The Day the Clock Stopped: 50 years after the 1974 Xenia tornado

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Dayton 24/7 Now

Dayton 24/7 Now

Күн бұрын

Fifty years ago, an F5 tornado devastated the city of Xenia, Ohio. Thirty-two people were killed and countless homes destroyed. Now, Dayton 24/7 Now Anchor Adam Aaro and Chief Meteorologist Natalie Walters shares the stories of survival and the science behind the April 3, 1974, storm.
#weather #tornado #outbreak #xenia #documentary #news #ohio
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Пікірлер: 362
@juliesmithson4336
@juliesmithson4336 Ай бұрын
As compelling as this video is, I am astonished that there was no mention of meteorologist Gil Whitney, whose immediate realization of the gravity of the approaching tornado galvanized him into action to break into the television programming to deliver an urgent warning to TV viewers, therein saving lives.
@mikemonett7071
@mikemonett7071 Ай бұрын
Perhaps they didn't want to seem to be promoting Dayton Channel 7, WHIO, where he worked. As for WHIO, their radio station, 1290 AM, spent the hours after the tornado reporting vital facts as the details of transporting the injured and search and rescue and everything else became less chaotic. I spent that night in Columbus before returning to the Dayton area the next morning. I am glad I was able to pick up the 1290 signal in Columbus.
@tonytrammell3102
@tonytrammell3102 Ай бұрын
Gil Whitney wasn't a meteorologist, most TV stations didn't employ one in 1974, but he was an instrumental part in saving lives. I can partly understand not wanting to promote WHIO, but they were the only ones who had TV radar in Dayton at that time, and I'll always remember him pointing at that hook echo on live TV, telling Xenians to take cover.
@adamsmith9636
@adamsmith9636 Ай бұрын
I was wondering if they would mention Gil or not but just like McCall they both saved a lot of lives in Daytons darkest days .
@zztop4996
@zztop4996 Ай бұрын
It is in his Wikipedia page: "Gil Whitney"
@timothyhenry5454
@timothyhenry5454 Ай бұрын
This video is incomplete without the mentioning of WHIO TV7 & the late Gil Whitney
@Susan-lm8fp
@Susan-lm8fp Ай бұрын
I will never forget that day. One of the tornados went directly over us in Louisville. Your ears pop from the pressure change. You open your mouth to scream and it feels like the air is being pulled out of your lungs. Your eyes feel like they're "bugging out". The noise is so loud you can feel the scream in your throat, but can't hear it. My body got lighter, like being in an elevator going down. Felt like I was almost lifted up.... then just like that, it's over. We were lucky, the tornado lifted up as it went over.
@Inspiredteacher1
@Inspiredteacher1 Ай бұрын
The description sounds beyond terrifying.
@joycebrackbill-henderly8311
@joycebrackbill-henderly8311 Ай бұрын
God protected you!
@jackgross6133
@jackgross6133 Ай бұрын
Me too susan,...apr 3rd, 1974,...i remember the terror still,...9 yrs old,....my hood was skipped over,...5th and creel ave,...storms hit lennins fish fry area of west lou,..we saw funnel from rear window as dad drove us east to home,....our steet was flooded but funnels started to hit churchill downs barns,...eastern parkway, crittendan dr,....cheerokee pkwy, and park was destroyed,....sightseeing days later,..the damage to homes in highland was just incredible...
@miai.728
@miai.728 Ай бұрын
I have never heard or read a very detailed description of what it's like being in the middle of a tornado. I'm glad you and your family were ok
@mommyshark1124
@mommyshark1124 21 күн бұрын
Reading your account terrified me. I can't imagine having to actually go through that. I'm so glad you guys were safe. Here in South Florida, we have hurricanes, but we get a few days to prepare. For those who live where tornadoes are a real threat, you barely get a few minutes. That's so scary dude. Sincerely wish all of you who live in tornadoe territory all the best.🙏🏽🫶🏽💖🫶🏽
@clarefletcher6290
@clarefletcher6290 Ай бұрын
I was a college sophomore in '74, and played softball at Rio Grande College in eastern Ohio. 7 days after this tornado hit Xenia, we traveled by van to Dayton to play ball; and drove directly through Xenia on the way. Our van rides were raucous - we would sing and carry on the entire trip. When we came over the hill to the east of.town , saw the devastation, I remember vividly, the silence as we drove down the main drag . The silence remained in that van til we got to Dayton. If you have ever seen the damage from a tornado you will never forget it
@sharoncrawford7192
@sharoncrawford7192 Ай бұрын
I live about 2 miles from Rio Grande College. But grewup in Fairborn, Ohio not far from Xenia.
@jamessimms415
@jamessimms415 Ай бұрын
I live in Tuscaloosa, AL.; that is so true. It took several years to recover from our 27 April 2011 EF 4 storm.
@jeannestrickland7027
@jeannestrickland7027 21 күн бұрын
Ditto. I was away at college, but my family lived right outside of Xenia. I'll never forget the rubble that greeted me when I returned home from college.
