June 1990 Lower Ohio Valley tornado outbreak

The June 1990 Lower Ohio Valley tornado outbreak spawned 65 tornadoes, including seven of F4 intensity, in southern Illinois, central and southern Indiana, southwestern Ohio, and northern Kentucky on June 2–3, 1990.

1990 Ohio Valley tornado outbreak
Tornado tracks for tornadoes under NWS Indianapolis coverage on June 2, 1990.
TypeTornado outbreak
DurationJune 2–3, 1990
Tornadoes
confirmed
65
Max. rating1F4 tornado
Fatalities9 fatalities, 253 injuries[1]
DamageUnknown
Areas affectedMidwestern United States

1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

In Indiana, 37 tornadoes formed, breaking the single-day record of 21 set during the Super Outbreak on April 3, 1974.[2]

Meteorological synopsis

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On June 2, an unseasonably intense surface low over eastern North Dakota brought with it a cold front across the Mississippi Valley. Ahead of the front, a highly unstable air mass combined with a strong jet stream that increased the synoptic-scale lifting favoring supercell development. Meanwhile, backed southerly low-level winds brought moist dew points well into the region.[2] The National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Norman, Oklahoma, put out a high risk for severe weather over much of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and northern Kentucky. A notable feature of this outbreak is that there was a sector of weak tornadoes north of Terre Haute, Indiana, while a sector of strong and vicious tornadoes developed south of the city.[2]

Confirmed tornadoes

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Confirmed tornadoes by Fujita rating
FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 16 21 17 5 7 0 66

