Tornadoes in Oklahoma

Tornadoes in Oklahoma
Clockwise from top:
Tornadoes statewide>4,100[1]
Location of max. windspeeds321 mph (517 km/h)
Bridge Creek, Oklahoma F5 tornado
on May 3, 1999
Fatalities>1,707
Injuries>14,000
Deadliest single tornado116 deaths[2]
Woodward, Oklahoma F5 tornado
on April 9,1947
Worst year2024 (152 tornadoes)[3]

Several destructive tornadoes have hit the state of Oklahoma since 1882, the year with the first recorded tornado within state boundaries. Oklahoma, located in Tornado Alley, experiences around 68 tornadoes annually, with each EF3+ tornado killing an average of 2.9 people. 497 tornadoes have been classified as "intense" in Oklahoma, being rated F3+ on the Fujita Scale[note 1] or EF3+ on the Enhanced Fujita Scale. Oklahoma has seen thirteen F5 or EF5 tornadoes since 1905, the most recent hitting Moore in May 2013. The deadliest sliced through the Oklahoma panhandle in April 1947, hitting Woodward and killing at least 182 people.

Oklahoma was struck by several significant tornadoes prior to 1950, including an F5 tornado that hit Snyder and a large tornado that passed over Woodward and surrounding communities. The first tornado warning ever issued in the United States was sent out for the Tinker Air Force Base area on March 25, 1948, shortly before an F3 tornado hit the base. The 1950s were particularly devastating for Oklahoma, with 546 tornadoes killing a total of 154 people.[6] A large F5-rated tornado hit Blackwell in the early hours of May 26, 1955, and an F4 tornado killed seven people west of Stonewall in May 1959. Tornadoes in the 1960s were less damaging, with a total of 581 tornadoes touching down within state boundaries, killing 57 people. An F5 tornado moved through Prague and Sapulpa in May 1960, killing five people along a 71.8 mi (115.6 km) track. An F3 tornado hit downtown Oklahoma City five days earlier, inflicting $2.5 million (1960 USD)[7] in damages to the city and injuring 57 people.[6]

The 1970s, like the 1950s, was a particularly deadly decade for tornadoes in Oklahoma, with 433 tornadoes killing a combined total of 110 people.[6] The deadliest, rated F4, hit Wichita Falls, Texas before moving into Jefferson County on April 10, 1979. 42 people were killed by the tornado and a further 1,740 were injured. The majority of casualties took place along the tornado's track through Texas. Only 25 people were killed by tornadoes through the 1980s, eight of which were the result of an F3 tornado that moved through Morris on April 26, 1984. The strongest tornado was an F5 that moved through rural Choctaw and McCurtain counties, injuring 29.[6]

The 1990s were a significant decade for severe weather in Oklahoma, with over 55 people being killed by a total of 688 tornadoes.[6] The deadliest and most powerful devastated Bridge Creek, Moore and surrounding suburbs of Oklahoma City on May 3, 1999, where 41 people were killed. The tornado, which received an F5 rating, had the highest measured windspeeds ever recorded on Earth, at 321 miles per hour (517 km/h). The tornado inflicted a total of $1 billion (1999 USD)[8] in damage to the Oklahoma City metropolitan area, making it the second-costliest in Oklahoma history.[9] A large F4 tornado killed two people in Cimarron City and Mulhall on the same day; it was the largest tornado ever measured quantitatively.[10]

The 2000s were less significant, with 483 tornadoes killing a total of 32 people.[6] A large F4 tornado moved through southwestern Oklahoma City in May 2003, injuring 134 people. The first violent tornado to be rated on the Enhanced Fujita scale in Oklahoma hit the town of Picher on May 10, 2008, killing 21 people and inflicting an estimated $15,000,000 (2008 USD)[11] in damages to structures and farms along a 75.5 mi (121.5 km) spanning from Craig County in Oklahoma to Barry County in Missouri. The 2010s would mark a broad increase in the number of tornadoes that touched down annually, jumping from 103 in 2010 to 149 in 2019; the latter was the second-worst year for tornadoes in Oklahoma history, only behind 2024, which saw 152 tornadoes. The deadliest tornado of the decade would again hit Moore on May 20, 2013, killing 24 people and receiving a rating of EF5, making it the most recent tornado worldwide to top the Enhanced Fujita Scale as of January 2025. The tornado was the costliest in Oklahoma history and the third costliest in US history, leaving an estimated $2 billion (2013 USD) worth of damages in its wake.[12]

Tornadoes in Oklahoma have broken numerous national and worldwide records. Both the widest and most powerful tornadoes ever recorded occurred in Oklahoma. Two of the top ten costliest tornadoes in history have happened in Oklahoma and the state also has the most violent tornadoes out of any other state.[13] Tornadoes in Oklahoma have also been extensively featured in media; both 1996's Twister and 2024's Twisters take place primarily in Oklahoma.[14][15] Into the Storm and 13 Minutes, released in 2014 and 2021 respectively, are both set in fictional Oklahoman towns that were hit by tornadoes.[16]

Climatology

Oklahoma is located in Tornado Alley, an expanse of land stretching from South Dakota to Texas. Tornadoes are more frequent in Tornado Alley than anywhere else in the world, and Oklahoma sees the second-highest number of tornadoes out of any state.[17] In the alley, warm and humid air from the equator meets cold, dry air from Canada and produced by the Rocky Mountains. This creates an ideal environment for tornadoes to form within supercellular thunderstorms.[18]

Worst tornado years for Oklahoma[6]
Year Max F/EF# Tornadoes Deaths
2024 EF4 152 8[19]
2019 EF3 149 4[20]
1999 F5 145 42[21]
2011 EF5 119 14[22]
2015 EF3 111 2[23]
1957 F4 107 22[24]

Deadliest tornadoes

Ten deadliest Oklahoma tornadoes[25]
Date F/EF# Deaths Injuries Hardest-hit community
April 9, 1947 F5 116 782 Woodward
The deadliest tornado to strike within the borders of the state of Oklahoma occurred on April 9, 1947 in the city of Woodward. The Woodward tornadic supercell thunderstorm began in the Texas Panhandle during the afternoon of April 9, 1947, and produced at least six tornadoes along a 220 mi (350 km) path that stretched from White Deer, Texas to St. Leo, Kansas. At least 116 lives were lost in Oklahoma and another 68 deaths were recorded in Texas as a direct result of the tornado.[25]
May 10, 1905 F5 97 58 Snyder
This tornado developed about 2 mi (3.2 km) southeast of the Frances school house in Greer County (now Jackson County). Homes were swept away about 14 mi (23 km) southeast of Altus. From its inception, this tornado moved east-northeast crossing the North Fork of the Red River near the mouth of Otter Creek. The tornado followed very close to Otter Creek curving to the northeast through what is now northern Tillman County (but was still part of Kiowa County at the time). Three people were killed about 6 mi (9.7 km) southwest of Snyder. As the tornado continued northeast it struck the city of Snyder at around 8:45 pm CST.[25]

The tornado struck Snyder beginning in the southwest corner of town and destroyed or damaged homes and other buildings west of Main Street and from 6th Street northward through the city. No buildings north of the railroad were left standing. After moving through Snyder, the tornado continued to the northeast, destroying a couple of small residences within two miles of the town site, then lifted about 3 mi (4.8 km) northeast of Snyder.[25]

May 2, 1920 F4 71 100 Peggs
This violent tornado began 2 miles southwest of Peggs, moved northeast, and cut a 3 mi (4.8 km)-long, 0.5 mi (0.80 km)-wide swath of devastation that included the entire town of 250 people. Around 8:30 pm CST, a loud roar was heard by residents just before the tornado hit Peggs at 8:35 pm CST. The town was almost completely destroyed with only 7 buildings remaining partially intact. Only a small, wood house, used as the city jail and located next to a smashed concrete store, was still standing. A cement block schoolhouse that was located west of Peggs had only partly standing walls after the tornado hit it. The tornado traveled at least as far as the Illinois River to the east of Peggs where a house was demolished. Wheat fields were scoured and trees were carried away by the storm, and scores of livestock were killed or injured. Eleven members of one family were killed by the tornado, and in one smashed house a total of 20 mud-covered bodies were recovered. A total of 71 persons were killed and another 100 were injured by the storm. Nearly 30% of the town's population was killed and another 40% were injured.[25]
April 12, 1945 F5 69 353 Antlers
This violent tornado was part of an outbreak of devastating severe weather and flooding that occurred in Oklahoma on April 12-15, 1945, and was one of the 5 violent twisters that hit the state on April 12. The tornado touched down at 5:30 pm CST in about 5 miles southwest of Antlers near the Hall Community in Pushmataha County. The tornado moved to the northeast and struck Antlers, passing from the southwest corner of the town through the northeast portion. It produced a damage swath a half mile wide through both business and residential areas, and devastated about a third of the town. Some areas were swept completely clean of all debris. The tornado then continued for another 20 mi (32 km)+, striking the One Creek area before dissipating near Nashoba, Oklahoma.[25]

The tornado killed 69 persons and injured 353 more people. A total of 379 homes and 254 buildings were destroyed, and 200 more homes and buildings were damaged. Approximately 1500 people were made homeless by the tornado. Damage estimates were at $1.5 million (1945 USD).[25]

April 27, 1942 F4 52 350 Pryor Creek
This tornado touched down 5 mi (8.0 km) south of Claremore at about 3:15 pm CST, and moved storm east-northeast through rural parts of Rogers and Mayes Counties before taking aim on the town of Pryor Creek. At 3:45 pm CST, the tornado entered Pryor Creek and traveled directly through the main portion of the town, including the principal business section. Its violent winds demolished dozens of frame buildings and several brick buildings, including the First Baptist Church. After leaving Pryor Creek, the tornado caused damage to the northeast of the town, completely wrecking everything in its path before it lifted about 3 mi (4.8 km) northeast of Pryor Creek. The damage swath was a quarter of a mile in width, and about a third of Pryor Creek was destroyed by the tornado.[25]

A total of 49 people were killed in Pryor, with another 3 persons killed to the west-southwest of the town. A total of 350 people were injured with 192 of those being hospitalized. Damages totaled $2.3 million (1942 USD) and 500 buildings were damaged or destroyed.[25]

May 3, 1999 F5 36 583 Bridge Creek, Newcastle, Moore, Del City, Midwest City
This violent, long-lived tornado was the most infamous of nearly 60 tornadoes that struck central Oklahoma during an unprecedented outbreak on the afternoon and evening of May 3, 1999. The tornado was the ninth of fourteen tornadoes produced by a supercell thunderstorm during the tornado outbreak. It formed around 5:26 pm CST about 2 mi (3.2 km) south-southwest of Amber, and grew rapidly as it headed northeast, paralleling Interstate 44. It moved across Bridge Creek and rural parts of northwest Newcastle, causing continuous F4 and sporadic F5 damage. The tornado was estimated to be a mile in diameter in this area.[25]

Total losses from this tornado include 36 direct fatalities (12 in Bridge Creek, 1 in Newcastle, 9 in southern/southeastern Oklahoma City, 5 in Moore, 6 in Del City, and 3 in Midwest City), 5 indirect fatalities during or shortly after the tornado, 583 direct injuries, numerous indirect injuries, 1,800 homes destroyed, and 2,500 homes damaged. The tornado was also the 118th tornado to strike the Oklahoma City area since 1890. Total damage was estimated at $1 billion (1999 USD).[25]

June 12, 1942 F4 35 100 Oklahoma City metropolitan area
This was the deadliest tornado to strike the Oklahoma City area until the May 3, 1999 F5 tornado. The funnel cut a twisting, erratic path through the southwest part of Oklahoma City. Movement was generally to the northeast, but it often "cut to the east or west". Thirty-five people were killed and 100 persons injured, with 29 people being hospitalized; an estimated total of 110 families were affected by the tornado. A total of 73 homes were destroyed and another 31 damaged, and many outbuildings were destroyed. Numerous automobiles and other vehicles were destroyed or damaged. Most of the damage occurred in the 27-29th Street areas between Portland and Goff Avenues. Damage estimates for this tornado were $500,000 (1942 USD).[25]
April 25, 1893 F4 31 100 Moore
This massive tornado, reportedly over 1.25 mi (2.01 km) miles in width at one point, moved northeast along a 15 mi (24 km) path from northwest of Newcastle through rural areas between Norman and Moore (through what is now extreme northern Norman and extreme southern Moore), and swept away at least 30 homes. Thirty-three people were killed with 11 people dying in one home, 6 in a second home and 4 in a third home. This tornado was one of at least 5 strong to violent tornadoes in central Oklahoma on this day. This was the second tornado to affect areas near Norman this day with the first one passing just south and east of Norman.[25]
May 20, 2013 EF5 24 212 Moore
This violent tornado was first observed developing at 1:56 pm CST in McClain County around 1.5 mi (2.4 km) south of State Highway 37 in northwest Newcastle to the east of Rockwell Avenue. EF4 damage was observed soon after the tornado crossed State Highway 37. The tornado continued to expand in size as it approached the Canadian River and moved into Cleveland County.[25]

