• Choose your text size »
  • A
  • A
  • A

Xenia Tornado of 1974

On April 3, 1974, an F5 category tornado struck Xenia, Ohio. The tornado that struck Xenia was just one of at least 148 tornados that occurred in the South and Midwest in a twenty-four period. This was the worst outbreak of tornados recorded in the twentieth century.

The tornado that struck Xenia had maximum winds of three hundred miles per hour. It destroyed more than one thousand homes and businesses. Hardly any buildings remained standing in Xenia's downtown. Thirty-three people died in the storm, with approximately another 1,150 people injured. President Richard Nixon visited Xenia a week following the tornado. He stated, "It's the worst disaster I've ever seen."

Amazingly, Xenia rebuilt quickly. By April 3, 1975, eighty percent of the destroyed homes and forty percent of the businesses had been rebuilt. It would take until 1984 for all structures to be repaired or rebuilt, but as bumper stickers that appeared within days of the tornado stated, "Xenia Lives!"

Unfortunately for Xenia, another tornado struck the city twenty-six years later. This storm did significantly less damage, killing one person, injuring several dozen more people, and destroying approximately forty homes.

1974 Xenia Tornado, destroyed homes

A view of two destroyed homes. The night after the tornado, twenty-four hundred people were provided temporary shelter.

250x250_newsarticles_dark_1.gif

Time Periods

Citation

"Xenia Tornado of 1974", Ohio History Central, July 1, 2005, http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=1615

Feedback

Do you have comments that you would like to send us about this entry? Use our secure feedback form to send us your thoughts.

Support

Ohio History Central

If you found this entry helpful, please consider supporting Ohio History Central. Your support will enable us to continue to add new content and features to the encyclopedia.

To make a donation, click here. Be sure to select "Ohio History Central" from the list of "Gift Designations," when you make your gift.

Thank you for supporting Ohio History Central!

 
 

A product of the Ohio Historical Society

Ohio Historical Society logo