June 2 event

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List of confirmed tornadoes – Saturday, June 2, 1990[nb 1]
F# Location County / Parish State Date Start Coord. Time (UTC) Path length Max width Summary
F0 SW of Cantril Van Buren IA June 2 40°37′07″N 92°06′11″W / 40.6186°N 92.1030°W / 40.6186; -92.1030 (Cantril (Jun. 2, F0)) 16:35 0.5 mi (0.80 km) Minor damage reported to a farm.[3][4]
F1 S of Greenwood Sebastian AR June 2 35°10′46″N 94°16′02″W / 35.1795°N 94.2671°W / 35.1795; -94.2671 (Greenwood (Jun. 2, F1)) 17:00 2 mi (3.2 km) Roof damage to homes and outbuildings with severe damage to 29 homes.[3][4]
F2 SW of Manchester Van Buren, Delaware IA June 2 42°25′53″N 91°32′59″W / 42.4313°N 91.5496°W / 42.4313; -91.5496 (Manchester (Jun. 2, F2)) 17:43 10.5 mi (16.9 km) Tornado struck a building housing 500 hogs, killing two of them.[3][4]
F1 S of Goodhue Goodhue MN June 2 44°21′57″N 92°37′43″W / 44.3657°N 92.6286°W / 44.3657; -92.6286 (Goodhue (Jun. 2, F1)) 17:50 4 mi (6.4 km) A barn was destroyed but without damage to the equipment inside. The tornado also uprooted trees and damaged three farm sites.[3][4]
F1 Flat Gap area Johnson KY June 2 37°56′05″N 82°53′23″W / 37.9346°N 82.8898°W / 37.9346; -82.8898 (Flat Gap (Jun. 2, F1)) 19:00 1 mi (1.6 km) This tornado destroyed a food market and a mobile home.[3][4]
F1 S of Maquoketa Jackson IA June 2 42°02′03″N 90°41′01″W / 42.0343°N 90.6837°W / 42.0343; -90.6837 (Maquoketa (Jun. 2, F1)) 20:12 1 mi (1.6 km) Trees snapped and transported 100 yards (300 ft). One shed was slightly damaged as a door was ripped off and the power cut off.[3]
F2 Westervelt to Findlay Shelby IL June 2 39°28′47″N 88°51′51″W / 39.4798°N 88.8643°W / 39.4798; -88.8643 (Westervelt-Findlay (Jun. 2, F2)) 21:30 8 mi (13 km) Tornado struck Findlay, where 16 homes were destroyed and 60 others were damaged. Two people were injured.[3][4]
F0 SW of Arcola Douglas IL June 2 39°39′29″N 88°22′44″W / 39.6580°N 88.3789°W / 39.6580; -88.3789 (Arcola (Jun. 2, F0)) 21:47 0.5 mi (0.80 km) No damage reported.[3][4]
F2 SW of Fond du Lac area Fond du Lac WI June 2 43°45′18″N 88°27′54″W / 43.7549°N 88.4650°W / 43.7549; -88.4650 (Fond du Lac (Jun. 2, F2)) 22:00 1 mi (1.6 km) Caused $2 million in damage to an industrial park, several businesses, and a farm. A woman was cut by flying glass when her vehicle was struck by a billboard.[3][4]
F1 SE of La Grange Walworth WI June 2 42°47′04″N 88°37′40″W / 42.7845°N 88.6278°W / 42.7845; -88.6278 (La Grange (Jun. 2, F1)) 22:00 0.2 mi (0.32 km) Four homes damaged along with trees near Lauderdale Lake.[3][4]
F1 N of Casey Cumberland, Clark IL June 2 39°19′38″N 88°00′47″W / 39.3272°N 88.013°W / 39.3272; -88.013 (Casey (Jun. 2, F1)) 2205 0.5 mi (0.80 km) A mobile home was destroyed and trees were damaged.[3][4]
F0 NW of Dana Vermillion IN June 2 39°49′31″N 87°31′20″W / 39.8253°N 87.5221°W / 39.8253; -87.5221 (Dana (Jun. 2, F0)) 22:15 1 mi (1.6 km) Brief touchdown. No damage was found from this tornado.[3][4]
F0 NW of Annapolis Parke IN June 2 39°52′17″N 87°15′57″W / 39.8713°N 87.2657°W / 39.8713; -87.2657 (Annapolis (Jun. 2, F0)) 22:23 0.5 mi (0.80 km) Brief tornado damaged trees.[3][4]
F0 SW of Byron Parke IN June 2 39°53′46″N 87°07′04″W / 39.8962°N 87.1177°W / 39.8962; -87.1177 (Byron (Jun. 2, F0)) 22:28 0.2 mi (0.32 km) Brief tornado along with the Annapolis event. One porch was damaged.[3][4]