The center of the large tornado path passed near SW 149th Street and Western Avenue. After crossing Western Avenue, numerous buildings were destroyed and horses killed at Orr Family Farm. Two storage tanks estimated to weigh approximately 10 tons were lifted from Orr Family Farm and landed about 1.5 mi (2.4 km) mile east. Moving east, the tornado destroyed much of Briarwood Elementary School, where the National Weather Service storm survey team rated damage as EF5. Despite the destruction of this elementary school during school hours, no fatalities occurred at the school. After crossing Santa Fe Avenue, the tornado moved through more suburban neighborhoods and toward Plaza Towers Elementary School. Damage to the school was extensive and seven children were killed when a wall collapsed at the school. Nine other people were killed in eight different neighborhood homes within one-quarter mile of Plaza Towers Elementary School, most occurring just south of the school.[25]

Overall, over 300 homes experienced EF to EF5 damage along the tornado path. Damages with this storm were estimated at $2 billion (2013 USD), and the tornado killed a total of 24 people.[25]

November 19, 1930 F4 23 150 Bethany
This rare tornado is one of only three violent tornadoes to have been documented to have occurred during the month of November in Oklahoma since 1900. Between 9:30 am and 9:58 am CST, it moved north-northeast from 3 mi (4.8 km) west of the Oklahoma City limits and hit the eastern part of Bethany. About 110 homes and 700 other buildings, or about a fourth of the town, were damaged or destroyed. Near the end of the damage path, 3.5 mi (5.6 km) northeast of Wiley Post Airfield, the tornado hit the Camel Creek school. Buildings blew apart just as the students were falling to the floor and looking for shelter, and 5 students and a teacher were killed. A total of 23 people were killed and another 150 injured, with 77 being seriously injured. Damage estimates were listed at $500,000 (1930 USD).[25]

Costliest tornadoes

Ten costliest Oklahoma tornadoes[26]
Date F/EF# Damages (in United States dollars) Hardest-hit community
May 20, 2013 EF5 $2 billion (2013 USD) Moore
May 3, 1999 F5 $1 billion (1999 USD) Moore
May 8, 2003 F4 $370 million (2003 USD) Moore
May 11, 1982 F3 $200 million (1982 USD) Altus
May 7, 1995 F3 $100+ million (1995 USD) Ardmore
October 9, 2001 F3 $100 million (2001 USD) Cordell
April 19, 1981 F3 $75+ million (1981 USD) Tulsa
May 3, 1999 F3 $60 million (1999 USD) Stroud
April 24, 1993 F4 $50+ million (1993 USD) Catoosa
March 15, 1982 F2 $30-40 million (1982 USD) Bartlesville

Intense tornadoes

Pre–1925

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
1 0 3 128 66 40 1 239
Deaths: 583 Injuries: >2,475

107 intense tornadoes hit Oklahoma prior to the year 1925. The majority of these tornadoes were deadly, with each tornado killing an average of 3.6 people. Tornadoes in this time-frame hit several populated places including Moore,[27] Stillwater and Sulphur.[28][29] The strongest tornado touched down on May 10, 1905, striking the community of Snyder and killing 97 people.[30] The tornado was the first to receive a rating of F5 on the Fujita Scale in Oklahoma's history.[30]

 Deadliest in Oklahoma history at time of event
 Tornado crossed state lines in or out of Oklahoma
Intense (F3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, pre–1925[31][32]
F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
F3 May 8, 1882 3 13 Near Cherokee Alfalfa Unknown
F3 21† 42 McAlester Pittsburg 6.1 mi (9.8 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 December 16, 1887 6 50 N of Durant Johnston, Bryan 25.7 mi (41.4 km) Unknown
F3 June 8, 1889 0 3 E of Elgin Osage 12.8 mi (20.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 May 12, 1892 5 25 NE of Olustee Jackson 15.4 mi (24.8 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F3 2 3 NE of Kingfisher Kingfisher 12.3 mi (19.8 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F4 April 25, 1893 4 25 S of Stillwater Logan, Payne 23.2 mi (37.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 31† 100 Moore Cleveland 14.7 mi (23.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 1 11 SW of Marietta Love 15 mi (24 km)‡ 150 yd (140 m)
F4 April 28, 1893 6 20 S of Ponca City Kay 15.4 mi (24.8 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 April 26, 1894 3 37 E of Oilton Creek, Pawnee 22 mi (35 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 8 95 Morris Okmulgee 22 mi (35 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
F4 April 29, 1894 1 60 N of Westport Creek, Pawnee 27 mi (43 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 October 31, 1894 0 0 Rural Woodward County Woodward 20 mi (32 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 April 8, 1896 0 3 E of Norman Cleveland Unknown 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 12, 1896 0 5 S of Stillwater Logan, Payne 18.4 mi (29.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 20, 1896 0 0 E of Newkirk Kay 15.6 mi (25.1 km)‡ 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 27, 1896 0 1 Marshall Kingfisher, Logan, Garfield 10.5 mi (16.9 km) Unknown
F3 October 28, 1896 3 0 W of Carney Lincoln 8.3 mi (13.4 km) 70 yd (64 m)
F3 2 2 E of McAlester Pittsburg 9.7 mi (15.6 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F4 March 30, 1897 14 40 Chandler Lincoln 17.7 mi (28.5 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 June 2, 1897 2 8 S of Chelsea Rogers 10 mi (16 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 May 15, 1903 0 10 Carnegie Kiowa, Caddo 10.6 mi (17.1 km) Unknown
F3 May 18, 1903 0 10 W of Oklahoma City Canadian, Oklahoma, Logan 47.2 mi (76.0 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 May 23, 1903 3 10 NW of Burns Flat Washita 15.5 mi (24.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 2 40 Camargo Roger Mills, Dewey, Woodward, Major 65.3 mi (105.1 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 2 20 Carmen Woods, Alfalfa 10 mi (16 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 April 24, 1904 3 20 E of Tulsa to W of Grove Tulsa, Wagoner, Rogers, Mayes, Delaware 67.4 mi (108.5 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 5 35 Fairland Delaware, Ottawa 14.9 mi (24.0 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 March 17, 1905 0 16 E of Carter Beckham Unknown 800 yd (730 m)
F5 May 10, 1905 97† 150 Snyder Jackson, Tillman, Kiowa 40 mi (64 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 November 4, 1905 8 16 Mountain View Kiowa 3.1 mi (5.0 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 June 4, 1906 2 5 N of Verden Grady 6.2 mi (10.0 km) Unknown
F3 0 1 W of Bridgeport Caddo, Blaine 6.2 mi (10.0 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 June 22, 1907 1 7 NE of Owasso Rogers Unknown
F4 May 10, 1908 5 40 SW of Arnett to W of Fairview Ellis, Dewey, Woodward, Major 79.9 mi (128.6 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F4 May 26, 1908 7 8 N of Mooreland to S of Burlington Woodward, Woods, Alfalfa 49.9 mi (80.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 May 28, 1908 0 3 SW of Cimarron City Kingfisher, Logan, Oklahoma 10 mi (16 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 0 0 W of Lawton Comanche, Stephens 8.4 mi (13.5 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 29, 1909 1 20 SE of Stroud Lincoln, Creek 13.6 mi (21.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 6 20 N of Prague Lincoln, Okfuskee, Creek 14.9 mi (24.0 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 8 E of Wetumka Hughes 17.1 mi (27.5 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 May 6, 1910 1 4 SE of Coweta Wagoner 4.8 mi (7.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 May 20, 1910 3 20 E of Elmore City Garvin 12.2 mi (19.6 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 10, 1911 1 4 SE of Frederick Tillman Unknown
F3 April 12, 1911 0 2 S of Chandler Lincoln 8.9 mi (14.3 km) Unknown
F3 1 3 NW of Okmulgee Okmulgee 4.8 mi (7.7 km) Unknown
F4 5 50 Barnsdall Osage 12.2 mi (19.6 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 2 25 S of Checotah McIntosh 14.9 mi (24.0 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 20, 1912 0 0 W of Addington Jefferson 6.1 mi (9.8 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 0 S of Anadarko Caddo 1 mi (1.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 3 SW to E of Oklahoma City Grady, Canadian, Cleveland, Oklahoma, Lincoln 63.6 mi (102.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 0 NE of Edmond Oklahoma, Logan, Lincoln 14.3 mi (23.0 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 14 Perry Noble 10.9 mi (17.5 km) Unknown
F4 1 1 E of El Reno Canadian, Oklahoma 15.3 mi (24.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 2 6 S of Hennessey Kingfisher 11.3 mi (18.2 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 3 12 N of Morrison Noble, Osage 30.4 mi (48.9 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 May 27, 1912 7 30 SW of Skiatook Pawnee, Tulsa 7.4 mi (11.9 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 June 15, 1912 1 15 Barnsdall Osage 19.5 mi (31.4 km) Unknown
F3 April 17, 1914 1 15 Chickasha Grady 10.2 mi (16.4 km) Unknown
F4 0 12 W of Braman Grant, Kay 25.2 mi (40.6 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F4 October 9, 1914 6 14 S of Picher Ottawa 16.4 mi (26.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 24, 1916 2 28 W of Ada 17.7 mi (28.5 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 8 5 W of Sulphur Murray 16.6 mi (26.7 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 May 20, 1916 9 52 Kemp Bryan 11.9 mi (19.2 km) 1200 yd (1100 m)
F3 January 4, 1917 16 20 SE of Crowder Pittsburg 15.1 mi (24.3 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 April 18, 1917 0 15 Snyder Kiowa 5.3 mi (8.5 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F4 May 31, 1917 3 20 NW of Marietta Love 7.9 mi (12.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 June 1, 1917 5 5 E of Dougherty Murray 3.2 mi (5.1 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F4 14 100 Coalgate Coal 12.1 mi (19.5 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 0 12 N of Seminole Seminole 7 mi (11 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 15, 1919 1 8 N of Colony Washita, Custer 14.1 mi (22.7 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 2 25 S of Porter Wagoner 7 mi (11 km) 75 yd (69 m)
F4 2 8 W of Bridgeport Washita, Caddo, Blaine 18.2 mi (29.3 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F4 4 18 N of Kingfisher Canadian, Kingfisher 30.1 mi (48.4 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 April 8, 1919 9 35 E of Durant Bryan 10.1 mi (16.3 km) Unknown
F3 1 4 Stonewall Coal, Pontotoc 20 mi (32 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 8 50 E of Kemp Bryan 25.2 mi (40.6 km)‡ 300 yd (270 m)
F3 October 8, 1919 3 15 W of Fort Towson Choctaw 23.5 mi (37.8 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 17, 1920 0 8 SE of Bristow Creek 6.1 mi (9.8 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
F3 May 2, 1920 4 8 NE of Chelsea Rogers 5.2 mi (8.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 71 100 Peggs Cherokee 3.1 mi (5.0 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 0 4 S of Pryor Creek Mayes 3.6 mi (5.8 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 April 14, 1921 0 0 W of Carnegie Caddo, Washita 10.4 mi (16.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 13, 1922 3 40 Sulphur Murray 4 mi (6.4 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 April 8, 1922 3 40 W of Lawton Comanche 5.1 mi (8.2 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 May 7, 1922 1 10 Gould Harmon, Jackson, Greer 26.3 mi (42.3 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 November 4, 1922 11 40 W of Tulsa Creek, Tulsa 23.9 mi (38.5 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 May 21, 1923 0 8 W of Eagle City Blaine 2.4 mi (3.9 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 May 22, 1923 2 9 W of Freedom Harper, Woods 10.3 mi (16.6 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
F3 0 4 N of Freedom Woods 28.7 mi (46.2 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F4 March 28, 1924 8 80 SW of Norman to N of Prague Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Okfuskee 52.6 mi (84.7 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 4 W of Davidson Tillman 10.6 mi (17.1 km)‡ 300 yd (270 m)
F4 May 28, 1924 7 30 Wetumka Hughes, Okfuskee 25.5 mi (41.0 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 3 50 N of Keota Haskell, LeFlore 22 mi (35 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 5 25 N of Tamaha Muskogee, Haskell 41.9 mi (67.4 km) 150 yd (140 m)

May 10, 1905

A black-and-white image of a largely-destroyed hotel, with debris littering the floor.
A damaged hotel in Snyder

This deadly F5 tornado was caused by a strong low pressure system that developed across the Rocky Mountains, near Denver, Colorado. Another storm was also located across Wyoming on May 9. Tornadoes formed on that day across several Plains states including Missouri, Oklahoma, and Kansas. The Colorado storm system then moved toward the Central and Southern Plains on the next day and affected areas slightly to the east of the area affected on May 9. A new trough of low pressure developed in the vicinity of the southern storm. It later moved across the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles.[33]

The tornado touched down just after 8:00 PM CST near the Kiowa/Greer County line and merged with the remnants of the first cyclone. It also proceeded northeast across the Red River Valley and Otter Creek region. At around 8:45 PM CST (after dark), it struck the town of Snyder, killing 97 people. Structures in the western and northern part of the town were completely demolished, with some homes being swept away. One hundred homes were leveled and 150 were badly damaged.[33] The tornado lifted northeast of Snyder shortly after 9:00 PM CST. Another tornado from a different supercell, which previously killed two in Elk City in Beckham County, killed three more in Quinlan, Oklahoma, which is about two hours northeast of Snyder.[33]

