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View Full Version : Good Morning...Deadliest Tornado in Sooner State history



Okla-homey
4/9/2009, 06:29 AM
April 9, 1947 Tornado reduces Woodward OK to rubble

http://img364.imageshack.us/img364/7801/aaaaaawwddmg18zm.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

62 years ago today, the town of Woodward, Oklahoma, is nearly wiped off the map by a powerful tornado which is now listed as the sixth deadliest tornado in US history and Oklahoma's deadliest. More than 100 people died in Woodward alone, and 80 more lost their lives elsewhere in the series of twisters that hit the U.S. heartland that day.

http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/6974/aaaawwd47map2wb.gif (http://imageshack.us)

It first struck Glazier and Higgins in the Texas Panhandle, devastating both towns and producing at least 69 fatalities in Texas before crossing into Oklahoma. In Ellis County, Oklahoma, the tornado did not strike any towns, passing to the southeast of Shattuck, Gage, and Fargo.

Even though no towns were struck, nearly 60 farms and ranches were destroyed and 8 people were killed with 42 more injured. Moving into Woodward County, one death was reported near Tangier.

By the time it slammed into Woodward, the monster tornado was 1.8 miles wide at the base and was barrelling along the ground at 50 mph!

The violent tornado (F5 on the Fujita Scale) unleashed its worst destruction on Woodward, striking the city without warning at 8:42 pm. Over 100 city blocks on the west and north sides of the city were destroyed with lesser damage in the southeast portion of the town.

http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/5461/aaaaaawoodward32qd.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

Confusion and fires reigned in the aftermath with over 1000 homes and businesses destroyed, at least 107 people killed in and around Woodward, and nearly 1000 additional injuries. Additionally, Woodward's electrical and gas service was destroyed and neither were restored for weeks.

http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/2315/aaaaa47torn95yd.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

Normal communications between Woodward and the outside world were not restored for some time and there was great uncertainty as to victim status. In fact, the bodies of three children were never identified, and one child who survived the tornado was lost and never reunited with her family. Help for Woodward came from many places, including units from as far away as Oklahoma City and Wichita.

http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/4323/aaaawoodward74hq.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

Beyond Woodward, the tornado lost some intensity, but still destroyed 36 homes and injured 30 people in Woods County before ending.

http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/1677/aaaaaaoklahomanclip8pf.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

In all, at least 116 lives were lost in Oklahoma on that fateful night. Never before or since has a tornado been so costly to human life in the Sooner State. Because of the Woodward tornado and other devastating tornadoes in the late 1940's and early 1950's, and because of new radar technologies available after World War II, the Weather Bureau (now the National Weather Service) began a tornado watch and warning program in 1953.

http://img223.imageshack.us/img223/9629/aaaaawoodward18ab.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

During the last five decades, the warning system composed of the National Weather Service, local civil preparedness agencies, and the media has continued to mature and provide better and better information to citizens to help them protect themselves from tornadoes. Because of the strengths of the warning system, tornado death tolls in Oklahoma, and nationwide, have dropped considerably with each passing decade and, hopefully, will continue to decrease.

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soonerboy_odanorth
4/24/2009, 11:44 AM
Late to the party... But my grandparents and 2-year old mom went through the tornado. My grandmother (still living in Woodward) relates just how horrible the injuries were. My grandfather related one man's body he had seen that had been turned into a pincushion of straw. Many people lost extremeties to flying glass, etc. Survival of the town itself was touch and go for awhile, as many families, with or without personal losses, couldn't bear the tragedy and left. But as with so many tornadoes, even this monster demonstrated capriciousness. My grandparent's home at the time was only minimally damaged. A few broken panes of glass and some lost shingles. Two blocks away several houses imploded or were simply flattened.

If you're ever through Woodward, their little Pioneer Museum (and for a little town, they have some neat stuff) has more photos, news articles, etc. from that day and the aftermath.