@tomh5006
@tomh5006 10 күн бұрын
​@sharoncrawford7192 I grew up on Springfield and do remember that nasty day
@dianefoister4400
@dianefoister4400 Ай бұрын
I was pregnant with my first baby when this event took place. There was some minor damage at our home that night. The storm woke me up that night & we raced to the basement, wondering if we would make it. I thought sure we were gonna have a tornado. I could feel the pressure inside the house, like the walls were breathing. So weird! After the storm passed we went back to bed. The next morning the damage was around the garage & front porch overhang. I knew we'd had a close call. But the news all day was how much worse it was north of us. So many lives taken & so much damage. I will never forget it. I thank God He delivered us from what could have been. That baby will be 50 her next birthday!
@scottydvintagevideos
@scottydvintagevideos Ай бұрын
This happened in Xenia around 4:40 pm in the afternoon, not at night.
@danielmorse4213
@danielmorse4213 14 күн бұрын
Thank you for the story. Glad your baby has made it this far.
@barbaraboeckman1510
@barbaraboeckman1510 Ай бұрын
My parents were denied a loan to build a home in Arrowhead Subdivision, in 1973. Thank God! God Bless those families ❤
@piscesempress1978
@piscesempress1978 Ай бұрын
Maybe it was the universes way of protecting your family. Works in mysterious ways sometimes.
@paige_on_YT
@paige_on_YT 21 күн бұрын
Wow.. coincidence or fate? 🤔 Either way, thank God they didn't
@gregatkinson7276
@gregatkinson7276 Күн бұрын
@@piscesempress1978 The universe was created by the one and only God so....Yea.
@livingreflection5
@livingreflection5 Ай бұрын
My father was a police officer in our home town hours away. He was sent down to Xenia to help. He slept in a jail cell while he was there.
@Dahn.Baern.
@Dahn.Baern. 23 күн бұрын
Damn.. did they catch him looting or something??
@mommyshark1124
@mommyshark1124 21 күн бұрын
​@@Dahn.Baern. 😩😂🤣🤣
@gregatkinson7276
@gregatkinson7276 Күн бұрын
@@Dahn.Baern. No, his name was Otis Campbell.
@RobMathMiller
@RobMathMiller Ай бұрын
My dad, a fireman saw the EF five tornado that hit Sayler Park in Cincinnati that same day. Ironically, the Monday after his funeral I was in the 2019 Dayton tornado! I remember thinking about the stories he told me and I prayed to him during the night, and I am convinced he protected me. God bless all tornado victims.
@larrysorenson4789
@larrysorenson4789 Ай бұрын
That’s the one that erased our Dayton home.
@nancydemoss2945
@nancydemoss2945 29 күн бұрын
Yes, no mention of Saylor Park. One of my father's co-workers lived across the river from Saylor Park. He saw the tornado hit Saylor Park, then skipped over the river and barely miss where he lived.
@RobMathMiller
@RobMathMiller 29 күн бұрын
@@larrysorenson4789So sorry to hear that. Hope things worked out.
@gregatkinson7276
@gregatkinson7276 Күн бұрын
Pray to God for results, not a spirit of someone deceased (The Bible.)
@Jaymindrew1990
@Jaymindrew1990 Ай бұрын
I’m a trained storm spotter, so the name Xenia is known by me for its tornado. I visited Xenia in 2007 and drove through the neighborhoods once struck by the tornado. You’d expect to find a city that was downtrodden and beat down by this disaster, but I found it to be a very friendly and inviting town both in looks and in the nice people I met there. It totally didn’t deserve this tornado, but it didn’t let this storm defeat it either. Xenia Lives!
@dancline2143
@dancline2143 Ай бұрын
Amen to all of that! I, too, am a storm spotter
@chrispinchak1511
@chrispinchak1511 Ай бұрын
You have never seen the movie Gummo, have you?
@dancline2143
@dancline2143 Ай бұрын
No, and with what I have read about, I don't want to. I know that it's based in Xenia
@SunlessComa4614
@SunlessComa4614 24 күн бұрын
​@@chrispinchak1511 I remember when that was being filmed. I was a kid and no one outside of the production crew knew anything beyond the fact that a movie was being made somewhere in Dayton. The buzz died down very quickly, and even after I watched it I still didn't immediately know that was the independent movie filmed in Dayton.
@SunlessComa4614
@SunlessComa4614 24 күн бұрын
​@@dancline2143 when I lived at The Greene, my hairstylist left Woodhouse when construction was complete on the salon she was having built close to her house in Xenia. The first time I saw her there she had me over for coffee afterward, and I'm walking through her house thinking, did I miss something? I'd always been told Xenia was a rough area, but I didn't see any of that in the two neighborhoods I visited with the $500k houses, HOAs, and professionally landscaped lawns. Ofc that was 2016, so it's safe to say those homes cost significantly more now
@Jdwify
@Jdwify Ай бұрын
This is a very well done video. It's just as powerful to me in 2024 as it was when I was a 10 year old boy living in Cincinnati in 1974. Great job and interesting interviews.
@richarpadilla1891
@richarpadilla1891 Ай бұрын
Great video ! I survived the 12-10-2021 Mayfield KY tornado, that was the Quad State Tornado Outbreak.I was working at the candle factory (MCP) that night ! 9 of my coworkers die , i used to work on line 2 making boxes. I don't know if this was a multiple vortices tornado but it was very powerfull, rated as a high end EF4 190 mph winds and it was rain wrapped at times !