1925–1949

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
2 0 2 188 76 37 4 309
Deaths: 612 Injuries: >4,543

1925 through 1949 was a particularly devastating period in Oklahoma's tornado history, with 309 confirmed tornadoes killing over 600 people. The deadliest, a long-track F5 tornado, killed 181 people through Northwestern Oklahoma, where it directly impacted Woodward. 117 intense tornadoes hit Oklahoma in this time-frame, hitting several cities, including Moore, Norman, Leedey, Antlers and Pryor Creek. Caney would be hit by two F4 tornadoes in 1926 and 1948, respectively.[34] The first tornado warning in United States history was issued for Tinker Air Force Base on March 25, 1948, shortly before an F3 tornado hit the base.[35]

 Deadliest in Oklahoma history at time of event
 Tornado crossed state lines in or out of Oklahoma
Intense (F3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, 1925–1949[31][32]
F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
F3 February 21, 1925 1 5 Loco Stephens Unknown
F3 April 26, 1925 2 4 S of Madill Marshall 1.1 mi (1.8 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 April 23, 1926 4 15 S of Caney Johnston, Atoka 19.9 mi (32.0 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 May 7, 1926 4 25 N of Panama LeFlore 9.7 mi (15.6 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 2 23 NW of Okmulgee Okfuskee, Okmulgee 30 mi (48 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 March 8, 1927 0 3 S of Tonkawa Garfield, Grant, Kay 37.2 mi (59.9 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 April 11, 1927 1 6 NE of Carnegie to SW of Oklahoma City Washita, Caddo, Grady, Canadian 55.3 mi (89.0 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 5 NE of Carnegie to S of Duncan Washita, Comanche, Stephens 68.7 mi (110.6 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 12, 1927 2 18 W of Bokoshe Haskell, LeFlore 10.5 mi (16.9 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 2 13 Fort Smith LeFlore 3.9 mi (6.3 km)‡ 150 yd (140 m)
F4 April 17, 1927 4 4 Bokoshe LeFlore 6.6 mi (10.6 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 April 18, 1927 11 72 Fort Towson Choctaw 19.9 mi (32.0 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F3 May 16, 1928 0 1 W of Mangum Greer Unknown 800 yd (730 m)
F4 June 8, 1928 2 6 NE of Boise City Cimarron, Texas 45.2 mi (72.7 km)‡ 600 yd (550 m)
F4 June 16, 1928 7 52 Blair to NW of Snyder Greer, Jackson, Kiowa 29.8 mi (48.0 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
F3 November 15, 1928 2 7 Orlando Logan, Payne 1.8 mi (2.9 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 April 18, 1929 0 2 N of Gate Beaver, Harper 8.3 mi (13.4 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F4 April 19, 1929 3 35 S of Carnegie Kiowa, Caddo 30.1 mi (48.4 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F4 April 23, 1929 0 1 N of Buffalo Harper 12.4 mi (20.0 km)‡ 300 yd (270 m)
F4 May 5, 1930 1 16 SE of Hulen Cotton 7.2 mi (11.6 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F3 0 7 Empire City Stephens 10.3 mi (16.6 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F4 2 9 SW of Alex Grady 4 mi (6.4 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 3 18 E of Greenfield Blaine 10.1 mi (16.3 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 November 19, 1930 0 4 S of Carrier Garfield 5.2 mi (8.4 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F4 23 125 Western Oklahoma City Oklahoma 7.1 mi (11.4 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 March 19, 1931 2 20 Clinton Custer 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 April 19, 1933 0 4 W of Faxon Tillman 4 mi (6.4 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F4 3 25 W of Alex Grady 15.4 mi (24.8 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
F3 May 11, 1933 1 1 S of Snyder Tillman, Comanche 14.6 mi (23.5 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F3 May 12, 1933 5 11 Skiatook to Collinsville Washington, Tulsa, Rogers 19.8 mi (31.9 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 May 22, 1933 4 150 E of Tyrone Texas 9.4 mi (15.1 km)‡ 600 yd (550 m)
F3 October 14, 1933 3 1 SE of Sayre Beckham 0.9 mi (1.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 3, 1934 0 20 Wynnewood Murray, Garvin 7.1 mi (11.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 May 4, 1934 3 11 Jenks to Catoosa Tulsa, Wagoner 14.4 mi (23.2 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 5 E of Bartlesville Washington 3.4 mi (5.5 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 1 17 S to NE of South Coffeyville Nowata 15 mi (24 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F3 April 24, 1935 0 0 E of Blackwell Kay 12.3 mi (19.8 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 May 8, 1935 0 4 SW of Medford Grant 4.8 mi (7.7 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 June 2, 1935 0 0 W of Fairfax Osage Unknown 200 yd (180 m)
F4 0 12 Dilworth Kay 35 mi (56 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F3 June 20, 1935 0 0 W of Shidler Osage 2.2 mi (3.5 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 February 25, 1936 0 18 N of Tulsa Washington, Tulsa 4.8 mi (7.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 1, 1936 3 13 Albert Caddo 2.1 mi (3.4 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 May 8, 1936 2 38 Webbers Falls to Gore Muskogee, Sequoyah 14.1 mi (22.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 1 30 Hanna McIntosh 0.9 mi (1.4 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 June 5, 1936 1 5 W of Snyder Tillman, Kiowa 5.5 mi (8.9 km) 75 yd (69 m)
F3 June 9, 1937 4 7 W of Moore Canadian, Cleveland 19.1 mi (30.7 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 4 Maud Pottawatomie, Seminole 9.6 mi (15.4 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 March 30, 1938 0 7 S to W of Bartlesville Osage, Washington, Nowata 29.9 mi (48.1 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F4 10 200 NW of Welch Craig 44.9 mi (72.3 km)‡ 300 yd (270 m)
F3 May 1, 1938 0 1 NE of Buffalo Harper 22.3 mi (35.9 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F5 April 13, 1939 7 33 S of Vici to NE of Alva Dewey, Woodward, Major, Woods, Alfalfa 81.2 mi (130.7 km)‡ 1000 yd (910 m)
F3 May 21, 1940 0 7 SW of Pocasset Grady 4.8 mi (7.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 4, 1941 1 3 W of Brooksville Pottawatomie 9.7 mi (15.6 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 March 15, 1942 0 0 Okarche Canadian, Kingfisher 12.8 mi (20.6 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F4 April 27, 1942 4 12 Talala Rogers 15.2 mi (24.5 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 52 350 Tiawah to Pryor Creek Rogers, Mayes 19.8 mi (31.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 May 2, 1942 3 28 Pawhuska Noble, Pawnee, Osage, Washington, Nowata 80.4 mi (129.4 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F4 7 20 Cushing to N of Tulsa Payne, Creek, Tulsa, Osage 55.5 mi (89.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 16 80 W of Shawnee to Prague to W of Okmulgee Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Creek, Okmulgee 57.4 mi (92.4 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 May 31, 1942 0 0 Guymon Texas 4.8 mi (7.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 June 12, 1942 35 100 W of Moore Oklahoma 2.4 mi (3.9 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 April 11, 1943 1 12 NE of Poteau LeFlore 1.3 mi (2.1 km) 80 yd (73 m)
F3 June 3, 1943 2 5 SW of Temple Cotton 7.7 mi (12.4 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F3 January 26, 1944 0 2 NE of Fairmont Garfield Unknown
F3 March 3, 1944 0 35 Hugo Choctaw 14.9 mi (24.0 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 April 9, 1944 1 10 SE of Corn Washita 14.5 mi (23.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 November 25, 1944 0 5 Collinsville Tulsa 1.8 mi (2.9 km) 70 yd (64 m)
F3 March 16, 1945 1 6 W of Kemp Bryan 7.6 mi (12.2 km) Unknown
F3 April 12, 1945 3 15 Red Oak Latimer 12.7 mi (20.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 13 200 E of Muskogee Muskogee 3.1 mi (5.0 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F5 69 353 Antlers to S of Clayton Pushmataha 27.9 mi (44.9 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F4 8 200 Moore to Nicoma Park Oklahoma 20 mi (32 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 13, 1945 0 10 Farris Atoka 3.5 mi (5.6 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 14, 1945 1 1 E of Newport Carter Unknown 100 yd (91 m)
F3 June 5, 1945 0 3 SW of Alva Woods 13.1 mi (21.1 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 February 12, 1946 1 15 Ardmore Carter 4.3 mi (6.9 km) Unknown
F4 March 22, 1946 0 0 SE of Wynona Osage 3 mi (4.8 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 May 10, 1946 1 5 NW to E of Eufaula McIntosh, Pittsburg 10 mi (16 km) Unknown
F3 October 17, 1946 0 0 SE of Hugo Choctaw 7.5 mi (12.1 km)‡ 200 yd (180 m)
F5 April 9, 1947 181†[note 2] 970 S of Shattuck to Woodward to NW of Capron Ellis, Woodward, Woods 207.8 mi (334.4 km)‡ 1500 yd (1400 m)
F3 May 11, 1947 0 5 Hitchcock Blaine 15.9 mi (25.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F5 May 31, 1947 7 15 Leedey Roger Mills, Dewey 18.1 mi (29.1 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 March 8, 1948 0 3 S of Sayre Beckham 16 mi (26 km) Unknown
F3 0 0 N of Purcell McClain 6.2 mi (10.0 km) Unknown
F3 May 1, 1948 4 175 NW of Grove Rogers, Craig, Delaware 35.8 mi (57.6 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 15 Grove Craig, Delaware 15.2 mi (24.5 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 May 3, 1948 0 3 NW of Dougherty to Caney Murray, Johnston, Atoka 55.5 mi (89.3 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 March 25, 1949 2 25 NW of McAlester Pittsburg 35.3 mi (56.8 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 March 29, 1949 4 31 Canton Dewey, Blaine 19.6 mi (31.5 km) Unknown
F3 0 7 N of Enid to Blackwell Garfield, Grant, Kay 42.4 mi (68.2 km) Unknown
F3 April 30, 1949 0 0 NE of Frederick Tillman 6.2 mi (10.0 km) Unknown
F3 0 0 S of Frederick Tillman Unknown
F3 0 4 E of Lawton Comanche, Grady 34.8 mi (56.0 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 1 W of Paoli Garvin, McClain 17.1 mi (27.5 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 0 7 Bennington Bryan 35.2 mi (56.6 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 1 8 W of Soper Bryan, Choctaw, Pushmataha 29.6 mi (47.6 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 0 48 Norman McClain, Cleveland 22.3 mi (35.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 3 8 SE of McLoud Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Lincoln 23.8 mi (38.3 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F4 May 15, 1949 1 3 Texhoma to Goodwell Texas 59.9 mi (96.4 km)‡ 400 yd (370 m)
F3 May 17, 1949 0 0 E of Binger Caddo 9 mi (14 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F4 May 20, 1949 1 7 S of Watonga Blaine 15.3 mi (24.6 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 0 0 N of Waynoka Woodward, Woods 30.4 mi (48.9 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 1 1 N of Shattuck Ellis Unknown 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 1 Cleveland Pawnee, Osage 4.8 mi (7.7 km) Unknown
F3 October 9, 1949 0 3 SW to N of Laverne Beaver, Harper 34.7 mi (55.8 km) 200 yd (180 m)

April 9, 1947

Moving at an average forward speed of 42 to 50 mph (68 to 80 km/h), this large and violent tornado was first confirmed near Canadian, Texas. When it struck the town of Glazier, it may have been as much as two miles (3.2 km) in width. Most structures in town were swept completely away and scattered. Vehicles in the area were thrown hundreds of yards and mangled, shrubbery was debarked, and ground scouring occurred. Glazier was considered completely destroyed, with 17 dead, a major percentage of the populace. Press reports told of two people who were known to be together in Glazier before the tornado struck were found three miles (4.8 km) apart afterward. The tornado maintained its intensity as it slammed into Higgins, on the Texas–Oklahoma border, which was also devastated. The accepted death toll here was 51; again, a large portion of the residents of the town were killed or injured. Much of downtown Higgins was completely demolished, and entire rows of homes were swept away. At one residence, a 412-tonne (4,500 kg) lathe was reportedly ripped from its anchors and broken in half.[36]

After killing at least one other person, the tornado crossed the state line and entered Oklahoma. There the tornado was at its worst—the deadliest storm in that state's tornado-troubled history. Six more people were killed when the tornado swept away about 60 ranches and farms south of Shattuck, Gage, and Fargo. During its trek, the funnel was so wide and low to the ground that it did not resemble a prototypical tornado. The tornado then moved into Woodward, where it devastated the town and killed an estimated 107 people. The damage that occurred in Woodward was catastrophic. There, the tornado was 1.8 mi (2.9 km) wide and destroyed 100 city blocks. Many homes and businesses were leveled or swept away, and as the tornado struck the town's power plant, a 20-tonne (20,000 kg) steel boiler tank was lofted and thrown a block and a half. Large trees sustained severe debarking as well. The tornado finally dissipated in Woods County, west of Alva, where it wrecked 36 homes and injured 30 people.[36]

