfrey - St. Peter Tornado Outbreak |
March 29, 1998 |
Southern Minnesota |
14 |
2 fatalities, 36 injuries |
Earliest tornado outbreak in Minnesota history |
| Birmingham Tornado |
April 8, 1998 |
Metropolitan area of Birmingham, Alabama, also Georgia, Louisiana, Tennessee |
11 |
39 fatalities |
(2 violent, 5 significant, 3 killers) |
| Tennessee Valley Tornado Outbreak |
April 16, 1998 |
Southeastern U.S. |
10 |
≥4 fatalities |
Passed through downtown Nashville |
| Spencer tornado |
May 30, 1998 |
South Dakota |
- |
6 fatalities |
|
| New York Tornado Outbreak |
May 31, 1998 |
NY, PA, VT |
35 |
1 fatality, 109 injuries |
$83M in damage |
| Eastern tornado outbreak of 1998 |
June 2, 1998 |
NY to SC |
49 |
2 fatalities, 80 injuries |
$42M in damage |
| Lynbrook tornado |
September 7, 1998 |
Long Island, NY |
- |
1 fatality |
During the Labor Day Derecho Event |
| January 1999 Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
January 17 - 22, 1999 |
Arkansas Tennessee Mississippi |
>100 |
16 |
Two tornado outbreaks. January 17 and another one on January 21-22. Arkansas and western Tennessee raked by strong and killer tornadoes. |
| Oklahoma Tornado Outbreak |
May 3, 1999 |
Southern Great Plains |
66 |
46 fatalities, 665 injuries |
First tornado to incur $1 billion in (non-normalized) damages |
| Salt Lake City Tornado |
August 11, 1999 |
Utah |
- |
1 fatality |
|
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Southwest Georgia tornado outbreak |
February 13 - 14, 2000 |
Georgia |
- |
19 fatalities |
|
| Fort Worth Tornado |
March 28, 2000 |
U.S. South |
- |
2 fatalities |
|
| Tuscaloosa Tornado of December 2000 |
December 16, 2000 |
Southern United States |
24 |
12 fatalities |
Tuscaloosa Tornado caught live via Tower Cam(1 violent, 10 significant, 2 killers) |
| Virginia-DC-Maryland Tornado Outbreak |
September 24, 2001 |
- |
9 |
2 fatalities, 57 injuries |
Multi-vortex F3 tornado passed through the University of Maryland campus (2 violent, 1 killer) |
| North Central Indiana-Michigan Tornado Outbreak |
October 24, 2001 |
Central U.S. |
10 |
2 fatalities |
|
| Arkansas-Mississippi-Alabama tornado outbreak |
November 23 - 24, 2001 |
Southeast U.S. |
67 |
13 fatalities |
|
| Midwest to Mid-Atlantic United States tornado outbreak of 2002 |
April 27 - 28, 2002 |
- |
49 |
6 fatalities |
(7 violent, 10 significant, 2 killers) |
| Veterans Day Weekend tornado outbreak of 2002 |
November 9 - 11, 2002 |
Southeastern U.S. - Ohio Valley |
≥75 |
36 fatalities |
| May 2003 Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
May 3 - 11, 2003 |
- |
401+ |
48 fatalities |
|
| Utica, Illinois Tornado Outbreak |
April 20, 2004 |
Illinois - Indiana |
- |
8 fatalities |
|
| Hallam, Nebraska Tornado Outbreak |
May 22, 2004 |
Central Great Plains |
- |
1 fatality |
Widest recorded tornado (2.5 mi / 4 km) |
| Memorial Day Weekend outbreak |
May 29 - 30, 2004 |
Great Plains - Midwest |
149 |
5 fatalities |
|
| Roanoke, Illinois tornado |
July 13, 2004 |
Central Illinois |
- |
0 fatalities |
1 violent |
| Hurricane Frances |
September 2004 |
Eastern U.S. |
123 |
- |
92 F0's, 30 F1's, 5 F2's |
| Hurricane Ivan |
September 2004 |
Eastern U.S. |
117 |
- |
57 F0's, 59 F1's, 18 F2's 1 F3 |
| Wisconsin Tornado Outbreak of August 2005 |
August 18, 2005 |
Wisconsin - Minnesota |
- |
1 fatality |
|
| Hurricane Katrina |
August 26 - 31, 2005 |
Southeastern - Eastern U.S. |
44 |
1 fatality |
|
| Hurricane Rita |
September 2005 |
U.S. South |
22 |
- |
|
| Evansville Tornado of November 2005 |
November 5 - 6, 2005 |
Middle Mississippi - Ohio Valley |
7 |
25 fatalities |
All fatalities caused by a single F3 |
| Iowa Tornado Outbreak of November 2005 |
November 12, 2005 |
Iowa - Missouri |
|
1 fatality |
|
| Mid-November 2005 Tornado Outbreak |
November 15, 2005 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