@tammysims8716
@tammysims8716 Ай бұрын
Thank God you made it out alive.
@pamelabrumfield7679
@pamelabrumfield7679 3 күн бұрын
I remember that tornado so well! I sent you all a care package and I watched the footage everyday! Thank God you survived the storm and the candle factory! ❤🙏🙏🙏
@jdrake8738
@jdrake8738 Ай бұрын
The Brandenburg ky tornado missed my school by roughly 1/8 mile. It was sufficiently impressive to make me pay attention to weather 50 years on. Our bus passed through the damage path on the way home
@noelle1225
@noelle1225 Ай бұрын
Good seeing Dr Forbes. Miss him during tornado season.
@georgiasmith64
@georgiasmith64 Ай бұрын
❤storm master G! 👍
@peaceangel4192
@peaceangel4192 Ай бұрын
We lived north of Xenia. Some family/friends were staff and students at Central State University. The devastation on CSU & Wilberforce campuses forced students to seek shelter & support elsewhere. We were able to assist several students for as long as they needed. Our property had minor damage and no one was injured. That was a terrible day!
@specialredd8031
@specialredd8031 Ай бұрын
I have family there. They said their street was saved also. It was minor damage from blowing debris.
@Robindigsit
@Robindigsit Ай бұрын
I had just turned 13. Our house wasn't hit, but close enough to feel the powerful pull. Forever changed me.
@jamessimms415
@jamessimms415 Ай бұрын
Living in Tuscaloosa, AL; my house was on the very edge of our December 2000 tornado that killed 11. Even so, we still had minor damage.
@TheLadyDiazepam
@TheLadyDiazepam Ай бұрын
That sounds terrifying. I was 10 years old and lived in Kettering. I remember the sky being this horrid shade of dark green before the hail started. I remember hiding in the hallway with my mother and younger brother. Apparently the tornado went over our house but fortunately did not touch down. Can't imagine being as close as you were.
@neolithicnobody8184
@neolithicnobody8184 Ай бұрын
You may call it "The Day the Clock Stopped", but I call it "The Day the Cows Would Fly". I grew up about 50 miles South of Xenia and I remember the day vividly. The tornadoes were everywhere! A neighboring Dairy Farm was wiped out when the tornadoes took 2 large barns full of cattle waiting to be milked. I watched it all get sucked up into the sky, cows and all. Trust me, if you ever see it happen, you'll never, ever forget it. Two of them landed in one of our fields, the rest were found scattered all over the area within a 2 mile radius. All but 3 were found, thanks to ear tags and their Brand. We suspect the other 3 were remote somewhere or grabbed up by a local before the search began. My family was well known by all of the surrounding Fire and Rescue Departments for volunteering when needed and my Aunt was an LPN, so the following day we loaded all of our vehicles full of supplies and headed for Xenia to help them recover. Your footage and photos might be enough for you to tell your story, but none of it really does any justice to the true extent of the devastation. Some neighborhoods were gone, others were in piles upon piles of rubble. War movies come to mind when I think back about that day. In the movies, they always seem to have a scene where the town is completely obliterated. That's the same scene I saw for 2 days straight. We camped overnight to continue the next day in helping people. We even worked side by side with National Guardsmen in some of the cleanup projects before packing up and heading back to our own cleanup on our small farm. To this day, I can still see those 2 barns disappearing into the sky with all of those cows flying around. It may not be my earliest memory of my life, but it's definitely the most memorable at such a young age. Happy Birthday to ME, I turned 4 years old just 3 days before this all happened. Broke my heart, too. Those storms took my tricycle I got for a birthday gift.
@elflingskitten
@elflingskitten Ай бұрын
Great story, thanks for sharing it. Poor cows 😢😢😢🐄🐄🐄
@allanmcelroy9840
@allanmcelroy9840 Ай бұрын
Stories like yours are the ones who leave the most impact
@neolithicnobody8184
@neolithicnobody8184 Ай бұрын
@@allanmcelroy9840 I've lived through a lot of these storms in my lifetime and I've seen some really bad ones along the way. This day still holds the top spot in that long list. Definitely a Once-In-A-Lifetime Event, without a doubt. Amazingly, 4 years later I witnessed another Weather Event that made just as big of an impact on my life. Another OIAL Event, I guess. I call it "The Year We Walked On Water". Others call it The Blizzard of 78.
@allanmcelroy9840
@allanmcelroy9840 Ай бұрын
@@neolithicnobody8184 i heard of that from the new york perspective (I think)
@djamo1969
@djamo1969 Ай бұрын
By my math, Happy Easter and Happy 54th Birthday today!
@Danger-Dave
@Danger-Dave Ай бұрын
I grew up in London Ohio, but we had moved to New Carlisle in 1972 and when this tornado hit, I was in the bathtub and a bolt of lightning struck a tree right next to that side of the house sounding like a bomb and causing the tub water to slosh back and forth as my little brother ran in screaming that the back yard was on fire! My father called us from school where he worked to tell us to go to the basement and wait for him to get there. The storm went through so quickly that he didn't make it till it had passed and while my brothers and I cowered in the basement we could hear the destruction happening above. Thankfully it was just high winds and large hail balls pummeling everything. We saved several hail balls the size of baseballs in the freezer for years as a reminder of escaping the brunt of this devastating storm that wiped out Xenia. RIP those that lost their lives that day.