Cleanup in the region was made more difficult because of cold and snow that followed the tornado. Four-year-old Joan Gay Croft and her sister Jerri were among refugees taking shelter in a basement hallway of the Woodward hospital. As officials sent the injured to different hospitals in the area, two men took Joan away, saying they were taking her to Oklahoma City. She was never seen again. Over the years, several women have come forth saying they suspect they might be Joan, although none of the claims have been verified. She is likely deceased. The Glazier–Higgins–Woodward tornado was the sixth deadliest in U.S. history, killing 184 and injuring 980; of these figures, 116 deaths and 782 injuries occurred in Oklahoma. An undetermined number of additional fatalities may have occurred in both states affected. In all, the tornado destroyed 626 homes and damaged 920 others, becoming the costliest on record in Oklahoma history.[36]

March 20, 1948

Several damaged planes are seen in a black-and-brown aerial image. They are facing to the left, and all have their wings attached. Three of the planes appear shifted from their original position.
Airplanes damaged by the March 20, 1948 F3 tornado on the grounds of Tinker Air Force Base

Two tornadoes which struck Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma City on March 20 and 25, 1948. Both are estimated to have been equivalent to F3 in intensity on the modern Fujita scale of tornado intensity, which was not devised until 1971. The March 20 tornado was the costliest tornado in Oklahoma history at the time.[37] On March 25, meteorologists at the base noticed the extreme similarity between the weather conditions of that day and March 20, and later in the day issued a "tornado forecast", which was verified when a tornado struck the base that evening. This was the first official tornado forecast, as well as the first successful tornado forecast, in recorded history.[37]

Weather forecasting was still crude and prone to large errors in the era before weather satellites and computer modeling. Thunderstorms were not even in the forecast for the evening of March 20. However, around 9:30 pm storms were reported about 20 miles (32 km) to the southwest, and at 9:52 a tornado was sighted near Will Rogers Airport 7 miles (11 km) away, along with a 92-mile-per-hour (148 km/h) wind gust, moving northeast towards the base.[38]

At 10:00, the tornado reached the southwest corner of the base. Illuminated by nearly constant lightning, the tornado was highly visible as it bisected the base, tossing around planes which were parked in the open. The control tower reported a 78-mile-per-hour (126 km/h) wind gust before the windows shattered, injuring several personnel with flying glass. The tornado dissipated at the northeast corner of the base.[38] The tornado missed most structures on the base, but the damage to expensive military aircraft was substantial. The total damage cost came to around $10 million, or $127 million in 2023 United States dollars. This was the most damaging tornado in Oklahoma up to that date.[39]

1950–1974

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 381 495 365 96 29 3 1369
Deaths: 251 Injuries: 2,315

1950 through 1974 saw 128 intense tornadoes in Oklahoma, resulting in the deaths of 240 people. The deadliest touched down in Kay County before crossing state lines into Kansas, striking the town of Udall, Kansas and killing eighty. The tornado was one of two to receive an F5 rating on May 25, 1955; the other killed twenty people in Blackwell. The Oklahoma City metropolitan area was hit particularly hard, with intense tornadoes moving through the area in 1951, 1960, 1973 and 1974. The largest tornado outbreak took place on June 8, 1974, with 22 tornadoes killing a combined total of 22 people. Two F3-rated tornadoes moved through metropolitan Tulsa on June 8, crossing paths over Jenks.

 Tornado crossed state lines in or out of Oklahoma
Intense (F3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, 1950–1974[31][32]
F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
F3 April 30, 1951 0 0 Downtown Oklahoma City Oklahoma 7.4 mi (11.9 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 June 8, 1951 0 0 Corn to Colony Washita, Caddo 10.9 mi (17.5 km) 173 yd (158 m)
F3 March 13, 1953 2 11 NW of Marietta Love, Carter, Marshall, Johnston 45.3 mi (72.9 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 1 8 E of Bradley Grady 1 mi (1.6 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 June 5, 1953 0 0 SW of Sulphur Garvin, Murray 16.9 mi (27.2 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 April 30, 1954 0 12 Hugo Choctaw 1 mi (1.6 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 May 1, 1954 3 3 E of Grandfield Tillman, Cotton 12.3 mi (19.8 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 0 W of Waurika Cotton, Jefferson 8 mi (13 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 0 Marlow Stephens 6.2 mi (10.0 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 0 2 W of Frederick Tillman, Kiowa 68.6 mi (110.4 km)‡ 440 yd (400 m)
F4 0 65 NE of Moore Oklahoma, Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Creek 59.2 mi (95.3 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 April 18, 1955 0 0 SW of Cheyenne Roger Mills 8.9 mi (14.3 km)‡ 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 25, 1955 0 1 Deer Creek Grant 13.3 mi (21.4 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F4 2 18 SW of Cheyenne Roger Mills 45.1 mi (72.6 km)‡ 1100 yd (1000 m)
F5 20 280 Blackwell Kay 28.4 mi (45.7 km)‡ 500 yd (460 m)
F5 80[note 3] 273 NW of Newkirk Kay 56.4 mi (90.8 km)‡ 1320 yd (1210 m)
F3 April 2, 1956 5 68 Stroud Lincoln, Creek 42.6 mi (68.6 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 2 SW of Alva Woods, Alfalfa 20 mi (32 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 0 3 SE of Sobol Choctaw 2 mi (3.2 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 2 29 NW of Kaw City Kay 108.3 mi (174.3 km)‡ 880 yd (800 m)
F4 0 59 Miami Ottawa 41.8 mi (67.3 km)‡ 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 8, 1956 0 4 SE of Enid Garfield 7.3 mi (11.7 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 0 0 S of Covington Garfield 7.7 mi (12.4 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 January 22, 1957 10 20 NW of Gans Sequoyah 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F4 April 2, 1957 2 6 E of Kingston Marshall, Bryan 5.2 mi (8.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 3 3 Durant Bryan 7.9 mi (12.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 April 22, 1957 0 1 Carnegie Caddo 1 mi (1.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 20, 1957 0 1 Sallisaw Haskell, Sequoyah 20.4 mi (32.8 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 May 24, 1957 4 5 S of Lawton Cotton, Comanche 21.6 mi (34.8 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F4 September 14, 1957 2 6 Asher to Wetumka Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Seminole, Hughes 67.5 mi (108.6 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 June 20, 1958 0 0 S of Gage Ellis 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 67 yd (61 m)
F3 November 17, 1958 0 4 S of Frederick Tillman, Cotton 65.8 mi (105.9 km)‡ 50 yd (46 m)
F3 0 15 S to NE of Seminole Seminole, Okfuskee 18.3 mi (29.5 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 0 Fairmont to Blackwell Garfield, Noble, Kay 39.2 mi (63.1 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 March 31, 1959 0 3 NE of Oilton Creek, Pawnee 3.8 mi (6.1 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 10 S of Kingston Marshall 13.2 mi (21.2 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F4 May 9, 1959 7 12 W of Stonewall Pontotoc 6.2 mi (10.0 km) 900 yd (820 m)
F3 0 0 SW to NE of Talala Washington, Rogers, Nowata 23.4 mi (37.7 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F3 0 3 Ketchum Mayes, Craig, Delaware 23.2 mi (37.3 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 May 26, 1959 0 8 Graham Carter 3.3 mi (5.3 km) 60 yd (55 m)
F3 August 30, 1959 0 1 Devol Cotton 2 mi (3.2 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 September 27, 1959 1 1 NW of Welch Craig 8.2 mi (13.2 km)‡ 440 yd (400 m)
F3 April 28, 1960 0 0 S of Binger Caddo 3.3 mi (5.3 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 2 NW of Amber Grady 3.6 mi (5.8 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 1 NW of Tuttle Grady 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 57 Downtown Oklahoma City Oklahoma 11.7 mi (18.8 km) 333 yd (304 m)
F4 May 4, 1960 0 3 E of Antlers Pushmataha 30.8 mi (49.6 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 0 0 NE of Marlow Stephens 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 6 NW of Ada Pontotoc, Seminole 18.3 mi (29.5 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 4 Bethany to The Village Oklahoma 5.1 mi (8.2 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 0 0 E of Asher Pottawatomie, Seminole 8 mi (13 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 May 5, 1960 0 0 NE of Wayne to W of Sand Springs Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Creek, Tulsa 101.9 mi (164.0 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 16 106 Wilburton to Keota Pushmataha, Haskell, Sequoyah 62.4 mi (100.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F5 5 81 Tecumseh to Sapulpa Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Creek, Tulsa 71.8 mi (115.6 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 5 13 Roland Sequoyah 5.4 mi (8.7 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 1 0 W of Gans LeFlore, Sequoyah 23.7 mi (38.1 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 1 0 E of Roland Sequoyah 4.5 mi (7.2 km)‡ 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 0 Maysville Garvin 7.3 mi (11.7 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 2 15 SW of Hoffman Okmulgee 0.8 mi (1.3 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 June 7, 1960 0 0 S of Olustee Jackson 0.8 mi (1.3 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 August 7, 1960 0 0 Quapaw Ottawa 4.7 mi (7.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 February 17, 1961 0 7 Spencer to Luther Oklahoma 16.8 mi (27.0 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 0 11 Stratford to Henryetta Garvin, Pontotoc, Seminole, Hughes, Okfuskee, Okmulgee 73 mi (117 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 March 26, 1961 0 0 E of Kaw City Kay, Osage 8 mi (13 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 1 W to NE of Eufaula McIntosh 21.4 mi (34.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 April 30, 1961 0 2 N of Minco Grady 2 mi (3.2 km) 77 yd (70 m)
F3 May 4, 1961 1 0 NW of Calumet Blaine, Canadian 9.5 mi (15.3 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F4 May 5, 1961 16 58 E of Talihina LeFlore 26.4 mi (42.5 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 0 0 NE of Hugo Choctaw 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 May 7, 1961 0 1 Bluejacket Craig, Ottawa 8.9 mi (14.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 May 21, 1961 0 0 S of Cushing Payne 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 0 SE of Cushing Payne 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 April 26, 1962 0 0 N of Sayre Beckham 3.6 mi (5.8 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 May 25, 1962 0 4 Weatherford Custer 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F4 0 9 Dill City Washita 7.2 mi (11.6 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F4 May 26, 1962 0 1 E of Randlett Cotton 10.1 mi (16.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 May 26, 1963 0 5 SE of Midwest City Oklahoma 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 1 4 Arcadia to N of Meeker Oklahoma, Lincoln 34.3 mi (55.2 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 2 Bowlegs Seminole 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 July 15, 1963 0 0 SW of Beaver Beaver 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 April 3, 1964 0 1 E of Kingston Marshall, Bryan 16.7 mi (26.9 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 10, 1964 0 0 S of Tahlequah Cherokee 2 mi (3.2 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F4 March 16, 1965 0 7 S of Nash to N of Braman Grant, Kay 82.7 mi (133.1 km)‡ 300 yd (270 m)
F3 April 11, 1966 0 6 W of Coweta Wagoner, Tulsa 7.3 mi (11.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 April 27, 1966 0 0 N of Haywood Pittsburg 8 mi (13 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F4 0 2 S of Wapanucka Johnston, Atoka 10.2 mi (16.4 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F3 April 20, 1967 0 0 S of Anadarko Caddo 1 mi (1.6 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F4 June 10, 1967 4 1 W of Butler Roger Mills, Custer 8.7 mi (14.0 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F4 0 0 E of Watonga Blaine 0.1 mi (0.16 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 0 1 W of Kingfisher Kingfisher 16.7 mi (26.9 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 April 19, 1968 0 0 SW of Little Seminole 6.6 mi (10.6 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 May 13, 1968 0 0 W to N of Konawa Pontotoc, Pottawatomie, Seminole 11.6 mi (18.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 April 26, 1970 0 0 E of Ames Major 1 mi (1.6 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 June 11, 1970 0 1 Northwestern Oklahoma City Canadian, Oklahoma 13.2 mi (21.2 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 1 45 Stilwell Adair 51.8 mi (83.4 km)‡ 250 yd (230 m)
F4 October 5, 1970 4 84 Shawnee to Prague Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Okfuskee 25 mi (40 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 October 8, 1970 0 4 E of Colcord Delaware 6.9 mi (11.1 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 12, 1971 0 4 Colbert Marshall, Bryan 41.6 mi (66.9 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 May 5, 1971 0 0 Haskell to SE of Hulbert Muskogee, Wagoner, Cherokee 37 mi (60 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 June 7, 1971 0 0 SW of Thomas Custer 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F4 April 19, 1972 5 6 SE of Ratliff City Carter, Murray, Garvin 28.2 mi (45.4 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 May 22, 1972 0 0 SW of Willow Greer 9.5 mi (15.3 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 October 21, 1972 0 1 Idabel McCurtain 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 33 yd (30 m)
F3 April 19, 1973 0 21 Ada Pontotoc 7.9 mi (12.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 May 24, 1973 2 4 Union City Canadian, Grady 13.3 mi (21.4 km) 300 yd (270 m)
F4 May 26, 1973 5 25 N of Warner Muskogee 3.6 mi (5.8 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 0 6 NE of Webbers Falls Sequoyah 18.7 mi (30.1 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 0 3 N of Copan Washington 0.3 mi (0.48 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 June 18, 1973 0 29 Frederick Tillman 3.3 mi (5.3 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F3 0 0 N of Carnegie Caddo, Washita 16.8 mi (27.0 km) 133 yd (122 m)
F3 0 0 E of Hominy Osage 2.5 mi (4.0 km) 40 yd (37 m)
F3 September 24, 1973 0 14 N of Afton Craig, Ottawa 20.8 mi (33.5 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 November 19, 1973 5 36 Moore McClain, Cleveland, Oklahoma 24.2 mi (38.9 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 April 20, 1974 0 3 N of Moore Grady, Canadian, Cleveland, Oklahoma, Lincoln 63.6 mi (102.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 0 N of Waurika Jefferson 6.1 mi (9.8 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 June 8, 1974 0 14 Downtown Oklahoma City Oklahoma 8.9 mi (14.3 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 0 0 Choctaw Oklahoma 9 mi (14 km) 127 yd (116 m)
F3 0 0 N of Jones Oklahoma 10.2 mi (16.4 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 0 8 Davenport Lincoln 6.8 mi (10.9 km) 1300 yd (1200 m)
F3 0 0 E of Sparks Lincoln 2.5 mi (4.0 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 0 0 E of Prague Seminole, Pottawatomie, Okfuskee, Creek 29.9 mi (48.1 km) 1300 yd (1200 m)
F3 0 42 Jenks to Chouteau Creek, Tulsa, Wagoner, Rogers, Mayes 48.9 mi (78.7 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 2 80 Jenks to Vinita Tulsa, Rogers, Mayes, Craig 63.6 mi (102.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 0 SW of Jay Delaware 2.7 mi (4.3 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F4 14 150 Drumright to Westport Payne, Creek, Pawnee, Osage 29 mi (47 km) 400 yd (370 m)