50 |
- |
|
| Late-November 2005 Tornado Outbreak |
November 27 - 28, 2005 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
46 |
- |
|
| March 2006 Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
March 9 - 13, 2006 |
Central U.S. |
105 |
11 fatalities |
One tornado lasted over 2 hours. One supercell lasted over 17 hours and crossed 5 states. |
| April 2, 2006 Tornado Outbreak |
April 2, 2006 |
Central U.S. |
- |
26 fatalities |
2 others killed by non tornadic storms |
| April 6-8, 2006 Tornado Outbreak |
April 6 - 8, 2006 |
Central - Southeastern U.S. |
- |
11 fatalities |
At least 1 indirect fatality |
| Easter Week 2006 Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
April 13 - 19, 2006 |
Midwest U.S. |
- |
1 fatality |
|
| North Texas tornado of May 2006 |
May 9, 2006 |
North Texas - Oklahoma |
- |
3 fatalities |
At least seven tornadoes |
| Dakota-Minnesota Tornado Outbreak of August 2006 |
August 24, 2006 |
North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota |
11 |
1 fatality, 24 injuries |
11 confirmed tornadoes; 24 total reported |
| September Upper Midwest Tornado Outbreak |
September 16, 2006 |
South Dakota, Minnesota |
- |
1 fatality |
- |
| Late-September 2006 Tornado Outbreak |
September 21-23, 2006 |
Central U.S. |
41 |
None |
|
| Mid-November 2006 Tornado Outbreak |
November, 2006 |
North Carolina, Louisiana |
- |
9 fatalities |
|
| Central Florida Tornado of February 2007 |
February 2, 2007 |
Florida |
3 |
20 fatalities |
3 confirmed tornadoes |
| New Orleans Tornado of 2007 |
February 12 - 13, 2007 |
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama |
10 |
1 fatality |
|
| February-March 2007 Tornado Outbreak |
February 28 - March 1, 2007 |
Kansas, Missouri, Alabama, Georgia |
49 |
20 fatalities |
|
| Late-March 2007 Tornado Outbreak |
March 28 - March 31, 2007 |
Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado |
65 reported, 33 confirmed |
3 Fatalities |
|
| Event |
Date |
Area |
Tornadoes |
Casualties |
Notes |
| Bouctouche, New Brunswick tornado |
August 6, 1879 |
Bouctouche, New Brunswick |
- |
7 fatalities |
Easternmost violent tornado in North America |
| Late-May 1896 tornado outbreak |
May 24 - 25, 1896 |
Upper Mississippi Valley - Great Lakes (Ontario) |
- |
≥79 fatalities, >215 injuries |
|
| Regina Cyclone |
June 30, 1912 |
Saskatchewan |
- |
28 fatalities |
Deadliest Canadian tornado |
| Windsor - Tecumseh, Ontario Tornado of 1946 |
June 17, 1946 |
Michigan - Ontario |
1 |
≈18 fatalities |
|
| Fort Frances, Ontario tornado |
June 25, 1946 |
Minnesota - Northwestern Ontario |
1 |
|
Crossed the Rainy River, caused severe damage to Fort Frances, Ontario's waterfront |
| Sudbury, Ontario Tornado |
August 20, 1970 |
Ontario, Canada |
- |
6 fatalities |
1 killer |
| Super Outbreak |
April 3 - 4, 1974 |
Eastern U.S. - Ontario |
148 total, 1 in Canada |
315 fatalities total, 9 in Canada |
Largest and most intense recorded outbreak; mostly impacted the United States, but one tornado occurred in Ontario. |
| Woodstock, Ontario tornado of August 1979 |
August 7, 1979 |
Ontario |
- |
2 fatalities |
Two F4s strike the City of Woodstock and surrounding farmland, at the same time. |
| Edmonton Tornado |
July 31, 1987 |
Alberta |
- |
≥27 fatalities, ≥300 injuries |
Most destructive Canadian tornado (≥1 violent killer) |
| Illinois-Ontario Tornado Outbreak Sequence |
April 19 - 22, 1996 |
Texas - Arkansas - Illinois - Indiana - Ontario |
>70 |
- |
|
| Southeast Michigan Tornado Outbreak |
July 2, 1997 |
Southeast Michigan - Southwestern Ontario |
13 |
7 fatalities |
One tornado passed through some Detroit neighborhoods, the suburbs of Hamtramck, and Highland Park. One also touched down near Windsor, Ontario |
| Pine Lake, Alberta Tornado |
July 14, 2000 |
Alberta |
- |
12 fatalities |
|