News

It was Palm ... in Ohio and 36 in Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. James Imm were driving on state Route 65 near Cairo when the tornado hit. They never made it to their 540 W. McKibben St. home in Lima.
Sixty years ago on April 11, a catastrophic tornado outbreak swept through multiple states, including Ohio, on Palm Sunday. It remains one of deadliest tornado outbreaks in the United States.
a catastrophic tornado outbreak swept through multiple states, including Ohio, on Palm Sunday. It remains one of deadliest tornado outbreaks in the United States. Northeast Ohio was not spared ...
On this day 102 years ago an EF-4 tornado moved across northwest Ohio, devastating the Raab ... about the 1920 tornado is that it struck on Palm Sunday. And some residents may remember another ...
marks 59 years since the Palm ... the tornado. As bad as that storm was, communities further south in Ohio saw even worse. A series of deadly tornadoes struck one after another from Lima in ...
The Tornado History Project says that 236 other people were injured in this single tornado alone. Overall, the outbreak killed 256 people across the Midwest, including 55-60 in Ohio. The weather ...
TOLEDO, Ohio — Northwest Ohio has a long and sobering history of powerful tornadoes. From the infamous Palm Sunday outbreak to the tragic overnight strike in Millbury, these storms have left ...
causing people to call it the 1965 Palm Sunday tornado outbreak. NOAA recorded nine tornadoes in northern Ohio, causing destruction in Lorain, Cuyahoga, Lucas, Allen and other counties.
Johnson gets a first-hand look at the devastation in Dunlap following the Palm Sunday ... tornado outbreak occurred in the Midwest, unleashing more than 40 tornadoes in Iowa, Indiana, Michigan and ...
The deadliest single day for Ohio tornadoes since 1950 was April 11, 1965—the Palm Sunday tornadoes—by the National Severe Storms Laboratory, when 60 people died. Ohio saw 11 tornados that day.
marks 59 years since the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak ... By 6 pm, two more tornado forecasts were issued, covering the northern half of Indiana and Ohio and the southern half of Lower Michigan.