May 25, 1955

Aerial of tornado damage in Blackwell

The tornado formed in extreme northern Noble County at around 9:00 p.m. CDT, just west of Marland, before crossing the county line, passing east of Tonkawa, and through the eastern portions of the Kay County town of Blackwell as an F5 tornado up to 400 yards (370 m) wide. It claimed the lives of 20 people in Blackwell and injured over 200 before crossing into and dissipating over Sumner County, Kansas. Along with destroying nearly 200 homes,[40] the tornado also demolished the town's main employers including the Acme Foundry and the Hazel Atlas Glass plant. 400 homes were destroyed or swept away, and 500 other homes were damaged.[40] 60 businesses were also destroyed and the local hospital also sustained major damage. Most of the western half of the town was spared the worst of the damage.[40] Multiple eyewitnesses reported seeing a prominent blue light in the funnel.[41]

About 30 minutes after producing the Blackwell tornado, the same supercell produced another large and violent and long-tracked tornado just east of the first tornado track near the Kansas/Oklahoma border. It proceeded northward across Sumner and Cowley Counties. The town of Udall, Kansas was especially hard hit with F5 damage that included the disintegration of numerous structures and homes all across the town. Even the town's water tower was toppled. The funnel, about 1,300 yards (1,200 m) wide, hit Udall at around 10:30 p.m. CDT. Half of the town's population was killed or injured. Numerous homes and businesses were destroyed, many of which were swept away, including a 30-by-40 foot concrete block building that was obliterated, with the foundation left mostly bare of any debris. Vehicles were thrown hundreds of yards and mangled beyond recognition, including a pickup truck that was wrapped around a tree and stripped of everything but its frame and tires.[42] The Udall public school building sustained major damage, with beams snapped and blown away.[43][44][45]

Almost immediately, volunteers and rescue workers descended into the darkness to aid the survivors. Ambulances and automobiles of all kinds rushed the growing numbers of injured to hospitals in three neighboring towns. The closest hospitals were William Newton and St Mary's Hospitals, 17 miles southeast in Winfield, the former of which took in 129 patients that night. Several were taken to St Luke's Hospital in Wellington, 23 miles to the southwest, while the remainder were taken to three hospitals in Wichita to the northwest.[46] This tornado was the deadliest in Kansas history with 80 fatalities and 273 injuries.[47]

1975–1999

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 650 396 234 73 19 3 239
Deaths: 150 Injuries: >3,821

1975 through 1999 saw 293 tornadoes, which collectively resulted in the deaths of over 150 people. The deadliest in Oklahoma moved through Bridge Creek, Newcastle, Moore and Del City on May 3, 1999; the tornado, which received an F5 rating, had the highest measured windspeeds ever recorded on Earth, at 321 miles per hour (517 km/h). The tornado inflicted an estimated total of $1 billion (1999 USD)[8] in damage to the Oklahoma City metropolitan area, making it the second-costliest in Oklahoma history.[9] Another F4 tornado that had killed 42 people in Wichita Falls, Texas moved into Jefferson County, but caused no deaths along the Oklahoma portion of its path.[48] Three F5 tornadoes hit Oklahoma during this time period, striking in 1976, 1982 and 1999. One of these tornadoes moved south of Spiro, killing two people. Another, which crossed Choctaw and McCurtain counties, injured 29 people near Broken Bow.

 Tornado crossed state lines in or out of Oklahoma
Intense (F3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, 1975–1999[31][32][49]
F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
F3 May 2, 1975 0 0 E of Dill City Washita 4.7 mi (7.6 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 June 13, 1975 0 8 Stillwater Payne 5.1 mi (8.2 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 December 5, 1975 0 38 Downtown Tulsa Tulsa 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 700 yd (640 m)
F3 0 0 W of Haskell Okmulgee, Muskogee, Wagoner 27 mi (43 km) 50 yd (46 m)
F4 March 26, 1976 1 4 N of Talihina Latimer, LeFlore 10.7 mi (17.2 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F5 2 64 S of Spiro LeFlore 11.9 mi (19.2 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F4 April 16, 1976 0 6 E of Fort Cobb Caddo 32.9 mi (52.9 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 April 19, 1976 0 2 W of Leon Jefferson 10.4 mi (16.7 km) 373 yd (341 m)
F3 March 2, 1977 0 1 E of Duncan Stephens 4.3 mi (6.9 km)‡ 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 15, 1977 1 2 E of Duncan Stephens 0.8 mi (1.3 km) 180 yd (160 m)
F3 May 16, 1977 0 0 NW of Sayre Beckham, Roger Mills 18.2 mi (29.3 km) 1320 yd (1210 m)
F3 0 0 N of Erick Beckham 6.5 mi (10.5 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F4 May 18, 1977 0 0 Keyes Cimarron 38.6 mi (62.1 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 May 20, 1977 0 3 E of Altus Jackson, Kiowa 10.4 mi (16.7 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 0 0 SE of Tipton Tillman 1.5 mi (2.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 0 NE of Arcadia Oklahoma, Logan 9.9 mi (15.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 April 30, 1978 0 0 SE of Slapout Beaver 14.4 mi (23.2 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 0 0 S to W of Piedmont Canadian, Oklahoma 9.3 mi (15.0 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
F3 March 18, 1979 0 0 Copan to Wann Washington, Nowata 7.9 mi (12.7 km) 30 yd (27 m)
F3 April 10, 1979 3 100 Lawton Comanche 4.5 mi (7.2 km) 170 yd (160 m)
F3 0 0 SE of Ratliff City Jefferson, Stephens, Carter, Garvin 12.8 mi (20.6 km) 170 yd (160 m)
F4 11 68 S of Davidson Tillman 39.7 mi (63.9 km)‡ 880 yd (800 m)
F4 42[note 4] 1,740 Waurika Jefferson 47.3 mi (76.1 km)‡ 1320 yd (1210 m)
F3 May 2, 1979 0 0 SW of Covington Garfield 8.4 mi (13.5 km) 120 yd (110 m)
F4 1 25 N of Ringwood Major, Garfield 20.6 mi (33.2 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 October 30, 1979 3 2 NW of Ardmore Carter 8.4 mi (13.5 km) 530 yd (480 m)
F3 April 7, 1980 0 4 S of Afton Mayes, Craig, Delaware 24.8 mi (39.9 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 0 9 W of Cameron Le Flore 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 127 yd (116 m)
F3 April 19, 1981 0 0 W of Tahlequah Cherokee 3 mi (4.8 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 7 Tulsa metropolitan area Tulsa 4.9 mi (7.9 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 1 Tulsa metropolitan area Tulsa 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 10 yd (9.1 m)
F3 5 49 S of Bixby Tulsa 9.9 mi (15.9 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 May 17, 1981 0 6 Tecumseh Pottawatomie 10.2 mi (16.4 km) 587 yd (537 m)
F3 0 0 Cromwell to Okemah Seminole, Okfuskee 15.4 mi (24.8 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F4 0 2 W of Cromwell to SW of Okmulgee Seminole, Okfuskee, Okmulgee 33.6 mi (54.1 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 May 22, 1981 0 12 Clinton Custer 10.3 mi (16.6 km) 267 yd (244 m)
F4 0 0 N of Binger Caddo, Canadian 16.7 mi (26.9 km) 1333 yd (1219 m)
F3 May 23, 1981 0 0 Durant Bryan 9.7 mi (15.6 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 March 15, 1982 1 36 Ada Pontotoc 6 mi (9.7 km) 60 yd (55 m)
F4 March 18, 1982 0 12 E of Hardesty to Beaver Texas, Beaver 88 mi (142 km)‡ 800 yd (730 m)
F5 April 2, 1982 0 29 Broken Bow Choctaw, McCurtain 53 mi (85 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 0 0 N of Marietta Love 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 30 yd (27 m)
F3 0 0 NE of Boswell Choctaw 8 mi (13 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 1 4 S of Tom McCurtain 52 mi (84 km)‡ 233 yd (213 m)
F3 May 11, 1982 0 41 Altus Jackson 4 mi (6.4 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 2 18 NE of Blair Jackson, Greer 10 mi (16 km) 700 yd (640 m)
F3 0 0 E of Lone Wolf Kiowa 7 mi (11 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 May 13, 1983 0 0 Kingfisher Kingfisher 8.8 mi (14.2 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 November 22, 1983 0 3 Albion Pushmataha 3 mi (4.8 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 0 NW of Westville Adair 19 mi (31 km)‡ 100 yd (91 m)
F3 April 26, 1984 8 95 SE of Okmulgee to Morris Okmulgee 22 mi (35 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
F4 3 37 E of Jennings Creek, Pawnee 22 mi (35 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F4 April 29, 1984 1 60 E of Jennings Creek, Pawnee, Osage 27 mi (43 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 October 31, 1984 0 0 N of Seiling Woodward, Major 20 mi (32 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 May 8, 1986 0 15 Downtown Oklahoma City Oklahoma 4 mi (6.4 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 22, 1987 0 0 NW of Shattuck Ellis 30 mi (48 km)‡ 440 yd (400 m)
F3 March 13, 1990 0 1 SE of Duncan Stephens 22 mi (35 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 0 E of Wakita Grant 19 mi (31 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 0 0 E of Wakita Grant 22 mi (35 km)‡ 200 yd (180 m)
F3 May 15, 1990 1 12 NW of Stillwater Payne 7 mi (11 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 May 26, 1990 0 0 SE of Hinton Caddo 3 mi (4.8 km) 200 yd (180 m)
F3 March 21, 1991 0 2 Ada Pontotoc 11 mi (18 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 March 26, 1991 0 0 SE of Wakita Grant, Kay 67 mi (108 km)‡ 500 yd (460 m)
F3 April 12, 1991 0 0 SW of Pond Creek Garfield, Grant 9 mi (14 km) 800 yd (730 m)
F3 0 0 Pond Creek Grant 9.5 mi (15.3 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F4 April 26, 1991 0 6 NW of Fairfax Garfield, Noble, Osage 66 mi (106 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
F4 1 24 SE of Westport Pawnee, Osage, Tulsa 32 mi (51 km) 1700 yd (1600 m)
F4 0 22 Oologah Rogers 4 mi (6.4 km) 1300 yd (1200 m)
F3 0 0 E of Enid Garfield 6 mi (9.7 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 May 15, 1991 0 3 Laverne Harper 11.5 mi (18.5 km) 900 yd (820 m)
F3 May 26, 1991 0 0 Mooreland Woodward 12.5 mi (20.1 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
F4 May 11, 1992 0 3 N of Kiowa Pittsburg 10 mi (16 km) 400 yd (370 m)
F3 0 1 NE of Tupelo Coal 12 mi (19 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 July 2, 1992 0 1 W of Oologah Tulsa, Rogers 4 mi (6.4 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F4 April 24, 1983 7 100 W of Catoosa Tulsa, Rogers 5.5 mi (8.9 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 0 30 S of Catoosa Tulsa, Wagoner, Rogers 8 mi (13 km) 250 yd (230 m)
F3 May 5, 1993 0 0 SE of Guymon Texas 12 mi (19 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 0 0 NW of Hooker Texas 18.5 mi (29.8 km)‡ 1200 yd (1100 m)
F3 June 8, 1993 0 0 N of Kildare Kay 11.5 mi (18.5 km) 150 yd (140 m)
F3 May 7, 1995 3 6 NW of Marietta Love, Carter 34.1 mi (54.9 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 May 26, 1997 0 1 W of Indianola McIntosh, Pittsburg 5 mi (8.0 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 May 24, 1998 0 0 W of Lamont Grant 5.3 mi (8.5 km) 1300 yd (1200 m)
F3 October 4, 1998 0 1 Prague Seminole, Pottawatomie, Lincoln 10 mi (16 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 May 3, 1999 0 3 NE of Apache Caddo 6.4 mi (10.3 km) 100 yd (91 m)
F3 0 4 W of Chickasha Caddo, Grady 9.3 mi (15.0 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 0 0 N of El Reno Canadian, Kingfisher 22 mi (35 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 0 4 W of Kingfisher Kingfisher 21 mi (34 km) Unknown
F3 0 13 E of Crescent Logan 13 mi (21 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F4 1 11 Dover Kingfisher 15 mi (24 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F5 36 583 S of Amber to Bridge Creek to Moore to Midwest City Grady, Cleveland, Oklahoma 37.3 mi (60.0 km) 1430 yd (1310 m)
F4 2 26 Cimarron City to Mulhall Logan, Payne, Noble 40 mi (64 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
F3 0 13 Davenport to Stroud Lincoln, Creek 16 mi (26 km) 450 yd (410 m)
F3 May 4, 1999 0 0 SE of Stilwell Sequoyah, Adair 38.2 mi (61.5 km)‡ Unknown
F3 June 1, 1999 0 0 S of Checotah McIntosh 4.5 mi (7.2 km) 350 yd (320 m)
F3 2 5 W of Hulbert Cherokee 2 mi (3.2 km) 350 yd (320 m)