F1 Grandview area Edgar IL June 2 39°32′25″N 87°52′08″W / 39.5402°N 87.8688°W / 39.5402; -87.8688 (Grandview (Jun. 2, F1)) 22:30 8 mi (13 km) Four homes were unroofed and two others were damaged.[3][4]
F0 S of Catlin Parke IN June 2 39°41′13″N 87°14′09″W / 39.6870°N 87.2357°W / 39.6870; -87.2357 (Catlin (Jun. 2, F0)) 22:45 0.5 mi (0.80 km) Minor tree damage occurred near Raccoon Lake.[3][4]
F4 Rinard to S of Olney Wayne, Clay, Richland IL June 2 38°34′04″N 88°28′08″W / 38.5678°N 88.4688°W / 38.5678; -88.4688 (Rinard-Olney (Jun. 2, F4)) 22:45 23 mi (37 km) Three mobile homes were destroyed, including two that were completely disintegrated. A permanent home was also destroyed, and heavy oil tanks were rolled. Two injuries occurred when a tree fell onto a pickup truck.[3][4]
F0 W of Fairbanks Sullivan IN June 2 39°13′13″N 87°32′16″W / 39.2203°N 87.5377°W / 39.2203; -87.5377 (Fairbanks (Jun. 2, F0)) 22:45 0.1 mi (0.16 km) Brief tornado. No damage noted.[3][4]
F2 S of Crawfordsville to SE of Darlington Montgomery IN June 2 40°01′12″N 86°53′27″W / 40.0201°N 86.8909°W / 40.0201; -86.8909 (Crawfordsville—Darlington (Jun. 2, F2)) 22:50 10 mi (16 km) 14 homes and two mobile homes were badly damaged, with nearby barns leveled. A truck was blown from I-74. Twelve people were injured.[3][4]
F2 SW of Horace, IL to E of Dana, IN Edgar (IL), Vermillion (IN) IL, IN June 2 39°42′13″N 87°46′04″W / 39.7035°N 87.7677°W / 39.7035; -87.7677 (Horace, Illinois-Dana, Indiana (Jun. 2, F2)) 22:53 17.5 mi (28.2 km) Three farms were damaged, including one where all outbuildings were destroyed and the farmhouse sustained major damage. Trees were also damaged.[3][4]
F2 NE of Paris, IL to St. Bernice, IN Edgar (IL), Vermillion (IN) IL, IN June 2 39°39′08″N 87°43′58″W / 39.6521°N 87.7328°W / 39.6521; -87.7328 (Paris, Illinois-St. Bernice, Indiana (Jun. 2, F2)) 22:58 8 mi (13 km) Tornado struck St. Bernice, where 20 homes were damaged and an old brick school building was leveled.[3][4]
F0 S of Hollandsburg Parke IN June 2 39°45′18″N 87°04′20″W / 39.7550°N 87.0722°W / 39.7550; -87.0722 (Hollandsburg (Jun. 2, F0)) 23:00 0.2 mi (0.32 km) Brief tornado.[3][4]
F4 Newton area Jasper IL June 2 38°57′50″N 88°13′05″W / 38.9639°N 88.2181°W / 38.9639; -88.2181 (Newton (Jun. 2, F4)) 23:07 12.5 mi (20.1 km) Seven homes near Newton Lake were leveled to the ground. Two other homes were destroyed with minor damage elsewhere.[3][4][5]
F1 W of Thorntown to SE of Colfax Boone IN June 2 40°08′07″N 86°40′56″W / 40.1354°N 86.6822°W / 40.1354; -86.6822 (Thorntown—Colfax (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:10 4.5 mi (7.2 km) Windows were smashed with some damage to trees. Two barns were leveled.[3][4]
F0 Georgetown Cass IN June 2 38°18′02″N 85°58′09″W / 38.3005°N 85.9693°W / 38.3005; -85.9693 (Georgetown (Jun. 2, F0)) 23:10 0.1 mi (0.16 km) Brief tornado hit Georgetown.[3][4]
F1 S of Pomeroyton Menifee KY June 2 37°51′45″N 83°31′24″W / 37.8626°N 83.5233°W / 37.8626; -83.5233 (Pomeroyton (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:15 2 mi (3.2 km) Destroyed a single home with other structures damaged nearby.[3][4]
F3 SW of Montgomery to N of Loogootee Daviess, Martin IN June 2 38°39′12″N 87°03′09″W / 38.6532°N 87.0525°W / 38.6532; -87.0525 (Montgomery—Loogootee (Jun. 2, F3)) 23:19 7 mi (11 km) Metal high-tension towers blown were down, businesses were unroofed, and eight homes were damaged.[3][4]