@davelachey8118
@davelachey8118 Ай бұрын
I was delivering the Dayton Daily News that day about 10 miles to the Southwest of Xenia. I remember taking shelter in a neighbor’s garage from hail the size of golf balls. Later I realized I was in the path of the same storm.
@jamesedgar3442
@jamesedgar3442 Ай бұрын
On this day, I was 4 years and 6 weeks old. I remember it like it was yesterday. We lived in that Arrowhead subdivision. I remember my sister (7 yrs old) standing at our front door as she watched a secondary twister break out from the main funnel as she screamed, "TORNADO!!!!" I remember peeking into our garage, where Mom was trying to retrieve something from Dad's Chevy Corvair. I remember the whole family walking along US 42, where Dad had parked Mom's Pontiac Grand Am. We eventually made it to Grandma Edgar's house in Dayton. If I live to be 150 years old, I'll remember 04/03/1974 vividly.
@TheStuport
@TheStuport Ай бұрын
I had just gotten home from High School as a Junior and my Mom was in tears as she listened to the radio about the devastation that had happened in Xenia. Was very sobering for me as I was just beginning to think and act as if I was invincible and was never going to get old. Was humbling to see days later the destruction that these tornados caused and the deaths lost, homes destroyed and lives never to be the same again. That old saying of 50 years ago....and it STILL feels like yesterday! Blessings To All from COW-lumbus MOO
@pattymiller9040
@pattymiller9040 Ай бұрын
I remember that day; we heard about it on the radio, and I believe we also had storms later that day in PA! As I recall, that was a Sunday; possibly Easter sunday that year (?)!
@TheStuport
@TheStuport Ай бұрын
@@pattymiller9040 It happened on a Wednesday!
@CO84trucker
@CO84trucker Ай бұрын
Back in the late 2000s I met a girl who's mother lived through the 1974 Xenia🌪 and she said that when watching the movie "Twister" at movie theater, her mother bailed after the opening scene of that movie!
@charlayned
@charlayned Ай бұрын
My husband was graduating from high school in Antlers Oklahoma. He ended up going to the University of Oklahoma as a chemistry major. One day, the School of Meteorology at OU put out a call for science majors to come help with a project. He went. The project was chasing tornadoes with a map and a radio, to find tornadoes and help the school calibrate the new Doppler radar that was being tested at the university. The work they did on that has saved countless lives in the almost 50 years since (he graduated in 1978). He still watches weather, and, in his twilight years now, wishes he had majored in weather science. The project was an outgrowth of the Xenia tornado.
@scotabot7826
@scotabot7826 Ай бұрын
Honey, doppler radar was designed and tested on tornados in the mid to late 1950's. We even had NSSL doppler radar in 1971, years before the 1974 outbreak. Nice that your husband went on a field trip, but I believe you're very mistaken about some things!
@TheDoctor1225
@TheDoctor1225 Ай бұрын
@@scotabot7826 "Honey," there were different types of Doppler radar and refinements that came as they were developed. Synthetic-aperture radar was invented and developed circa 1951 and was based on Doppler principles but was distinct from the Doppler radar we know today. Digital filtering and microprosessors, which became available during the 1970's, were immediately applied to coherent pulsed radars, which allowed velocity information to be extracted. NSSL Doppler Radar was first deployed in 1971, but refinements were needed, and the work was accelerated as a result of the 1974 outbreak. I submit this for your reading and enjoyment, "honey:" www.nssl.noaa.gov/about/events/40thanniversary/stories/radar.html Perhaps in the future you might try not being condescending, or at least make sure you aren't "very mistaken about some things" before you patronize someone else.
@derekwhite9932
@derekwhite9932 Ай бұрын
Weatherbox just covered this yesterday. Theodore Fuijta gathered a team and surveyed the damage. So, what this person describes was explained in the documentary.
@Bootmahoy88
@Bootmahoy88 Ай бұрын
These images remind me immediately of the Minnesota tornado outbreak of 1965. I was living in the small town of Excelsior. I'll never ever forget that ghastly f-4 wedge passing just across Galpin Lake where we lived. We were spared. The f-4 was headed toward a number of large marinas on Lake Minnetonka. They were all utterly destroyed. I was ten years old, and if I live to 100 I'll remember that day vividly. Many communities came together to help rebuild the many small towns affected.
@kevinallen1699
@kevinallen1699 Ай бұрын
Well done, Dayton 24/7 Now.
