Public Information Statement
Issued by NWS Wichita, KS

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930 NOUS43 KICT 111200 PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-111500- Public Information Statement National Weather Service Wichita KS 700 AM CDT Sat May 11 2024 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... May 11th is likely the most significant severe weather date for the Lone Star State. In 1953, Waco was walloped by an F5 tornado that killed 114, injured 597, and caused around $41 million damage. The track was 23 miles long, averaged one third of a mile wide, and plowed through downtown where many large buildings were demolished. One was the collapse of a six story furniture store that buried an adjacent street with bricks to a depth of 5 feet. The Waco Tornado is tied with the Goliad Tornado of May 18th, 1902 for the deadliest in Texas history. However the Waco Tornado is placed first since it injured nearly two and a half times as many people, caused far worse damage, and had a track 10 miles longer and nearly two and a half times wider. In 1970, an F5 tornado hit Lubbock Texas.The track was only 8 miles long but reached one and a half miles wide. The slow moving multi vortex passed just east of the Texas Tech campus, then plowed through downtown Lubbock. The tornado destroyed 600 apartment units, 430 homes, 250 businesses and 119 aircraft. Also hit were the Lubbock Airport and the Weather Bureau Office, which had to be evacuated. In downtown Lubbock, the 20 story Great Plains Life Building was deformed and had to be abandoned for a few years. During that time, it became known as The Largest Pigeon Roost in the Panhandle. The tornado killed 26, injured around 500, and caused around $135 million damage, an estimate some consider conservative. $$ Auto