That would probably be the Woodward, Oklahoma of April 9, 1947 with 181 deaths. However, other tornadoes in the U.S. outside of Tornado Alley have been deadlier. The deadliest of those was the Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925 with 695 deaths. Overall the Woodward tornado is the 6th deadliest in U.S. history.
Alley
No. While Ontario does get tornadoes, it is nowhere near Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley is farther west.
Yes. Tornado Alley is in the south of the U.S.A.
The deadliest tornado in Michigan History was the Flint, Michigan F5 tornado. It hit on June 8, 1953, killing 115. It was also the tenth deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
Tornado Alley does not have official boundaries. Depending on how the map is drawn Leander could be considered just inside or just outside Tornado Alley.
The ISBN of Tornado Alley - book - is 0916156842.
Tornado Alley - book - was created in 1989.
The deadliest tornado in Bangladesh, in fact the deadliest in the world, was the Daulatpur-Saturia tornado of April 26, 1989. This tornado tore through cities in the Dhaka district, killing 1,300 people.
The deadliest tornado to hit the state of Wisconsin was the New Richmond, Wisconsin tornado of June 12, 1899 with 117 deaths. It also ranks as the 9th deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
No. Alabama is pretty far east of tornado Alley. However it is part of what is called Dixie Alley, another region of high tornado activity stretching from Louisiana to Georgia that is somewhat related to Tornado Alley.
Tornado Alley did not occur. It was not an event. Tornado Alley is a region in the central United States.
The deadliest category of tornado is F5. They have the highest death rate per storm.