TWIN CITIES TORNADO OUTBREAK OF 1965


The 'Twin Cities Tornado Outbreak of 1965' is the outbreak of tornadoes that occurred around Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, USA on May 6, 1965. It is most often remembered for the two F4 tornados that hit Fridley, Minnesota. Thirteen people were killed in the six tornadoes that touched down in the Twin Cities area that day. In all, four tornadoes were rated F4, one was rated F3, and other was rated F2. This event caused more dollar damage than any single weather event in Minnesota history at that time.1 It is in a tie for the "fifth most significant Minnesota Weather Event of the 20th Century" with the 1965 Mississippi & Minnesota River Flooding.[3]

Contents
Outbreak description
Confirmed tornadoes
See also
References
External links and sources

Outbreak description


Tornado damage near Hamburg, Minnesota.
Temperatures on May 6 were in the upper 70s with high dewpoints, which was considered to be unusual for early May in Minnesota.1 A strong upper level system moving in from the southwest and a nearby slow-moving cold front helped spark the storms.
Considering this outbreak occurred just three weeks after the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak, quick and successful warnings from the U.S. Weather Bureau and transmission from WCCO Radio kept the death toll relatively low. This was also the first time in Minnesota state history where civil defense sirens were used for severe weather purposes.
The first tornado touched down at 6:08 PM just east of the town of Cologne in Carver County. According to the U.S. Weather Bureau, this twister was rated an F4, killed three people, and injured 175. An F2 tornado that touched down in Sibley County at 6:43 PM killed one person and also injured 175 others.
Tornado damage in 'Fridley, Minnesota'.
Two tornadoes hit Fridley that day, just over an hour apart. A man who called WCCO radio after the first Fridley tornado claimed on air that he had been in his car when the tornado hit and that the tornado blew out his car windows. He escaped that incident without harm, but it is believed this same man was then killed by the second Fridley twister later that night. In all, six people were killed in the Fridley tornadoes and over 180 were injured. In Fridley, over 450 homes were destroyed, and neighboring Mounds View also sustained heavy damage. Photographs for the earlier Deephaven and second Fridley tornado were published in the ''Minneapolis Tribune'' (now Star Tribune) newspaper. Early radar images show the supercells as they moved through the area.
These storms formed as training supercells; an atmospheric phenomenon that is extremely rare in Minnesota. Because of the training, the same general areas from Sibley County through Carver and Hennepin and into northwestern Ramsey counties kept getting the brunt of these cells.

Confirmed tornadoes


'Outbreak death toll'
'State''Total''County''County
total'
Minnesota'13' Anoka3
Carver3
Hennepin6
Sibley1
Totals'13'
All deaths were tornado-related

:'''Table of confirmed tornadoes - after surveys by local weather service offices'''
'Confirmed
Total'
'Confirmed
F0'
'Confirmed
F1'
'Confirmed
F2'
'Confirmed
F3'
'Confirmed
F4'
'Confirmed
F5'
'6''0''0''1''1''4''0'

'F#''Location''County''Time (UTC)''Path length''Damage'
'F4''E of Cologne'Carver140813 milesTornado touched down just east of Cologne in Carver County and dissipated in the northwestern portion of Minnetrista in Hennepin County after being on ground for 13 miles. It killed three people and injured 175.
'F4''ChanhassenCarver14277 milesTornado touched down near Lake Susan in Chanhassen and traveled 7 miles toward Deephaven in Hennepin County. It resulted in no injuries or fatalities.
'F3''E of New Auburn'Sibley143416 milesTornado touched down about 3 miles east of New Auburn in Sibley County and moved to just west of Lester Prairie in McLeod County. It was on the ground for 16 miles, but there were no injuries or fatalities.
'F2''E of Green Isle'Sibley144311 milesTornado touched down about two miles east of Green Isle in Sibley County and was on the ground 11 miles. It dissipated about two miles southwest of Waconia in Carver County. It killed one person and injured 175.
'F4''Fridley'Anoka15067 milesTornado touched down in the southwesternmost corner of Fridley in Anoka County and moved across the Northern Ordnance plant, and dissipated just northeast of Laddie Lake in Blaine in Anoka County. It was on the ground for 7 miles, killed three people, and injured 175.
'F4''Golden Valley'Hennepin161418 milesTornado touched down in Golden Valley in Hennepin County and moved across north Minneapolis, Fridley in Anoka County, Mounds View in Ramsey County, and dissipated just west of Centerville in Anoka County after being on the ground for 18 miles. It killed six people and injured 158.
Source: National Climatic Database Center

See also



Fridley, Minnesota

Climate of Minnesota

List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks

References


1. Six Deadly Twisters
2. The May 6, 1965 Tornadoes
3. Significant Minnesota Weather Events of the 20th Century, Minnesota Climatology Group (University of Minnesota)

External links and sources



May 6, 1965 Tornado Outbreak (NWS Twin Cities, MN)

Mp3 recording of WCCO's coverage from 1965 outbreak Part 1 (9.8 MB) (Radiotapes.com)

Mp3 recording of WCCO's coverage from 1965 outbreak Part 2 (10.3 MB) (Radiotapes.com)

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