If you mean Hardtner, there are no records of any killer tornadoes in that area.
The Greensburg, Kansas tornado of 2007 Killed 12 people and injured 63.
12. It is very hard to find the most updated news. So the most updated one I could find said 12 people. However not all of those people were in Greensberg however they were all killed by the same tornado.
Judy Garland died on June 22, 1969. While there is no record of a tornado that day, a tornado did strike Kansas a day before (June 21, 1969) at 10:40 pm in Saline County. Since she died at her home in England, and the tornado struck late at night in Kansas, it was technically the same day. In reality, there are plenty of tornadoes in Kansas during tornado season (from March to May) so it's really not that much of a coincidence that there was a tornado on the ground in that time period.
10 people died on April 24, 2010 from a tornado in Mississippi.
The Xenia, Ohio tornado of 1974 killed 32 people directly. Two others died from indirect effects of the tornado.
The Andover tornado killed 17 people.
The Tri-State tornado killed 695 people.
Tornadoes do kill people, but it is rare for the death toll to make a substantial dent in the population unless a tornado kills a large number of people in a small community. A more significant effect is for some people to leave an area after a tornado hits. For example, most of the town of Greensburg, Kansas, was destroyed by a tornado in 2007. Only 12 of its 1,600 residents died, but since the tornado, more than 800 have moved away.
There were no tornado fatalities in Florida in 2010.
The Moore, Oklahoma tornado of May 20, 2013 killed 23 people. One other person died from causes not directly related to the tornado.
There were no tornado-related deaths in Illinois in 2011.
The Kirksville, Missouri tornado of May 13, 2009 killed 2 people.