Tornado Reports
Sort by Time Sort by Rating Sort by State Sort by County| Time | Rating | Radar | State | County | Location | Narrative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 02:58Z | EF0 | KTLX | OK | Johnston | Tishomingo | A small tornado from a quasi-linear convective system moved through portions of Tishomingo. It moved north, then northeast from the southern part of town to northeast of downtown. There were areas of roof and tree damage along the path, and some minor damage at Tishomingo Elementary School. |
| 03:28Z | EF0 | KSRX | OK | Muskogee | Webbers Falls Sheffi | This is the first segment of a two segment tornado. This tornado developed in the Arkansas River bottoms of far southeastern Muskogee County, where several center pivot irrigation systems were destroyed and barns were damaged. The tornado crossed the Arkansas River into Sequoyah County. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 80 to 85 mph. |
| 03:30Z | EF1 | KSRX | OK | Sequoyah | Gore | This is the second segment of a two segment tornado. The tornado crossed the Arkansas River, moving into Sequoyah County, and uprooted trees as it crossed I-40. It continued to move northeast, crossing Highway 64 to the east of Gore where trees were snapped and a home was damaged. The tornado then dissipated over open country south of the E1000 Road. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 95 to 105 mph. |
| 03:36Z | EF0 | KINX | OK | Osage | Skiatook Arpt | This tornado developed south of W 113th Street N where a barn was damaged. The tornado moved northeast damaging trees on N 36th West Ave, and then severely damaging two mobile homes, snapping large tree limbs, and damaging the roof of a home along Park Farm Lane. The tornado dissipated west of the Tulsa County line. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in the tornado was 70 to 80 mph. |
| 03:43Z | EF1 | KSRX | OK | Sequoyah | Blackgum | This is the first segment of a six segment tornado. This long-track tornado developed near Blackgum where homes were damaged, barns and outbuildings were destroyed, and trees were snapped. The tornado moved north-northeast, snapping and uprooting numerous trees as it approached an inlet of Lake Tenkiller, and crossed into Cherokee County. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 100 to 110 mph. |
| 03:47Z | EF2 | KSRX | OK | Cherokee | Cookson | This is the second segment of a six segment tornado. This long-track tornado moved into Cherokee County near an inlet of Lake Tenkiller, where boat docks, lake homes, boats, and outbuildings were destroyed, and trees and power poles were snapped. The tornado moved north-northeast along the eastern shores of Lake Tenkiller, passing through Cookson and Cherokee Landing State Park. Numerous homes were damaged or destroyed, numerous boat docks were destroyed, many boats were destroyed, outbuildings were destroyed, many trees and power poles were snapped, and hangars at the airport west of Cookson were destroyed. From Lake Tenkiller, the tornado continued to move north-northeast across less populated areas of southeastern Cherokee County where a few homes were damaged, outbuildings were destroyed, and trees were snapped or uprooted. The tornado moved into Adair County to the east-northeast of Welling. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 115 to 125 mph. |
| 04:13Z | EF1 | KSRX | OK | Adair | Titanic | This is the third segment of a six segment tornado. The tornado moved into Adair County southwest of Wauhillau and moved north-northeast across Highway 51 and the E768 Road. A couple homes were damaged, outbuildings were damaged, and trees were uprooted. The tornado moved back into Cherokee County northwest of Wauhillau. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 90 to 100 mph. |
| 04:14Z | EF1 | KSRX | OK | Cherokee | Eldon | This is the fourth segment of a six segment tornado. In this short segment of the tornado in Cherokee County, the tornado uprooted trees, and then moved back into Adair County south-southwest of Proctor. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 90 to 100 mph. |
| 04:15Z | EF2 | KSRX | OK | Adair | Titanic | This is the fifth segment of a six segment tornado. This long-track tornado moved back into Adair County south-southwest of Proctor and moved north-northeast snapping and uprooting trees on the 754 Road. The tornado crossed Highway 62 near Proctor where homes were severely damaged, large outbuildings were destroyed, farm equipment was thrown large distances, and many trees were snapped and uprooted. It snapped and uprooted numerous trees and destroyed barns between Highway 62 and Chewey Road. Some of the tree damage in this heavily-wooded, rural area was extensive. The tornado continued to move north-northeast across heavily wooded terrain and then crossed River Road where numerous trees were uprooted, and finally into Delaware County near Dripping Springs. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 110 to 120 mph. |
