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El Dorado Courier: Eldorado: Formerly published by Joan Gilliam The Elk Citian: Elk City: Indian Advocate: Sacred Heart: 1910 [18] Indian Chieftain: Vinita: 1882 1902 [19] Hartshorne Sun: Hartshorne: Formerly published by CNHI: The Muskogee Cimeter: Muskogee: 1904 1921 African-American newspaper founded by William Twine [20] Muskogee Star ...
El Reno is a city in and the county seat of Canadian County, Oklahoma, ... The El Reno Tribune publishes Wednesday and Sunday and has a circulation around 5,000.
Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribal Tribune, (bi-monthly news publication for tribal citizens), El Reno, Oklahoma [22] Choctaw Community News (Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians) Chickasaw Times, (official publication of the Chickasaw Nation), Ada, Oklahoma [23] Cokv Tvlvme (Poarch Band of Creek Indians) [5] Cokv Tvlvme (Seminole Nation of Oklahoma) [5]
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The 2013 El Reno tornado was an extremely large, powerful, and erratic tornado [a] that occurred over rural areas of Central Oklahoma during the early evening of Friday, May 31, 2013. This rain-wrapped, multiple-vortex tornado was the widest tornado ever recorded and was part of a larger weather system that produced dozens of tornadoes over the ...
The El Reno–Piedmont tornado killed nine people and injured 181, [5] making it responsible for the majority of the casualties caused by the entire outbreak (in which 11 died and 293 were injured). [ 7 ] : 2 Of that total, seven deaths and 112 injuries occurred in Canadian County, [ 27 ] 46 injuries occurred in Kingfisher County, [ 30 ] and ...
The 2013 Moore tornado was a large and violent EF5 tornado that ravaged Moore, Oklahoma, and adjacent areas on the afternoon of May 20, 2013, with peak winds estimated at 210 miles per hour (340 km/h), killing 24 people (plus two indirect fatalities) [2] and injuring 212 others. [3]
[89] [90] The El Reno tornado also had a documented width of 2.6 miles (4.2 km), which the modern-day National Weather Service stated was the widest tornado ever recorded, despite the United States government documenting and publishing about a tornado that was 4 miles (6.4 km) wide in 1946. [91] [92]