F4 N of Aden, IL to Mt. Carmel, IL to N of Petersburg, IN to SE of Huron, IN Hamilton (IL), Wayne (IL), Edwards (IL), Wabash (IL), Knox (IN), Gibson (IN), Pike (IN), Daviess (IN), Martin (IN), Orange (IN), Lawrence (IN) IL, IN June 2 38°14′30″N 88°24′56″W / 38.2417°N 88.4156°W / 38.2417; -88.4156 (Aden—Mt.Carmel, Illinois—Petersburg—Huron, Indiana (Jun. 2, F4)) 23:20 106 mi (171 km) 1 death — See section on this tornado — 11 people were injured.[3][4]
F1 Oblong area Jasper, Crawford IL June 2 38°59′50″N 87°54′20″W / 38.9973°N 87.9055°W / 38.9973; -87.9055 (Oblong (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:20 3 mi (4.8 km) Damaged grain-storage bins and a garage before dissipating.[3][4]
F1 Grassy Creek to Cottle Morgan KY June 2 37°51′57″N 83°20′41″W / 37.8659°N 83.3448°W / 37.8659; -83.3448 (Grassy Creek–Cottle (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:25 6 mi (9.7 km) Uprooted trees and damaged seven structures.[3][4]
F1 SE of Frankfort to Michigantown area Clinton IN June 2 40°15′34″N 86°29′01″W / 40.2595°N 86.4837°W / 40.2595; -86.4837 (Frankfort—Michigantown (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:25 6 mi (9.7 km) Damage to the roof of The Red Barn theater near Frankfort.[3][4]
F2 WNW of Switz City to E of Worthington Greene IN June 2 39°04′24″N 87°04′12″W / 39.0734°N 87.0701°W / 39.0734; -87.0701 (Switz City—Worthington (Jun. 2, F2)) 23:30 10 mi (16 km) Destroyed four homes with others damaged. Trees were snapped and farm buildings were damaged as well. Tornado killed several hogs and 50 rabbits on one farm alone.[3][4]
F1 SSE of Lebanon Boone IN June 2 39°59′57″N 86°26′30″W / 39.9993°N 86.4417°W / 39.9993; -86.4417 (Lebanon (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:35 0.5 mi (0.80 km) Hit two hangars and six planes at the Boone County Airport with losses of $200,000.[3][4]
F0 W of Gadsden Boone IN June 2 40°02′47″N 86°22′53″W / 40.0463°N 86.3814°W / 40.0463; -86.3814 (Gadsden (Jun. 2, F0)) 23:37 6 mi (9.7 km) Developed just after the previous event, resulting in minor damage to barns, treetops, and limbs along its path.[3][4]
F0 S of Palestine Crawford IL June 2 38°58′19″N 87°37′19″W / 38.9719°N 87.6219°W / 38.9719; -87.6219 (Palestine (Jun. 2, F0)) 23:40 3 mi (4.8 km) Little to no damage was found from this weak, brief tornado.[3][4]
F1 ESE of Elizaville Boone IN June 2 40°06′02″N 86°22′04″W / 40.1005°N 86.3677°W / 40.1005; -86.3677 (Elizaville (Jun. 2, F1)) 23:43 7 mi (11 km) Developed just to the north of the previous event. Also caused minor damage to barns and vegetation.[3][4]
F2 S of Pinkstaff, IL to WSW of Oaktown, IN Lawrence (IL), Knox (IN) IL, IN June 2 38°46′40″N 87°40′23″W / 38.7779°N 87.6730°W / 38.7779; -87.6730 (Pinkstaff, Illinois—Oaktown, Indiana (Jun. 2, F2)) 23:45 5 mi (8.0 km) Tornado destroyed a mobile home and farm. A man was injured when he hid under a tractor, which was lifted and dropped onto his leg.[3][4]
F4 NE of Bryantsville to ENE of Bedford Lawrence IN June 2 38°47′08″N 86°33′49″W / 38.7855°N 86.5636°W / 38.7855; -86.5636 (Bryantsville—Bedford (Jun. 2, F4)) 23:50 11 mi (18 km) 1 death — Leveled several businesses alongside U.S. Route 50 and State Road 37, then went on to destroy trailers, metal high-tension structures, trees, and cabins in the Bedford area. A total of 12 homes and 29 trailers destroyed.[3][4]
