Tornadoes can occur virtually anywhere, and if a place has been hit once, there is nothing preventing it from being hit again.
It would be impossible to list all places that have been hit two or more times. Some notable examples include:
Some places have the distinction of having been hit Twice in one day, including:
In a strange incident, one building near Elie, Manitoba was struck twice by the same tornado, which followed a looping damage path.
Yes, they can.
There are two main factors in this. First, some regions, such as the Great Plains, and the South, tend to get a lot of tornadoes, so it is easy for the same area to be hit a few times. The other part of it is simply bad luck. If a place can be hit once, it can be hit again; the "lightning never strikes twice" rule doesn't really work.
Tornadoes hit the U.S. every year.
Tornadoes hit the U.S. every year.
tornadoes hit very hard very hard
There were 129 tornadoes in Texas in 2009.
A total of 9 tornadoes hit California in 2011.
33 F3 tornadoes have hit Florida since 1950.
Yes. Tornadoes can and do hit southern Ontario and have even hit the Toronto area.
It is very rare for a tornado to hit the same place twice, however it does happen. A great example of this is Guy, Arkansas. It was here that a church was hit by three tornadoes within a twenty-four hour period.
On average, Oklahoma gets about twice as many tornadoes as Georgia does.
Tornado alley is the main striking point for tornadoes.