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More than 250,000 homes and business remained without power in Ohio, days after severe storms and at least two tornados hit the northeastern portion of the state.. The National Weather Service in ...
The National Weather Service is surveying storm damage today to confirm whether tornadoes touched down. The Wilmington office, which covers Central Ohio, said it dispatched crews shortly after 9 ...
— I Am Free! (@Fyre_Wolf666) March 15, 2024 I was born & raised in Ohio and the tornados that have come through the last 2 years have been faster, wilder & more out of control than i ever ...
Tornado damage in Lorain, Ohio The Xenia, Ohio tornado from the 1974 Super Outbreak. This tornado was rated by Ted Fujita himself as an F6 , but it was retroactively downgraded to F5 [ 1 ] Tornadoes in the state of Ohio are relatively uncommon, with roughly 16 tornadoes touching down every year since 1804, the year with the first recorded event ...
One horse was thrown by a tornado and sustained severe injuries. 2 people were injured by the storm and damage amounts were pegged a $1 million in both Adair and Adams Counties. F4: SE of Creston to NW of Granger: Union, Madison, Dallas: 2048 56 miles (90 km) Damage amounts in Union County were pegged at $2 million, and at $350,000 in Madison ...
On April 21–24, 1968, a deadly tornado outbreak struck portions of the Midwestern United States, primarily along the Ohio River Valley.The worst tornado was an F5 that struck portions of Southeastern Ohio from Wheelersburg to Gallipolis, just north of the Ohio–Kentucky state line, killing seven people and injuring at least 93.
The first tornado to result from the front, an EF1, struck in Montgomery and Greene counties in southwest Ohio, causing damage at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and in the Springfield area.
A few months after the landslide, on May 23, 1996, lightning struck near the location of the landslide, [6] causing a fire that lasted for six days. [5] The crack was filled in and Rumpke paid one million dollars as a fine. [1] Attorney General Betty Montgomery called the incident "the largest trash landslide in Ohio history". [1]