F1 NW of Oxbow Newaygo MI June 2 23:59 1.5 mi (2.4 km)
F4 W of Union to Alford Gibson, Pike IN June 2 38°26′22″N 87°30′48″W / 38.4395°N 87.5132°W / 38.4395; -87.5132 (Union—Petersburg—Alford (Jun. 2, F4)) 00:17 13 mi (21 km) 6 deaths — See section on this tornado — 60 additional people were injured.[3][4]
F0 NNE of Noblesville Hamilton IN June 2 40°04′35″N 85°59′04″W / 40.0764°N 85.9844°W / 40.0764; -85.9844 (Noblesville (Jun. 2, F0)) 00:20 0.2 mi (0.32 km) Uprooted two trees during a brief touchdown.[3][4]
F2 New Maysville to S of North Salem Putnam, Hendricks IN June 2 39°47′34″N 86°44′07″W / 39.7928°N 86.7352°W / 39.7928; -86.7352 (New Maysville—North Salem (Jun. 2, F2)) 00:30 3.5 mi (5.6 km) 1 death — One death occurred in a destroyed mobile home. Tornado also damaged another mobile home, a farm, and a house. Six people were injured.[3][4]
F1 Hanover area Jackson MI June 2 42°05′54″N 84°33′04″W / 42.0984°N 84.5511°W / 42.0984; -84.5511 (Hanover (Jun. 2, F1)) 00:30 0.5 mi (0.80 km)
F2 W of Merriam Noble IN June 2 41°17′24″N 85°29′23″W / 41.2899°N 85.4896°W / 41.2899; -85.4896 (Merriam (Jun. 2, F2)) 00:40 3.5 mi (5.6 km) Destroyed two mobile homes and three barns plus a silo. Also severely damaged a third mobile home and displaced a fourth barn.[3][4]
F1 W of Orleans Orange IN June 2 38°39′55″N 86°30′02″W / 38.6654°N 86.5005°W / 38.6654; -86.5005 (Orleans (Jun. 2, F1)) 00:54 11.5 mi (18.5 km)
F1 E of Reddington Jackson, Jennings IN June 2 39°02′24″N 85°45′42″W / 39.0400°N 85.7616°W / 39.0400; -85.7616 (Reddington (Jun. 2, F1)) 00:55 10 mi (16 km)
F2 NE of Fleming to NE of Zenas Jennings IN June 2 38°59′36″N 85°47′39″W / 38.9932°N 85.7941°W / 38.9932; -85.7941 (Fleming—Zenas (Jun. 2, F2)) 01:05 18 mi (29 km)
F2 N of Guthrie to NE of Dexter Washtenaw MI June 2 42°19′52″N 84°04′34″W / 42.3311°N 84.0761°W / 42.3311; -84.0761 (Guthrie Dexter (Jun. 2, F1)) 01:10 15 mi (24 km)
F0 NW of Millhousen Decatur IN June 2 39°14′10″N 85°27′50″W / 39.2361°N 85.4639°W / 39.2361; -85.4639 (Millhousen (Jun. 2, F0)) 01:15 0.1 mi (0.16 km)
F0 Campbellsburg area Washington IN June 2 38°39′16″N 86°16′56″W / 38.6544°N 86.2822°W / 38.6544; -86.2822 (Campbellsburg (Jun. 2, F0)) 01:17 3.5 mi (5.6 km)
F4 SW of Clear Spring to NW of Seymour Jackson IN June 2 38°54′33″N 86°13′41″W / 38.9093°N 86.2281°W / 38.9093; -86.2281 (Clear Spring—Seymour (Jun. 2, F4)) 01:20 18 mi (29 km) Hundreds of trees and ten homes leveled to the ground. 44 homes damaged and 11 mobile homes destroyed with many farms damaged or destroyed. Nine people were injured.[3][4]
F2 SE of Salem to NW of South Boston Washington IN June 2 38°34′23″N 86°03′59″W / 38.5731°N 86.0663°W / 38.5731; -86.0663 (Salem—South Boston (Jun. 2, F4)) 02:03 4.5 mi (7.2 km) Seven trailers and a barn were destroyed. 15 trailers and several frame homes were damaged as well.[3][4]
F3 S of Millport to NE of Lancaster Washington, Jackson, Scott, Jefferson IN June 2 38°45′02″N 86°06′08″W / 38.7505°N 86.1023°W / 38.7505; -86.1023 (Millport—Lancaster (Jun. 2, F3)) 02:25 41 mi (66 km) One home was destroyed and 15 others were damaged.[3][4]
F2 NE of Nebraska to SE of New Alsace Ripley, Dearborn IN June 2 39°05′41″N 85°26′34″W / 39.0947°N 85.4428°W / 39.0947; -85.4428 (Nebraska—New Alsace (Jun. 2, F2)) 02:30 23 mi (37 km) A church built in 1838 was destroyed.[3][4]
