The deadliest tornado in history was the Daulatpur/Saturia tornado of April 26, 1989. This tornado stuck the Dhaka district of Bangladesh, killing an estimated 1,300 people.
The deadliest tornado in Mississippi was the Natchez, Mississippi tornado of May 6, 1840. It killed 317 people, making it the second deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
The deadliest tornado in Oklahoma history was the Woodward tornado of April 9, 1947 with 181 deaths.
You are most Likely referring to the Daulatpur-Saturia tornado of April 26. That tornado is estimated to have killed 1300 people, making it the deadliest in world history.
The deadliest single tornado in history was the Daultatpur-Saturia, Bangladesh tornado of 1989. We don't know how big it was (probably and F5), but we do know it killed 1300 people, probably more. The deadliest tornado in US history was the Tri-state tornado of 1925. It was an F5 and killed about 700 people. The most destructive tornado in terms of the value of property destroyed was the Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011, which causes $2.8 billion worth of damage.
There were several killer tornadoes in 1925, but you most likely mean the Tri-state tornado of March 18. It killed 695 people, making it the deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
people get injured or killed in a tornado whether they were close from the location of tornado or they have poor building anchorage so this poor building will destroy which will hurt or kill the people inside that building.
The most destructive tornado in Ohio history was the Xenia tornado of April 3, 1974. This F5 tornado killed 34 people and caused $439 million in property damage (in 2011 U.S. dollars).
1989 when a single tornado in Bangladesh killed over 1,300 people. The deadliest tornado year in the U.S. was 1925 when a single tornado killed 695 people.
Oddly enough, two tornadoes tie as the deadliest in Texas history. Both the Goliad, Texas tornado of May 18, 1902 and the Waco, Texas tornado of May 11, 1953 killed 114 people. This figure also ties them for 11th place among the deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history
The five deadliest U.S. tornadoes of 2007 areThe Deland, Florida EF3 tornado of February 2 (13 deaths)The Greensburg, Kansas EF5 tornado of May 4 (11 deaths)The Enterprise, Alabama EF4 tornado of March 1 (9 deaths)The Lady Lake, Florida EF3 tornado of February 2 (8 deaths)The Eagle Pass, Texas EF3 tornado of April 24 (7 deaths)
Yes. Illinois is a tornado-prone state; no place is protected. Plainfield already has a history of tornadoes. Most notably it was devastated by an F5 tornado on August 28, 1990 that killed 29 people.
The tornado that hit Glazier, Texas on April 9, 1947 killed 17 people in that town. However, the same tornado went on to strike several more towns, most notably Woodward, Oklahoma. In all, it killed 181 people.