May 3, 1999

Through the afternoon to evening hours of May 3, 1999, the largest tornado outbreak in Oklahoma history would take place across the central portions of the state. Seventy confirmed tornadoes touched down within state boundaries, killing a total of 40 people. The deadliest and most powerful struck Moore; the tornado retained the highest windspeeds ever recorded on Earth. other powerful tornadoes include an F4 that killed one person in Kingfisher County and a large F4 tornado impacted Mulhall, killing two people.

A housing complex, with a large swath of destroyed homes running through the center. Ground scouring is also visible.
Tornado damage in Moore following the 1999 F5 tornado

On the evening of May 3, a large, long-lived and exceptionally powerful F5 tornado hit Moore, Oklahoma in which the highest wind speed ever measured globally was recorded at 321 miles per hour (517 km/h) by a Doppler on Wheels (DOW) radar. Considered the strongest tornado ever recorded to have affected the Oklahoma City metropolitan area, the tornado devastated southern portions of Oklahoma City while near peak intensity, along with surrounding suburbs and towns to the south and southwest of the city during the early evening of Monday, May 3, 1999. Parts of Bridge Creek were rendered unrecognizable. The tornado covered 38 miles (61 km) during its 85-minute existence, destroying thousands of homes, killing 36 people (plus an additional five indirectly), and leaving US$1 billion (1999 USD) in damage,[50] ranking it as the fifth-costliest on record not accounting for inflation.[51] Its severity prompted the first-ever use of the tornado emergency statement by the National Weather Service, which read:[52]

…TORNADO EMERGENCY IN SOUTH OKLAHOMA CITY METRO AREA…

AT 657 PM CDT…A LARGE TORNADO WAS MOVING ALONG INTERSTATE 44 WEST OF NEWCASTLE. ON ITS PRESENT PATH…THIS LARGE DAMAGING TORNADO WILL ENTER SOUTHWEST SECTIONS OF THE OKLAHOMA CITY METRO AREA BETWEEN 715 PM AND 730 PM. PERSONS IN MOORE AND SOUTH OKLAHOMA CITY SHOULD TAKE IMMEDIATE TORNADO PRECAUTIONS!

THIS IS AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS AND LIFE THREATENING SITUATION. IF YOU ARE IN THE PATH OF THIS LARGE AND DESTRUCTIVE TORNADO…TAKE COVER IMMEDIATELY.

DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED THIS STORM MAY CONTAIN DESTRUCTIVE HAIL TO THE SIZE OF BASEBALLS ... OR LARGER.

The tornado first touched down at 6:23 p.m. Central Daylight Time (CDT) in Grady County, roughly two miles (3.2 km) south-southwest of the town of Amber. It quickly intensified into a violent F4, and gradually reached F5 status after traveling 6.5 miles (10.5 km), at which time it struck the town of Bridge Creek. It fluctuated in strength, ranging from F2 to F5 status before it crossed into Cleveland County where it reached F5 intensity for a third time shortly before entering the city of Moore. By 7:30 p.m., the tornado crossed into Oklahoma County and battered southeastern Oklahoma City, Del City, and Midwest City before dissipating around 7:48 p.m. just outside Midwest City. A total of 8,132 homes, 1,041 apartments, 260 businesses, eleven public buildings, and seven churches were damaged or destroyed.[50]

2000–2006

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 200 92 21 8 1 0 322
Deaths: 1 Injuries: 203

The years 2000 through 2006 only saw nine intense tornadoes, none of which were fatal. These tornadoes caused a combined total of 154 injuries, the majority of which were sustained when an F4 tornado hit southwest Oklahoma City on May 8, 2003.[53] One fatality was recorded when an F2 tornado moved rural Coal and Atoka counties west of Coalgate on April 10, 2001.[54] The Fujita Scale, which had been used by the National Weather Service during tornado damage surveys to rate tornado damage, was discontinued in February 2007, being replaced by the Enhanced Fujita scale.[55]

Intense (F3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, 2000–2006[31][49]
F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
F3 October 9, 2001 0 0 NW of Elk City Beckham, Washita, Custer 11.5 mi (18.5 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F3 0 9 Cordell Washita 6 mi (9.7 km) 500 yd (460 m)
F3 0 1 N of Mountain View Kiowa 13 mi (21 km) 440 yd (400 m)
F3 April 17, 2002 0 0 W of Seiling Dewey, Woodward 8 mi (13 km) 600 yd (550 m)
F4 May 8, 2003 0 134 Moore Cleveland, Oklahoma 17.3 mi (27.8 km) 700 yd (640 m)
F3 0 0 W of Bartlesville Osage 45 mi (72 km) 880 yd (800 m)
F3 May 9, 2003 0 2 NE of Oklahoma City Oklahoma 17.8 mi (28.6 km) 1320 yd (1210 m)
F3 May 29, 2004 0 0 N of Depew Creek 7.5 mi (12.1 km) 700 yd (640 m)
F3 March 12, 2006 0 8 SW to NE of Kansas Cherokee, Delaware 29 mi (47 km) 440 yd (400 m)

2007-2025

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5 Total
126 507 440 106 28 13 2 1,220
Deaths: 110 Injuries: 1,515

As of January 2025, a total of 1,220 tornadoes, 41 being intense, have killed over 99 people in Oklahoma since the implementation of the Enhanced Fujita Scale in 2007. The deadliest struck Moore on May 20, 2013, killing 24 people and injuring 212 others.[56] Two EF5 tornadoes have been recorded within state boundaries since 2007, both of which hit areas around Oklahoma City.[57][58] The widest tornado ever recorded, which reached a peak width of 4576 yd (4184 m) (2.6 miles), moved through rural farmland south of El Reno on May 31, 2013, killing eight people.[59]

 Tornado crossed state lines in or out of Oklahoma
Intense (EF3+) tornadoes in Oklahoma, 2007-2025[31][49]
EF# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width
EF3 May 5, 2007 0 1 NE of Sweetwater Beckham, Roger Mills 7.7 mi (12.4 km) 150 yd (140 m)
EF4 May 10, 2008 21 350 S of Picher Craig, Ottawa 75.5 mi (121.5 km)‡ 1760 yd (1610 m)
EF3 May 23, 2008 0 0 S of Selman Harper 5 mi (8.0 km) 1100 yd (1000 m)
EF3 0 0 N of Freedom Woods 11 mi (18 km)‡ 980 yd (900 m)
EF4 February 10, 2009 8 46 W of Ardmore Jefferson, Love, Carter 37 mi (60 km)‡ 880 yd (800 m)
EF3 April 9, 2009 0 7 E of Eagletown McCurtain 37.2 mi (59.9 km)‡ 850 yd (780 m)
EF3 May 10, 2010 0 0 NW of Ardmore Carter 4.9 mi (7.9 km) 400 yd (370 m)
EF3 0 28 Tecumseh Pottawatomie, Seminole, Okfuskee 37.2 mi (59.9 km) 2200 yd (2000 m)
EF3 0 3 NW of Shawnee Pottawatomie 6.5 mi (10.5 km) 880 yd (800 m)
EF4 1 32 E of Norman Cleveland, Pottawatomie 22.2 mi (35.7 km) 880 yd (800 m)
EF4 2 49 SE of Moore Cleveland, Oklahoma 24 mi (39 km) 2000 yd (1800 m)
EF3 0 3 N of Medford Grant, Kay 47.7 mi (76.8 km)‡ 1500 yd (1400 m)
EF3 April 14, 2011 2 40 SW to NE of Atoka Atoka 17 mi (27 km) 1320 yd (1210 m)
EF3 May 22, 2011 0 4 S of Grove Delaware 17.9 mi (28.8 km) 1550 yd (1420 m)
EF3 May 24, 2011 0 0 N of Lookeba Caddo 8.6 mi (13.8 km) 800 yd (730 m)
EF4 1 48 S of Chickasha to Newcastle Grady, Cleveland 33.3 mi (53.6 km) 880 yd (800 m)
EF5 9 181 N of El Reno Canadian, Kingfisher, Logan 64.9 mi (104.4 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
EF4 0 61 W of Washington Grady, Cleveland 23.1 mi (37.2 km) 880 yd (800 m)
EF3 1 2 E of Seiling Dewey, Blaine, Major 13.2 mi (21.2 km) 880 yd (800 m)
EF4 November 7, 2011 0 0 Tipton Jackson, Tillman 17.4 mi (28.0 km)‡ 500 yd (460 m)
EF3 April 14, 2012 6 29 Arnett to Woodward Ellis, Woodward 34 mi (55 km) 400 yd (370 m)
EF3 May 19, 2013 0 4 S of Carney Oklahoma, Lincoln 20.8 mi (33.5 km) 1200 yd (1100 m)
EF4 2 10 E of Norman Cleveland, Pottawatomie 23 mi (37 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
EF5 May 20, 2013 24 212 Moore Grady, Cleveland 13.8 mi (22.2 km) 1900 yd (1700 m)
EF3 May 31, 2013 8 26 S of El Reno Canadian 16.2 mi (26.1 km) 4576 yd (4184 m)
EF3 May 6, 2015 0 0 Bridge Creek Grady 10.3 mi (16.6 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
EF3 0 12 Valley Brook Oklahoma 2 mi (3.2 km) 700 yd (640 m)
EF3 May 16, 2015 0 0 S of Snyder Jackson, Tillman, Kiowa 40.4 mi (65.0 km)‡ 1600 yd (1500 m)
EF3 May 25, 2015 1 1 NW of Bokchito Bryan, Atoka 18.8 mi (30.3 km) 700 yd (640 m)
EF4 May 9, 2016 1 0 Katie Garvin 8.9 mi (14.3 km) 400 yd (370 m)
EF3 0 0 N of Sulphur Murray, Pontotoc 16.6 mi (26.7 km) 1500 yd (1400 m)
EF3 1 0 NW of Wapanucka Johnston, Coal 9.1 mi (14.6 km) 700 yd (640 m)
EF3 0 2 S of Boswell Bryan, Choctaw 13.8 mi (22.2 km) 3100 yd (2800 m)
EF3 April 30, 2019 2 16 SW to N of Bokchito Bryan, Atoka 27.6 mi (44.4 km) 1400 yd (1300 m)
EF3 May 23, 2019 0 0 SW of Laverne Beaver, Ellis, Harper 15.7 mi (25.3 km)‡ 1500 yd (1400 m)
EF3 May 25, 2019 2 29 S of El Reno Canadian 2.2 mi (3.5 km) 75 yd (69 m)
EF4 November 4, 2022 0 1 Sawyer Choctaw 44.7 mi (71.9 km)‡ 1700 yd (1600 m)
EF4 1 13 Idabel McCurtain 60.9 mi (98.0 km)‡ 1056 yd (966 m)
EF3 April 29, 2023 2 0 Cole Cleveland 10.9 mi (17.5 km) 1200 yd (1100 m)
EF3 0 0 S of Pink Pottawatomie 0.6 mi (0.97 km) 250 yd (230 m)
EF3 April 27, 2024 1 30 Sulphur Murray, Pontotoc 9.9 mi (15.9 km) 440 yd (400 m)
EF3 2 4 W of Holdenville Hughes, Okfuskee 27.9 mi (44.9 km) 1760 yd (1610 m)
EF4 1 6 Marietta to Baum Love, Carter 26.8 mi (43.1 km) 900 yd (820 m)
EF4 May 6, 2024 2 33 Barnsdall Osage, Washington 40.8 mi (65.7 km) 1700 yd (1600 m)
EF3 November 3, 2024 0 6 E of Oklahoma City Cleveland, Oklahoma 2.4 mi (3.9 km) 300 yd (270 m)
EF3 0 0 S of Comanche Stephens 22 mi (35 km) 500 yd (460 m)
EF3 0 5 Harrah Oklahoma, Lincoln 25.1 mi (40.4 km) 1000 yd (910 m)
A piece of sheet metal is seen shoved between two debarked trees. Tornado debris litters the grass and a concrete home foundation below.
Tornado damage in Picher