@denisberger9657
@denisberger9657 Ай бұрын
I was fortunate to see this destruction up front being a member of the Ohio National Guard, HHC 372nd Combat Engineer unit from Kettering, Ohio. I remember getting off of work at the Metropolitan in downtown Dayton at 5pm and someone at the bus stop mentioned that a tornado hit Xenia. I walked down a little ways to the corner and looked East and saw the sky in the distance 😊was black as night. I caught the bus home and when I walked in the door and my mom told me I was to call my Guard immediately. I was told to pack up my gear with enough change of underclothing for 2 weeks. We sat around the armory all the next day and didn’t enter Xenia until 4am of the following day. I was assigned as the driver for the operations officer leading the whole unit in our jeep met by the Ohio Highway Patrol on US 35 at the Xenia border line. I got to see every bit of destruction everywhere in the city since I was driving the Officer in Charge. My unit not only had the manpower for clean-up but heavy equipment to pull, separate and demolish buildings. I will never forget what I saw up close, it was chilling and unimaginable.
@badguitar5653
@badguitar5653 Ай бұрын
How on earth is WHIO weatherman Gil Whitney not mentioned in this report? Had it not been for his quick thinking and warnings - rarities in those days - the xenia death toll would have been much higher.
@Jaymindrew1990
@Jaymindrew1990 Ай бұрын
When violent EF5 tornadoes get together and want to scare each other, they tell Xenia Tornado stories. It wasn’t just an EF5 tornado . . . it was THE EF5 tornado! 🌪️
@steveprevesk6627
@steveprevesk6627 Ай бұрын
Yes, Xenia was historic and horrific but Jarrell has a seat at that table also.
@louistaplin4665
@louistaplin4665 Ай бұрын
So does Moore/Bridge Creek. 319 miles an hour was the windspeed
@cjhoward409
@cjhoward409 Ай бұрын
Pretty sure Joplin Mo was this vicious too. 😮 It too was an EF5… on the ground for 46 min and killed over 150 people. That was 2011. We drove thru there in 2014 and things were still being cleaned up and starting to rebuild.
@irismania
@irismania Ай бұрын
@@louistaplin4665 What year was that? I can't remember what they named the 2013 that hit Moore. But we remembered what we went through. I along with four other ladies formed a group and we adopted 12 families that needed help. One of your local churches helped us identify those families. At first we said 6 and then found out there were 6 no one would take on so we took them. We helped them for a solid 12 months. So many of the citizens of Xenia donated money, clothing, household items and mind you, not used but brand new. We wanted to let them know that we knew what they were going through. We wanted to give back because so many helped those that needed in 1974.
@douglasgriffiths3534
@douglasgriffiths3534 Ай бұрын
@@irismania The Moore/Bridge Creek F5 tornado happened on May 3, 1999. (Jan Griffiths).
@richardmourdock2719
@richardmourdock2719 Ай бұрын
I was in my first year of graduate school at Ball State University in Muncie, IN. I was not from Indiana, had no television so I listened to radio, and I had no idea where the various spots they were talking about... but I eventually figured out they were generally east and north of Muncie. The next morning, I left campus in a van to go on a geology field trip to West Virginia. We went through Xenia on an interstate that overlooked the town. I'll never forget someone said it looked like a bulldozer with a 1/2-mile-long blade and gone through the town. And that was a good description. I'll never forget what Xenia looked like that morning. The normally noisy van full of students, was quiet for the next hour.
@genomccoy5885
@genomccoy5885 Ай бұрын
It was initially assigned an F6 rating by Dr. Ted Fujita, but he later downgraded it to an F5. If I was Dr. Fujita, I would've let that F6 rating stand because it was even worse than all the other F5s that day!
@jamessimms415
@jamessimms415 Ай бұрын
Dr. Fujita toyed with/assigning an F6 rating to the 1977 Smithfield (Birmingham), AL tornado. That storm killed dozens & was directly responsible for the crash of Southern Airways flight 242 outside of Atlanta, GA later that afternoon.
@timcarroll490
@timcarroll490 Ай бұрын
I'm from Pittsburgh but have been through Xenia. It's a wonderful town. God Bless Xenia
@drewdavis4614
@drewdavis4614 Ай бұрын
My dad worked for FEMA and was an educator and went there and helped the rebuilding of that town with his guidance for them to get the federal help they needed.❤
@veggiemom5
@veggiemom5 Ай бұрын
My aunt and uncle survived this tornado. My uncle was the pastor of the church and was there when the tornado hit. I remember coming with my parents afterwards to see the destruction and to visit my aunt and uncle.
@sherry8894
@sherry8894 Ай бұрын
I remember when this happened. I still live in Ohio. Tornadoes truly terrify me!
@Nunofurdambiznez
@Nunofurdambiznez Ай бұрын
Absolutely FANTASTIC Video!! I was 13 y.o. (living in Columbus Ohio) when it hit Xenia, but, I remember it like it was yesterday!
@ksgoo4960
@ksgoo4960 Ай бұрын
I was thirteen and living in Columbus too. We spent that night in our basement.
@sharoncrawford7192
@sharoncrawford7192 Ай бұрын
I was in my last year of high school. I grewup in Fairborn, but we had moved to Southern Ohio. But I remember that well.
@ARTSIEBECCA
@ARTSIEBECCA Ай бұрын
I was 2 and lived in Columbus, I remember being in the basement that night.
@jonathanr2830
@jonathanr2830 Ай бұрын
Thank God that so many people survived.
@YoFritts
@YoFritts Ай бұрын
This is the one they always taught the kids about in elementary school during the early 1990’s.