F2 Riddle to N of Carefree Crawford, Harrison IN June 2 38°15′01″N 86°25′47″W / 38.2504°N 86.4296°W / 38.2504; -86.4296 (Riddle—Carefree (Jun. 2, F2)) 02:30 11 mi (18 km) Destroyed four homes and damaged numerous others; $260,000 in damage to three buildings at a food-processing plant.[3][4]
F3 NW of Galena to Sellersburg Floyd, Clark IN June 2 38°21′40″N 85°57′09″W / 38.3612°N 85.9525°W / 38.3612; -85.9525 (Galena—Sellersburg (Jun. 2, F3)) 02:57 12 mi (19 km) Tornado first struck Floyds Knobs and Hamburg, destroying over 25 homes and mobile homes. In Sellersburg, the tornado badly damaged a bowling alley and many businesses.[3][4]
F4 W of Bright, IN to SW of Mason, OH Dearborn (IN), Hamilton (OH), Butler (OH), Warren (OH) IN, OH June 2 39°13′05″N 84°51′57″W / 39.2180°N 84.8657°W / 39.2180; -84.8657 (Bright,Indiana—Mason, Ohio(Jun. 2, F4)) 03:00 33 mi (53 km) See section on this tornado — 37 people were injured.[3][4]
F0 SE of Clarkedale Crittenden AR June 2 35°17′59″N 90°12′00″W / 35.2998°N 90.2001°W / 35.2998; -90.2001 (Clarkedale (Jun. 2, F0)) 03:05 0.1 mi (0.16 km) Brief touchdown sighted with no reported damage.[3][4]
F3 La Grange area to Jericho Oldham, Henry KY June 2 38°24′40″N 85°23′20″W / 38.4110°N 85.3888°W / 38.4110; -85.3888 (La Grange–Jericho (Jun. 2, F3)) 03:30 14 mi (23 km) First clipped the north side of La Grange, where three frame homes and three mobile homes were destroyed. Tornado then struck Jericho, damaging several other homes. Caused $2,500,000 in damage and injured 5 people.[3][4]
F3 SE of Marysville, IN to NE of Bedford, KY Clark (IN), Jefferson (IN), Trimble (KY) IN, KY June 2 38°33′43″N 85°37′17″W / 38.5620°N 85.6214°W / 38.5620; -85.6214 (Marysville,Indiana—Bedford, Kentucky (Jun. 2, F3)) 03:40 17 mi (27 km) Half-mile wide tornado badly damaged many buildings, homes, and trailers in Indiana. Tornado crossed into Kentucky and struck Mt. Pleasant, where 15 homes and 25 barns were damaged. Five people were injured. This tornado followed a similar path to a devastating EF4 tornado that killed 11 people during an outbreak on March 2, 2012.[3][4]
F2 N of Shelbyville Shelby KY June 2 38°14′54″N 85°13′44″W / 38.2482°N 85.2288°W / 38.2482; -85.2288 (Shelbyville (Jun. 2, F2)) 04:14 3 mi (4.8 km) Damaged 16 homes and 12 barns on the north edge of Shelbyville. Caused $1,000,000 in damage.[3][4]
F1 Allensville to Corinth Logan KY June 2 36°43′49″N 87°02′08″W / 36.7302°N 87.0355°W / 36.7302; -87.0355 (Allensville–Corinth (Jun. 2, F1)) 04:34 11 mi (18 km) Damaged outbuildings and a partially completed home.[3][4]
F1 S of Burlington Boone KY June 2 39°01′24″N 84°43′37″W / 39.0234°N 84.7269°W / 39.0234; -84.7269 (Burlington (Jun. 2, F1)) 04:40 0.7 mi (1.1 km) Major damage to four homes in the area.[3][4]
F1 S of Franklinton Henry KY June 2 38°26′21″N 85°03′31″W / 38.4393°N 85.0587°W / 38.4393; -85.0587 (Franklinton (Jun. 2, F1)) 04:55 1 mi (1.6 km) Damaged many homes and a barn.[3][4]
F0 Clarksville area Clinton OH June 2 39°24′15″N 83°58′47″W / 39.4043°N 83.9797°W / 39.4043; -83.9797 (Clarksville (Jun. 2, F0)) 04:45 1 mi (1.6 km) Damaged only two homes and some trees.[3][4]
F2 SW of Saltair Clermont OH June 3 38°55′20″N 84°09′22″W / 38.9221°N 84.1561°W / 38.9221; -84.1561 (Saltair (Jun. 3, F2)) 5:50 4 mi (6.4 km) Three mobile homes and numerous barns were destroyed. Five homes and other barns were damaged.[3][4]