May 10, 2008

In the afternoon and early evening hours of May 10, 2008, a large and violent tornado moved through Eastern Oklahoma and western Missouri, striking the communities of Picher, Quapaw, Racine and Granby. Twenty-one people were killed by the tornado and over three hundred more were injured. The tornado produced damage that would later receive an EF4 rating. It was one of nine to receive this rating worldwide in 2008, and was the second-deadliest of the year.[60]

The tornado first touched down near Chetopa before rapidly intensifying and hitting Picher at EF4 intensity. The community was devastated, and was hit so hard that it would become an unincorporated community. The tornado extensively damaged Picher, collapsing wooden buildings and loft several cars while tracking through the southeast portions of the town. The tornado then passed to the north of Quapaw, which avoided a direct hit. The tornado then crossed state lines into Missouri, hitting Racine and killing several people in mobile homes and other poorly-built structures. The tornado lifted some time after crossing Route 59.[60]

May 24, 2011

Debris from homes covers the ground above a cloudy sky.
Damage from the El Reno EF5 tornado in May 2011

A long-tracked, deadly and powerful EF5 tornado struck central Oklahoma on the evening of May 24, 2011. The tornado impacted areas near or within the communities of El Reno, Piedmont, and Guthrie, killing nine and injuring 181. After producing incredible damage in several locations along a path of more than 60 miles (97 km), the El Reno–Piedmont tornado was given a rating of EF5, the highest category on the Enhanced Fujita scale, as well as being the highest rated tornado on the scale since its implementation in 2007, with estimated peak winds >210 mph (337 km/h). It was also the first tornado rated EF5 or F5 to strike Oklahoma since the 1999 Bridge Creek–Moore tornado. A mobile radar found that the tornado possessed possible wind speeds of up to 295 mph (475 km/h).[61]

2011 was a prolific year for tornadoes and tornado-associated fatalities, with multiple destructive outbreaks. The El Reno–Piedmont tornado occurred during an outbreak across Oklahoma and the Great Plains that produced multiple violent tornadoes near the Oklahoma City metropolitan area on May 24, and was itself part of a tornado outbreak sequence spanning May 21–26. The Oklahoma storms came just two days after a devastating EF5 tornado in Joplin, Missouri on May 22, which killed 158 people and became the costliest tornado in U.S. history.[62]

El Reno has infamously been the site of other intense tornadoes. On May 31, 2013, a tornado just south of the town became the largest ever recorded, with a width of 2.6 miles (4.2 km) and radar-indicated wind speeds well over 200 mph (320 km/h). The massive multiple-vortex tornado killed eight people, including three storm chasers, and received a damage rating of EF3.[63][61] In 2019, a brief tornado spawned from an intense squall line struck just southeast of El Reno, killing two people and injuring dozens while again receiving a rating of EF3.[62]

May 20, 2013

An aerial shot of a subdivision of suburban homes, showing a line of destroyed homes going through the center where the tornado tracked through.
Tornado damage in Moore the following day, on May 21

In the afternoon hours of May 20, 2013, a large and violent EF5 tornado would again strike Moore, Oklahoma. The tornado had peak winds estimated at 210 miles per hour (340 km/h), killing 24 people (plus two indirect fatalities)[64] and injuring 212 others.[65] The tornado was part of a larger outbreak from a slow-moving weather system that had produced several other tornadoes across the Great Plains over the previous two days, including five that had struck portions of Central Oklahoma the day prior on May 19.[66]

The tornado touched down just northwest of Newcastle at 2:56 p.m. CDT (19:56 UTC), and quickly became violent, persisting for 39 minutes on a 13.85-mile (22.3 km) path through a heavily populated section of Moore, causing catastrophic damage of EF4 to EF5 intensity, before dissipating at 3:35 p.m. CDT (20:35 UTC) outside of Moore. The tornado was over one mile (1.6 km) across at its peak width.[67]: 13  The 2013 Moore tornado followed a roughly similar track to the deadlier 1999 Bridge Creek–Moore tornado, which was rated F5; neither of the stricken schools in the area had acquired purpose-built storm shelters in the intervening years.[66]

The tornado caused catastrophic damage around the city of Moore, with 1,150 homes destroyed as a result. Damage estimates ranged up to $2 billion, making it the costliest tornado since the 2011 Joplin tornado. As of 2025, this tornado is the most recent to be rated EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale.[68]

May 31, 2013

Subvortices of the El Reno tornado

This rain-wrapped and extremely large multiple-vortex tornado was the widest tornado ever recorded and was part of a larger weather system that produced dozens of tornadoes over the preceding days. The tornado initially touched down at 6:03 p.m. Central Daylight Time (2303 UTC) about 8.3 miles (13.4 km) west-southwest of El Reno, rapidly growing in size and becoming more violent as it tracked through central portions of Canadian County. Remaining over mostly open terrain, the tornado did not impact many structures; however, measurements from mobile weather radars revealed extreme winds in excess of 313 mph (504 km/h) within the vortex. These are among the highest observed wind speeds on Earth, just slightly lower than the wind speeds of the 1999 Bridge Creek–Moore tornado. As it crossed U.S. 81, it had grown to a record-breaking width of 2.6 miles (4.2 km), beating the previous width record set in 2004. Turning northeastward, the tornado soon weakened. Upon crossing Interstate 40, the tornado dissipated around 6:43 p.m. CDT (2343 UTC), after tracking for 16.2 miles (26.1 km), it avoided affecting the more densely populated areas near and within the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.[69]

The tornado killed four storm chasers (three professional and one amateur), the first known deaths in the history of storm chasing.[70] Although the tornado remained over mostly open terrain, dozens of storm chasers unaware of its immense size and erratic movement were caught off-guard. Near U.S. 81, TWISTEX scientist and engineer Tim Samaras, along with his son Paul and research partner Carl Young, died in the tornado. Paul Samaras and Young were ejected from their Chevrolet Cobalt by the storm's sub-vortex, while Tim was still buckled in the passenger's seat. Local resident Richard Henderson, who decided to follow the storm, lost his life in that same area. He snapped a picture of the tornado from his cellular phone before it struck him.[71] Other chasers, including Mike Bettes of The Weather Channel and Reed Timmer, were either injured or had their vehicles damaged. A Doppler on Wheels-based analysis of how the tornado impacted these teams revealed that they were hit by an intense internal sub-vortex.[72] Overall, the tornado was responsible for eight fatalities and 151 injuries.[73] Due to the ferocity and sheer size, as well as its irregular movement and the deaths linked with this tornado, it has become one of the most studied and infamous tornadoes ever. The National Weather Service referred to the tornado as "the most dangerous tornado in storm observing history."[69]

Alongside rush hour traffic, thousands of residents in Oklahoma City attempted to outrun the storm by taking to the roads in an attempt to drive out of the tornado's projected path. By attempting to escape the storm by vehicle, in direct contrast to the recommended plan of action, residents put themselves at great risk from the storm; had the tornado maintained itself and passed over the congested freeways, more than 500 lives could have been lost.[74]

May 9, 2016

A large gray tornado, seen behind a fence. Two storm chasers wearing blue shirts are pointing cameras at the tornado.
The Katie-Wynnewood EF4 tornado that killed one

On May 9, 2016, a violent multi-vortex EF4 tornado struck southern Katie, Oklahoma. The tornado was extremely erratic and killed one person[75][76] while causing $1,000,000 (2016 USD) in damages. The tornado was extremely photogenic, and was heavily documented by storm chasers and civilians. Although the tornado retained high-end EF3 intensity for large portions of its life, it produced a small pocket of intense and violent EF4 damage,[77] making it the first EF4 tornado in Oklahoma since 2013.[75] It was the first EF4 tornado in 2016.[78]

The tornado first touched down on North County Road 3170, and the tornado immediately began to damage trees at EF0 and EF1 intensity. The tornado headed east-northeastward into a forested area, where further tree damage occurred. It then crossed North Private Drive, causing an unknown amount of damage. As the tornado began to track toward the intersection at East 1960 Road and North 3180 Road, it deroofed a farm and uprooted hardwood trees at EF1 intensity. As it continued to track alongside East 1690 Road, it rapidly strengthened to EF2 intensity, where multiple tree trunks were found to be snapped.[79] The tornado then further strengthened to EF3 intensity, where two multi-story houses collapsed as a result of 140 mph winds generated by the tornado. It also continued to uproot and damage trees at EF1 and EF2 intensity along its path. A farm located off of eastern East 1690 Road sustained EF0 damage, and a manufactured home located off of a trail nearby sustained EF1 damage caused by 110 mph winds.[79][80]

The tornado then crossed the Wildhorse Creek Reservoir, causing an unknown amount of damage to trees or other structures. It continued tracking through relatively unpopulated areas of southern Katie, only hitting the far-south portions of North 3190 Road. The tornado then strengthened back up to EF2 intensity, snapping tree trunks and breaking windows in a home.[79] The tornado then began to turn directly East, crossing multiple trails. It snapped more trees located off of North County Road 3210, where it strengthened to EF3 intensity. Multiple trees nearby were completely debarked, and a home was deroofed at EF2 intensity. The tornado continued to uproot, debark and damage large swaths of trees as it moved eastward.[79]

August 6, 2017

An image of a glass-and-brick skyscraper against a cloudy sky. Several windows of the building are blown out, although there is no major structural damage.
Remington Tower, located in Tulsa, was heavily damaged by the 2017 tornado.

On August 6, 2017, a series of four damaging tornadoes occurred as a result of a bow echo that formed and moved through Tulsa. Major damage was inflicted on a shopping and office area in midtown Tulsa due to an EF2 tornado. There were no fatalities, although 30 people were injured.[81]

The strongest tornado formed at 1:19 A.M. CDT (Or Local Time) (06:19 UTC) south of East 36th Street South and east of South Harvard Avenue and eventually shifted west before heading to Broken Arrow, Oklahoma at around 1:25 A.M. The worst damage along its 6.9-mile-long (11.1 km) path was in midtown Tulsa (between South Sheridan Road and South Yale Avenue, near East 41st Street South), where several buildings had their roofs removed and outer walls collapsed. The 18-story Remington Tower office building (near Skelly Drive and 41st Street) underwent dramatic facade and window damage. Many offices in the building were further damaged by having equipment and furnishings inside sucked through the windows and falling to the ground below. The tornado also caused roof and structural damage to Promenade Mall and impacted infrastructure at the BOK Financial Corporation operations center (near 41st and Sheridan), rendering its online, mobile and automated telephone systems inoperable. More than 7 people were rescued from T.G.I. Friday's at 41st and Yale Avenue, after the roof collapsed into the building.[81][82]

This was the first tornado to hit the Tulsa area in the month of August since 1958 (and only the 3rd to strike the area since 1950), the tornado injured 26 people – with two seriously injured – in the east part of the city. Even with the tornado detectable on radar, the Tulsa County Emergency Management Agency did not begin civil defense sirens in the area because the National Weather Service did not issue a tornado warning until 1:25 a.m., after which time an EF1 tornado had entered Broken Arrow, damaging multiple home roofs and several large tree branches.[83][84] A second EF1 tornado hit east of Oologah at 1:32 a.m. CDT (06:32 UTC), damaging several trees, barns and a home, downing multiple telephone poles.[82][85]

Other exceptional events

F# Date Deaths Injuries Location County Path length Max width Ref.
F2 March 13, 1922 10 50 Gowen Latimer 2.2 mi (3.5 km) 300 yd (270 m) [86]
This tornado, rated F2, killed ten people in the Gowen area along a 2.2 mi (3.5 km) path.
FU April 12, 1945 7 40 Roland Sequoyah 10.9 mi (17.5 km) Unknown [87]
This strong tornado moved through Roland before crossing into Arkansas, hitting northwestern suburbs of Fort Smith. The tornado would kill a total of seven people, and injure 40 others.
F2 April 29–30, 1970 0 2 S of Altus to NW of Perkins Jackson, Kiowa, Caddo, Grady, Canadian, Oklahoma, Logan, Payne 140 mi (230 km) 400 yd (370 m) [88]
This tornado moved through eight counties spanning 140 mi (230 km) from Southern to Central Oklahoma, injuring two people. The tornado was on the ground for over three and a half hours.
EF2 May 4, 2022 0 0 E of Earlsboro Pottawatomie 3.4 mi (5.5 km) 150 yd (140 m) [89][90]
This tornado damaged buildings on the eastern side of Earlsboro before looping around to the north, hitting the town a second time. The tornado produced moderate damage to homes, and another EF2-rated tornado would directly impact Seminole on the same day.