@roaddawg3217
@roaddawg3217 Ай бұрын
We had "Day of the Killer Tornadoes" on reel to reel film in the 80's and, from 74 till a few years later, tornado sirens were always screaming, they were taking no chances, but it also caused complacency
@cjhoward409
@cjhoward409 Ай бұрын
Until 2011 when the Joplin Mo EF5 tornado happened. To this day its the costliest of all tornados. It was on the ground for 46 min and over 150 people died. 😢
@richardkeller3154
@richardkeller3154 Ай бұрын
The most surprizing thing to me about this was what came down from the sky a few weeks after a Xenia tornado. My parents were living in Delaware, Ohio (to the northeast of Xenia) and I was visiting on a weekend. Out in the back yard I noticed some things drifting slowly down from the sky. I checked a few of them as they reached the ground. What I remember was those little chips of paper were identifying paper personal bank checks on Xenia banks. It took me a few moments to come to grips with this. But I had visited Xenia by car a few days after that tornado and noticed how a there was a path maybe 30 yards wide diagonally through a residential street visible from a traffic bridge. Totally empty the width of the path; houses remaining standing seemingly untouched, except for the totally destroyed path through them (like a chain saw diagonally through the house). An indelible memory. I doubt I have any souvenirs of those check chips anymore. Would this have been the 1974 tornado?
@dancline2143
@dancline2143 Ай бұрын
More than likely
@TheoryWithSuds
@TheoryWithSuds Ай бұрын
Excellent video, well done.
@mikemonett7071
@mikemonett7071 Ай бұрын
I had never been to Xenia, til about a month before the tornado, when I bought new tires at the Michelin store there. That store was destroyed. I remember checking out the town and thinking it was very attractive. I am glad I got to see it before it became a totally different place.
@williamford9564
@williamford9564 Ай бұрын
1:40: For me too. I was 14 ( a month before my 15th) years old when this happened, living in southeast Pennsylvania. I became a young weather "geek" after Hurricane Camille in 1969. In that tornado outbreak of 1974 ( which still today is the second largest outbreak of all time in the US with 148 total, of which 30 were F4 or F5s), Xenia was the one place with the most media coverage and attention. In the late 1990s, I made took several road trips from Pennsylvania, going west through Ohio.. On one of them, I took a detour off I-70 and drove about 20 miles south to get to Xenia for a drive through the town before going back to my intended destination.
@victoriaclark4853
@victoriaclark4853 Ай бұрын
I was a high school senior in Norwood, Ohio and remember clearly this day. I did not experience what these folks did but it was still terrifying, not knowing what was going to happen. I remember it as a sunny warm spring day.
@philturner6642
@philturner6642 Ай бұрын
A Louisville resident. same thing same day..we will never forget..
@irismania
@irismania Ай бұрын
Very nicely done, thank you. Images here that will never leave the minds of many of us still here today of what we saw and went through that day.
@mslitton
@mslitton Ай бұрын
Excellent program!!! Nice job!
@tml721
@tml721 Ай бұрын
I was almost 11 years old. I lived in Miami co. I'll never forget it.
@tanasue77
@tanasue77 Ай бұрын
I lived in Troy, Ohio. I was a freshman in high school. Scared to death we were going to get hit.
@davashorb6116
@davashorb6116 Ай бұрын
I heard once that native Americans had called the area around Xenia "devil wind.". So, it may have a long history with tornadoes.
@OhioGypsyRobin
@OhioGypsyRobin Ай бұрын
I remember this like it was yesterday. I was 8 and wasn't in Xenia but was at church on Far Hills in Kettering/Centerville and looked outside to see clouds that looked like rows and rows of cotton candy in the sky. It was something to see. Not even aware of the destruction that happened just miles away. I remember too my school, Dayton Christian received books from Simon Kenton school library, many of which had a tar like substance on them which now I know was most likely tar from the roof of the school. There were other marks on them too, town pages and things like that. One devastating situation led to donations to our school. Great story by the way. Thank you!
@TheLadyDiazepam
@TheLadyDiazepam Ай бұрын
I was 10 years old in Kettering! We hid in the hallway at home. I remember the sky being dark green before the hail started.
@barbarajeffries
@barbarajeffries Ай бұрын
I’m so glad this popped up in my recommendations. What an excellent documentary about one of the most important weather events in American history. I was 21 when the tornado happened and the stories about Xenia were amazing. This storm helped create my fascination with severe weather. May the victims rest in peace.
@davidtavener1742
@davidtavener1742 Ай бұрын
Outstanding job on this video!!
@Michelle-ky8tn
@Michelle-ky8tn Ай бұрын
Nice to see my old classmate Jeff Louderback, I have been gone from Xenia since 1986, but all my family is still there. This is something you never forget that’s for sure.
@michaeliocca1407
@michaeliocca1407 Ай бұрын
Very sad event in Ohio history. God bless all of those people that survived and died that faithful day.
@paigemaddi
@paigemaddi Ай бұрын
Great video. What a horrifying event. Nature's sheer power is breathtakingly beautiful and terrifying all at once. Respect Mother Nature.