Albion/Browns, Illinois

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Albion/Browns, Illinois
F4 tornado
Max. rating1F4 tornado
Fatalities1 fatality, 11 injuries
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

This extremely long-tracked F4 tornado began near Aden, littering I-64 with trees and overturning a truck before striking Barnhill, where 10 homes were destroyed and 10 others were damaged. The tornado then struck Albion, where a factory, homes, and other buildings were destroyed. The tornado then caused severe damage in the Browns area, where one woman was killed in her home. In the town of Mt. Carmel, the tornado ripped apart seventeen homes and severely damaged Wabash Valley College before crossing into Indiana. In Indiana, the tornado passed near Hazleton, Bowman, Petersburg, and Orrville, where a barn was destroyed. In Daviess County, Indiana, the tornado caused $10,000,000 in damage as it destroyed 10 homes and damaged 35 others. A cabin was crushed by a tree as the tornado passed near Shoals, resulting in four injuries. The tornado passed near Whitfield before dissipating near Huron. A total of eleven people were injured by this tornado.[4]

Petersburg, Indiana

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Petersburg, Indiana
F4 tornado
Max. rating1F4 tornado
Fatalities6 fatalities, 60 injuries
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

A powerful F4 tornado developed west of Union and proceeded to enter that community from Gibson County. The tornado completely leveled one home, killing two occupants, and also blew another 30 feet (9.1 m) off its base. After passing through a wooded area, the tornado hit Petersburg, killing four people there. Upon entering the town limits, it leveled a nursing home plus an apartment complex and up to ten homes. Having now killed six people, the tornado was the deadliest to hit Indiana since the 1974 Super Outbreak.[3] It then struck the business district in downtown Petersburg and destroyed 19 businesses before going on to level 168 additional homes and damage an elementary school in Petersburg. The town became the hardest hit in Indiana on June 2, 1990.[2] The tornado destroyed half of Petersburg, including the home of the mayor. 60 others were injured by this tornado.[4][6]

Bright, Indiana/Harrison, Ohio

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Bright, Indiana/Harrison, Ohio
F4 tornado
Max. rating1F4 tornado
Fatalities37 injuries
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

A violent nighttime tornado began west of Bright, Indiana, with 50 homes destroyed in that area. Four of the homes were of brick construction, yet were completely leveled. The tornado then continued to produce F4 damage in Ohio as it hit the communities of Harrison, Crosby Township, and New Baltimore. In Hamilton County alone, the tornado damaged 800–900 homes and 31 businesses plus three schools; of these, 32 homes were reported destroyed, some so completely that their foundations were left "practically barren".[3] Steel beams, 18 inches (1.5 ft) wide, 75 feet (23 m) long, and 58 inch (0.052 ft) in thickness, were deformed and brought to ground level in Harrison. The tornado continued into the southern part of Fairfield and surrounding areas of Butler County, where 19 homes and four trailers were destroyed, with 58 homes, 22 trailers, and five apartment buildings damaged. The tornado continued into Warren County before dissipating near Mason. A total of 37 people were injured by this tornado.[3][4]

Aftermath

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Outbreak death toll
State Deaths Total County County
total
Illinois 1 Edwards 1
Indiana 8 Lawrence 1
Pike 6
Putnam 1
Totals 9
All deaths were tornado-related

People erected makeshift shelters in Petersburg as Indiana declared a state of emergency. The tornado outbreak was the most destructive to hit Indiana since the Super Outbreak in 1974.[6] Across Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky, the entire outbreak resulted in 313 homes destroyed, 76% of them in Indiana alone, and 892 damaged, fully 75% of them in Indiana.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ All dates are based on the local time zone where the tornado touched down; however, all times are in Coordinated Universal Time for consistency.
  1. ^ "Tornadoes on June 2, 1990". Tornado History Project. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e "June 2, 1990 Tornado Outbreak". Indianapolis: National Weather Service. Archived from the original on October 18, 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi Roger W., Tanner, ed. (June 1990). "Storm Data and Unusual Weather Phenomena". Storm Data. 32 (6). Asheville, North Carolina: United States Department of Commerce.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Thomas P. Grazulis (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991. St. Johnsbury, Vermont: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  5. ^ F4 Tornado Strikes Newton, IL June 2, 1990, retrieved 2022-10-19
  6. ^ a b "Storms Leave 13 Dead in Midwest; Indiana Twisters Worst Since '74". New York Times. The Associated Press. June 4, 1990.