Tornadoes by county

* Includes unofficially-rated tornado or tornadoes
Tornadoes in Oklahoma, by county (1875–2024)
County F0/EF0 F1/EF1 F2/EF2 F3/EF3 F4/EF4 F5/EF5 Total[91][note 5] Ref.
Adair 5 16 9 3 0 0 34 [92]
Alfalfa 19 14 12 1 0 0 49 [93]
Atoka 12 20 13 3 1 0 50 [94]
Beaver 43 15 10 2 1 0 74 [95]
Beckham 37 21 5 5 0 0 74 [96]
Blaine 19 21 8 2 1 0 52 [97]
Bryan 7 12 12 5 1 0 38 [98]
Caddo 59 33 26 8 2 0 131 [99]
Canadian 44 39 19 5 3 1 112 [100]
Carter 21 19 9 7 3 0 64 [101]
Cherokee 9 20 7 4 0 0 41 [102]
Choctaw 7 8 2 4 2 1 27 [103]
Cimarron 29 8 4 0 1 0 53 [104]
Cleveland 31 39 24 3 6 2 110 [105]
Coal 10 7 7 2 0 0 30 [106]
Comanche 29 22 10 1 1 0 68 [107]
Cotton 19 10 4 4 2 0 42 [108]
Craig 12 21 13 4 2 0 54 [109]
Creek 24 28 10 7 4 1 76 [110]
Custer 30 21 10 4 1 0 73 [111]
Delaware 11 28 18 8 0 0 66 [112]
Dewey 22 18 9 2 0 1* 54 [113]
Ellis 38 23 14 3 0 1* 78 [114]
Garfield 33 21 14 6 2 0 77 [115]
Garvin 18 28 12 3 2 0 63 [116]
Grady 22 37 19 7 2 1 96 [117]
Grant 35 18 7 8 1 0 71 [118]
Greer 22 10 7 2 0 0 46 [119]
Harmon 12 14 4 0 0 0 37 [120]
Harper 10 12 4 3 0 0 32 [121]
Haskell 17 12 3 0 1 0 33 [122]
Hughes 13 5 15 2 2 0 38 [123]
Jackson 37 16 17 5 2 1* 79 [124]
Jefferson 18 12 4 3 2 0 43 [125]
Johnston 11 14 7 2 1 0 42 [126]
Kay 46 25 20 5 3 2 102 [127]
Kingfisher 37 21 15 4 1 1 83 [128]
Kiowa 46 27 10 5 2 1* 95 [129]
Latimer 10 11 8 0 1 0 32 [130]
LeFlore 17 35 17 4 2 1 79 [131]
Lincoln 29 36 17 9 2 1 95 [132]
Logan 25 20 12 4 1 1 64 [133]
Love 11 10 5 3 2 0 33 [134]
Major 18 16 8 3 1 1* 52 [135]
Marshall 14 8 8 3 1 0 36 [136]
Mayes 24 42 13 6 1 0 89 [137]
McClain 28 31 14 2 2 2 81 [138]
McCurtain 17 25 21 3 1 1 68 [139]
McIntosh 22 18 15 2 0 0 58 [140]
Murray 13 17 9 3 1 0 45 [141]
Muskogee 23 22 12 2 1 0 65 [142]
Noble 16 19 6 1 2 1 48 [143]
Nowata 15 15 9 2 0 0 46 [144]
Okfuskee 21 24 7 5 2 1 63 [145]
Oklahoma 42 47 23 19 3 1 137 [146]
Okmulgee 19 22 8 4 1 0 54 [147]
Osage 49 34 18 3 5 0 115 [148]
Ottawa 7 26 9 3 2 0 49 [149]
Pawnee 16 7 4 0 3 0 30 [150]
Payne 18 24 12 4 2 0 61 [151]
Pittsburg 32 36 13 2 1 0 85 [152]
Pontotoc 21 21 15 7 1 0 67 [153]
Pottawatomie 26 22 23 8 6 1 93 [154]
Pushmataha 11 22 13 2 1 0 49 [155]
Roger Mills 19 17 15 2 1 0 55 [156]
Rogers 14 38 18 6 2 0 80 [157]
Seminole 16 21 19 9 3 0 68 [158]
Sequoyah 17 20 8 5 3 0 55 [159]
Stephens 21 23 14 8 0 0 75 [160]
Texas 47 19 7 3 0 0 75 [161]
Tillman 34 28 10 4 3 0 90 [162]
Tulsa 33 29 21 8 2 0 98 [163]
Wagoner 23 21 14 4 0 0 64 [164]
Washington 10 17 8 2 1 0 39 [165]
Washita 15 21 8 6 1 0 58 [166]
Woods 19 22 12 2 0 2* 56 [167]
Woodward 40 16 3 4 0 2* 43 [168]
Total 1,766 1,637 889 309 113 28 4,937 [note 6]

Tornadoes by month

Tornadoes in Oklahoma, by month (1950-2025)[6]
January February March April May June July August September October November December
No. of tornadoes 30 64 287 926 1,830 539 122 97 125 197 155 38
Highest year 2023 2023 1991 2024 2019 1995 1956 1979 1992 2021 2024 2022
Max F/EF# F4 EF4 F5 F5[note 7] EF5[note 8] F4[note 9] EF4 EF4 F4[note 10] F4[note 11] EF4[note 12] EF3

Longest span without a tornado

The longest timespan without a single tornado reported in Oklahoma was from May 17, 2003 to March 3, 2004, or 291 days.[169] The run was ended on March 4, 2004, when an EF0 tornado touched down near Muldrow.[170]

Longet consecutive timespan without a tornado in Oklahoma[169]
No. of days Start date End date
292 May 17, 2003 March 3, 2004
248 August 8, 2013 April 12, 2014
248 July 16, 1990 March 20, 1991
245 July 4, 2016 March 5, 2017
234 July 4, 1976 February 22, 1977
220 August 24, 1977 March 31, 1978
200 August 8, 1955 February 23, 1956
193 September 6, 1978 March 17, 1979
192 October 22, 2017 May 1, 2018
189 October 11, 1969 April 17, 1970

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Official ratings were assigned after 1950.[4] Prior to that, ratings are assigned by tornado historian Thomas P. Grazulis.[5]
  2. ^ As of January 2025, this tornado is the deadliest in Oklahoma history.
  3. ^ The majority of deaths occurred when the tornado struck Udall, Kansas.
  4. ^ The majority of deaths occurred when the tornado impacted Wichita Falls, Texas.
  5. ^ Due to the existence of unrated (F?/EF?) and unknown (FU/EFU) tornadoes, the total numbers are inconsistent with the count of rated tornadoes.
  6. ^ Due to some tornadoes crossing county lines, some tornadoes are counted more than once.
  7. ^ F5 tornadoes touched down in April of 1939, 1945, 1947 and 1982.
  8. ^ F5 tornadoes touched down in May of 1905, 1947, twice in 1955, 1960 and 1999. EF5 tornadoes touched down in May of 2011 and 2013.
  9. ^ F4 tornadoes touched down in June of 1917, twice in 1928, 1935 and 1942.
  10. ^ F4 tornadoes touched down in September of 1957 and 1959.
  11. ^ F4 tornadoes touched down in October of 1914 and 1970.
  12. ^ EF4 tornadoes touched down in November 2011 and twice in 2022.

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Monthly/Annual statistics for Tornadoes in Oklahoma (1950-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-26.
  2. ^ "Top Ten Deadliest Oklahoma Tornadoes (1882-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-26.
  3. ^ "2024 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
  4. ^ McCarthy, Daniel. "NWS Tornado Surveys and the Impact on the National Tornado" (PDF). www.spc.noaa.gov.
  5. ^ Grazulis, Thomas P. (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680–1991. St. Johnsbury, Vermont: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 978-1-879362-03-1.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h "Monthly/Annual statistics for Tornadoes in Oklahoma (1950-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
  7. ^ "Oklahoma Event Report: F3 Tornado". National Weather Service. National Centers for Environmental Information. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  8. ^ a b "The Great Plains Tornado Outbreak of May 3–4, 1999: Storm A Information". National Weather Service Forecast Office, Norman, Oklahoma. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. May 22, 2013. Archived from the original on February 11, 2017. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  9. ^ a b "Top Ten Costliest Oklahoma Tornadoes (1950-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  10. ^ Wurman, Joshua; C. Alexander; P. Robinson; Y. Richardson (January 2007). "Low-Level Winds in Tornadoes and Potential Catastrophic Tornado Impacts in Urban Areas". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 88 (1). American Meteorological Society: 31–46. Bibcode:2007BAMS...88...31W. doi:10.1175/BAMS-88-1-31.
  11. ^ "EF4 tornado on May. 10, 2008 16:25 PM CDT". The Oklahoman. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  12. ^ "10 Costliest U.S. Tornadoes". www.spc.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  13. ^ "These States Have Had the Most Violent Tornadoes Since 1950". The Weather Channel. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  14. ^ McDonnell, Brandy. "Where was 'Twisters' filmed? Summer blockbuster puts Oklahoma locations in spotlight". The Oklahoman. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  15. ^ Sharma, Dhruv (2022-08-03). "Twister (1996): Where Was the Movie Filmed?". The Cinemaholic. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  16. ^ McDonnell, Brandy (October 29, 2021). "Twister's path: Oklahoma-made tornado movie '13 Minutes' stars Anne Heche, Amy Smart and more". The Oklahoman. Retrieved October 10, 2022.
  17. ^ Rose, Marni (2024-08-20). "Map shows states with the most tornados". Newsweek. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
  18. ^ "Tornado Alley: The Most Tornado Prone Region In The World". www.worldatlas.com. September 16, 2016. Archived from the original on October 25, 2016. Retrieved October 15, 2016.
  19. ^ "2024 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
  20. ^ "2019 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  21. ^ "1999 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  22. ^ "2011 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  23. ^ "2015 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  24. ^ "1957 Oklahoma Tornadoes". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Top Ten Deadliest Oklahoma Tornadoes (1882-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  26. ^ "Top Ten Costliest Oklahoma Tornadoes (1950-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  27. ^ "25 Years Since One of Oklahoma's Most Infamous Tornadoes". KLAW 101. 2024-04-26. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  28. ^ "Stillwater, Oklahoma Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  29. ^ "Murray County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  30. ^ a b "The Snyder, Oklahoma Tornado of 10 May 1905". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  31. ^ a b c d e f "Storm Events Database". National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). Retrieved 2025-01-26.
  32. ^ a b c d Grazulis, Thomas P. (1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991: A Chronology and Analysis of Events. St. Johnsbury, VT: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  33. ^ a b c "The Snyder, Oklahoma Tornado of 10 May 1905". National Weather Service - Norman, OK. NOAA. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  34. ^ "March 25, 1948 - The First Tornado Forecast". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  35. ^ McDermott, Pat (July 28, 1951). "Flash-Tornado Warning!". The Saturday Evening Post. pp. 17–19, 53–57. Archived from the original on October 2, 1999. Retrieved July 12, 2009.
  36. ^ a b c Multiple sources:
  37. ^ a b Branick, Michael L. (December 22, 2008). "Tornadoes in the Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Area Since 1890". Norman, Oklahoma: National Weather Service. Archived from the original on June 30, 2009. Retrieved July 12, 2009.
  38. ^ a b Miller, Col. Robert C. "Description of Historical Events Relating to Tornado Forecasting in the Late 1940s and Early 1950s". The Unfriendly Sky. National Severe Storms Laboratory. Archived from the original on February 23, 1999. Retrieved July 12, 2009.
  39. ^ McDermott, Pat (July 28, 1951). "Flash-Tornado Warning!". The Saturday Evening Post. pp. 17–19, 53–57. Archived from the original on October 2, 1999. Retrieved July 12, 2009.
  40. ^ a b c Grazulis, Thomas P (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991. St. Johnsbury, VT: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  41. ^ Storm Electricity Aspects of the Blackwell/Udall Storm of 25 May 1955 - Don Burgess, University of Oklahoma (CIMMS)
  42. ^ Grazulis, Thomas P (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991. St. Johnsbury, VT: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  43. ^ "The Indefinitive List of the Strongest Tornadoes Ever Recorded (Pre-1970): Part II |". Archived from the original on 2013-07-31. Retrieved 2013-06-23.
  44. ^ US Department of Commerce, NOAA. "Info on the Udall Kansas tornado". National Weather Service. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
  45. ^ "1955 Udall Tornado | Wichita Eagle". Archived from the original on 2013-11-19. Retrieved 2013-10-09.
  46. ^ Minick, Jim. "Without Warning". p. 81, 85.
  47. ^ Hrenchir, Tim. "Here are 10 numbers to know about Kansas' history with tornadoes". The Topeka Capital-Journal. Retrieved 2025-01-27.
  48. ^ "The Red River Valley Tornado Outbreak of 10 April 1979". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-26.
  49. ^ a b c Grazulis, Thomas P. (2023). Significant Tornadoes 1974–2022. St. Johnsbury, Vermont: The Tornado Project. p. 637. ISBN 978-1-879362-01-7.
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  120. ^ "Harmon County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-28.
  121. ^ "Harper County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
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  124. ^ "Jackson County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
  125. ^ "Jefferson County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
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  164. ^ "Wagoner County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
  165. ^ "Washington County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
  166. ^ "Washita County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
  167. ^ "Woods County, OK Tornadoes (1875-Present)". National Weather Service. Retrieved 2025-01-29.
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