@dianefarley37
@dianefarley37 3 күн бұрын
Respect and love God, Who shields His children always.
@paigemaddi
@paigemaddi 3 күн бұрын
@@dianefarley37 I'll respect mother nature 😊 You are welcome to respect whomever you'd like, just the same as I am.
@mikemonett7071
@mikemonett7071 Ай бұрын
I was working with a brick laying crew about 15 miles northeast of Xenia. We knew there was a tornado watch since lunchtime. We were just south of where the tornado finally lifted, but we did not know it. I just remember the heavy rain, which left my car surrounded by a giant mud puddle, requiring my boss to hook a chain to pull me out. I drove to Columbus for supper with my parents, rather than up to South Vienna, where I had just moved in late 1973. The tornado touched down twice more, first at London, then in northeast Columbus. Even though I drove just a few miles south of where the tornado had just been, I did not know about it until the 6 PM radio news came on, where they read a bulletin from the Ohio Highway Patrol saying Xenia had been hit by a catastrophic tornado and that there would be many deaths and injuries due to the extent and severity of the destruction.
@scillyautomatic
@scillyautomatic Ай бұрын
50 Years ago today. I don't remember anything about the storms but I remember a lot of talk about tornados in the weeks following.
@elainewilliams4359
@elainewilliams4359 Ай бұрын
My Sister, Catherine Wilson ❤
@dancline2143
@dancline2143 Ай бұрын
I am a member of the historical society, although I am from extreme Northwest Ohio, so I have talked to her many time. She is a very nice, friendly person
@californiahiker9616
@californiahiker9616 Ай бұрын
Well done documentary! Great interviews, well described by citizens affected. I can’t even begin to imagine how terrifying this must have been!
@bobfitzpatrick8952
@bobfitzpatrick8952 Ай бұрын
I can still remember my late uncle telling me of how he parked Conrail railcars outside of the school, and then surveying the damage the day after. Years later I ran across a picture of those railcars sitting in the school yard, just like my uncle had told me. I'm from the Cincinnati area, but was living in Phoenix when the storm hit.
@feg3akatrey144
@feg3akatrey144 29 күн бұрын
FANTASTIC video, thanks for making and sharing it 🙏. Those are some hardy/resilient folks, God bless ‘em!
@garyakirsch
@garyakirsch Ай бұрын
No internet or cellphones? In 1974? Hell, calculators still used gears and lever arms, eh? And AT&T still charged extra for "long distance."
@shelbymccoy3936
@shelbymccoy3936 Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing!
@MrsHall38
@MrsHall38 Ай бұрын
I was in a tornado when I was 4. (1989) It was in Greenville/Spartanburg SC, an EF4. Nobody had any warning. Even after all this time, I'll never forget that day.
@NyghtWolf
@NyghtWolf Ай бұрын
Fantastically well done documentary, thank you so much for sharing it.
@darlenechaney6989
@darlenechaney6989 Ай бұрын
Excellent Documentary, Thank You for sharing this.
@sharoncrawford7192
@sharoncrawford7192 Ай бұрын
I remember that tornado. I grewup in Fairborn, Ohio.
@johnnysager8899
@johnnysager8899 Ай бұрын
I was 11 then and lived in Sharonville and we had a f4 which sat down right behind our house and destroyed around 40 homes and still remember that sound and the fear!!
@nicksttrs
@nicksttrs Ай бұрын
Crazy how KZbin recommends this now with the Tornado outbreak likely tomorrow in ohio and with the 50 year anniversary being Wednesday
@bubblegumlemonade159
@bubblegumlemonade159 Ай бұрын
I know I’m scared 😭😭
@nicksttrs
@nicksttrs Ай бұрын
@bubblegumlemonade159 No need to be scared. Also, I just saw Reed Timmer's post saying there is a lot of bust potential with these storms. Just have to be prepared if anything pops off.
@bubblegumlemonade159
@bubblegumlemonade159 Ай бұрын
@@nicksttrs thanks 💓☮️
@nicksttrs
@nicksttrs Ай бұрын
@bubblegumlemonade159 hope all was good in your neck of the woods!
@tomh5006
@tomh5006 10 күн бұрын
First time I have seen any details or interviews like this. Well done
@moemanncann895
@moemanncann895 Ай бұрын
19:18 Great shot of Doc Fujita and a flight crew 🛫🌪️
@mr.g1758
@mr.g1758 Ай бұрын
Ever been to a funeral with six caskets in the front of the church? I have. One of my best friends in 7th grade died with his entire family that afternoon in Alabama. Later learned the dad was talking to a neighbor on the phone regarding weather reports when the neighbor overheard one of the daughters yell that "it was in their backyard." God bless the Owens family, a loving family.
@sharoncrawford7192
@sharoncrawford7192 Ай бұрын
I dated a guy from Xenia in 1971. I hope he made it through that tornado ok. Havent seen him since before the tornado hit.
@tomschrein417
@tomschrein417 Ай бұрын
My dad and some co- workers (Toledo Fireman) volunteered to help Xenia in the aftermath of the tornado. During the course of their duties they flipped an overturned car back upright, to their amazement there was an infant under the car still alive. Dad was never able to find out if the child made it or not. Hopefully he/she did. Dad passed away in 1976, Thanks for everything dad.