| 04:39Z | EF1 | KINX | OK | Delaware | Flint | This is the final segment of a six segment tornado. This long-track tornado moved into Delaware County southwest of Dripping Springs and Natural Falls State Park, where trees were uprooted. The tornado tracked north-northeast damaging a few homes, destroying a couple outbuildings, and snapping and uprooting trees as it crossed Highway 412. It dissipated southeast of Colcord. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in this segment of the tornado was 95 to 105 mph. |
| 05:09Z | EF2 | KSRX | AR | Crawford | Van Buren | This tornado developed north of I-40 and just west of Lee Creek Road where homes sustained minor roof damage, trees were uprooted, and the roofs of several apartment complexes were damaged. The tornado moved northeast across Rena Road, damaging numerous homes, some severely, snapping three large wooden utility structures, and snapping and uprooting numerous trees. The tornado then crossed Uniontown Road and Fayetteville Road near Rena, and dissipated as it approached N Rudy Road. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in the tornado was 110 to 120 mph. |
| 05:17Z | EF1 | KSRX | AR | Crawford | Rudy | This tornado developed just north of Rudy, where trees were uprooted on Whitson Drive to the west of Highway 282. The tornado moved east-northeast uprooting more trees and destroying barns along Highway 282. Trees were uprooted as the tornado crossed Peach Drive, with extensive tree damage as it approached I-49 on Cozy Cove and Lancaster Road. Trees were uprooted on Gregory Chapel Road. Extensive tree and power pole damage occurred along Highway 71 near Winn Mountain Road and Cain Road. The tornado dissipated after crossing Old Turner Road, to the south of Highway 348, where barns were destroyed and trees were uprooted. Based on this damage, maximum estimated wind in the tornado was 90 to 100 mph. |
| 05:50Z | EF0 | KSRX | AR | Logan | Driggs | The tornado blew down trees, and removed some roofing material from several homes. Some barns and outbuildings were damaged. |
| 06:15Z | EF0 | KSGF | MO | Barry | Wightman | An EF-0 tornado with maximum estimated wind speed of 80 mph and path width of 25-50 yards tracked 0.12 miles to the east-northeast before lifting west of Highway 37. Roof damage occurred to several homes along the path and damaged a large tree before lifting. |
| 06:30Z | EF1 | KSGF | MO | Lawrence | Aurora | An EF-1 tornado developed just west of the water tower and tracked northeast to the Aurora Motel, where one fatality occurred. The tornado then tracked northward across Highway 60 and impacted Sutherlands before dissipating. Path length was near one half mile. Peak wind was estimated at 105 mph. |
| 06:40Z | EF0 | KSGF | MO | Christian | Clever | An EF-0 tornado touched down in the Christian County panhandle damaging numerous trees and a couple of outbuildings. One outbuilding was completely destroyed. The tornado was on the ground for roughly 2.08 miles south of Clever. |
| 06:41Z | EF1 | KSGF | MO | Christian | Billings | An EF-1 tornado developed approximately 2 miles south of Billings and tracked north-northeast and dissipated approximately 1 mile south of Billings. Numerous trees were uprooted and snapped with several homes and outbuildings sustaining minor roof damage. |
| 06:47Z | EF1 | KSGF | MO | Greene | Republic | An EF-1 tornado developed approximately 3 miles west of Republic and tracked northeast and dissipated within the city limits of Republic. Two large barns were destroyed and numerous trees were uprooted. Several homes sustained minor roof damage. |
| 07:22Z | EF1 | KSGF | MO | Webster | Seymour | An EF-1 tornado formed 2 miles north northeast of Seymour and tracked northeast and dissipated approximately 6 miles northeast of Seymour. There was significant damage to barns along with uprooted trees along the tornadoes path. |
| 07:25Z | EF1 | KSHV | AR | Hempstead | Spring Hill | An EF-1 tornado with maximum estimated winds near 107 mph touched down along County Road 1041 about one mile northwest of the Spring Hill community. Tree limbs were downed and a trunk was snapped off of a tree. More concentrated damage was found on County Road 174, where a barn's tin metal roof was completely removed, windows were blown out of two homes, shingles removed from roofs, trees fallen onto several homes, a shed was shifted off of its foundation, and a carport was destroyed. In addition, approximately 15 trees were either uprooted or snapped at their trunk. As the tornado continued northeast across Highway 29, it ripped the tin metal roof off of a heavy machinery shelter and led to the column anchorage failure of the structure. The metal roof was thrown and twisted into a tree behind it. The tornado continued to uproot and snap trees as it crossed Country Club Drive, East 28th Street, and Highway 32 before lifting along Highway 278 just southeast of Hope. |
| 07:37Z | EF0 | KSGF | MO | Wright | Boyer | A brief EF-0 tornado tracked for approximately one quarter of a mile and broke several large tree branches. |
Storm reports are derived from "The Storm Events Database" (National Centers for Environmental Information) and/or "Past Storm Reports" (Storm Prediction Center).