@debbystaats9338
@debbystaats9338 Ай бұрын
My Dad and I drove to the city from Hillsboro to offer help, my dad was a carpenter and builder. We were turned back by the Natl. Guard. We did this several times in my childhood. We went down to the Silver Bridge collapse and many other devastated places in our state. But in my memories I can't remember any worse site than coming up to Xenia. My heart and prayers go out to the Survivors and to all those then and now for the Spirit of Thriving in the face of such natural destruction. I hope the community continues to thrive and pass into the future w such driving Spirit.
@darryllmcgee
@darryllmcgee Ай бұрын
I live in Xenia. I was born and raised in Xenia. At one point, I lived in London, Ohio (November 2004 - March 2006). When living in London, I would tell people that I am from Xenia. All that most people would first talk to me about is the 1974 Xenia Tornado. I always had to tell people that I was not born until two and a half years after the tornado. I was born in October 1976.
@garysmith6857
@garysmith6857 Ай бұрын
I remember it well. I was serving in the Ohio national guard W.C.H. Only had been to 1 monthly meeting when i got the call.
@kevinhiles6548
@kevinhiles6548 Ай бұрын
On my 10th birthday, I still remember it well.❤
@mountinmike
@mountinmike Ай бұрын
Fun fact. I was on that stage with Maureen shortly before the whole auditorium imploded, partly from the buses landing on the very spot we were in moments before. Pretty amazing experience...
@irismania
@irismania Ай бұрын
Scary to think had school still have been in session what happened to the auditorium and the gyms. Do you go back in to your locker? I did.
@mountinmike
@mountinmike Ай бұрын
@@irismania I don't think I went back to my locker. I remember Mr. Heath, our drama teacher, led us as a group out the front doors, climbing over the roof that had been blown off and came down in front of the doors. We were all in a bit of shock. I think we stood there staring at all the devastation around us for a bit. Then, we walked off to our various homes. We had no way to call anyone, and our families were seeing the high school destroyed on the news, knowing we were there, but not knowing if we were ok. Pretty wild...
@diontaedaughtry974
@diontaedaughtry974 Ай бұрын
Very insightful and sad, Great video 👍👍
@Jbird-sx4zk
@Jbird-sx4zk Ай бұрын
Great documentary here by Dayton 24/7 Now! One of the better pieces I've seen or read about the Xenia Tornado. Xenia lives!
@lawrencestrabala6146
@lawrencestrabala6146 Ай бұрын
Xenia is a nice lil town. Drove through it several times in my OTR truck driver career. Shame what happened to those poor folks.
@TwoBs
@TwoBs Ай бұрын
Was a nice little doc to run upon. I always enjoy seeing these types of videos that are made by the locals to the region. I’m not from OH, just a neighboring sister state instead (WV), so I don’t really know firsthand how these tornados can be. However, I do enjoy learning about these events that happen elsewhere. Well, not enjoy in the sense of taking great pleasure seeing a disaster, but I like learning about such, how and where it formed, where it went through, what the locals have to say, how they survived and picked up the pieces to continue on, etc. Thanks for sharing their stories.
@jeffbryan4019
@jeffbryan4019 Ай бұрын
Most violent tornado outbreak to this day .
@kayhaley8744
@kayhaley8744 Ай бұрын
I lived in Xenia n had just moved outside of town to Beavercreek. I was 14 at the time. Watched the tornado go across the country and imto Xenia
@campfireaddict6417
@campfireaddict6417 Ай бұрын
There's still debris from that tornado in a woods South of Findlay, Ohio, across from my parents' cemetery (Bishop's).
@janrussell-kw4bs
@janrussell-kw4bs Ай бұрын
Wonderful documentary......heart wrenching....i will never forget this day. How beautiful Xenia is today. Hard to imagine the massive destruction that existed then. ....
@derekwhite9932
@derekwhite9932 Ай бұрын
My parents tell me stories of that day, being a town over.
@ncg5560
@ncg5560 Ай бұрын
I was living in Columbus, Ohio at the time. I remember this very well. Absolutely devastating to see the news reports of the damage. 😢
@signalfire6
@signalfire6 Ай бұрын
Excellent reporting, well done.
@frankwall2480
@frankwall2480 Ай бұрын
Very Good!
@user-ut8ls7qp1j
@user-ut8ls7qp1j Ай бұрын
april 3 1974 the wrath of GOD F-5 tornado destroyed xenia ,ohio and lives were changed forever
@stefkadank-derpjr1453
@stefkadank-derpjr1453 Ай бұрын
I was in Wilmington, Ohio near Xenia and we walked home from school at 3....we had heard from teachers that tornados were on the way and we were told to keep an eye out and they reminded us to go into the basement or hallway bathroom. Many of us back then walked home, and maybe our mom was home or perhaps at the grocery store (very few mothers worked then) but it was not uncommon....I was in the 4th grade...9 years old. Will never forget the green/yellow hue of the sky and the movement of the clouds. We all knew something bad was approaching.
@tsf5-productions
@tsf5-productions Ай бұрын
Yes! I have memories of that April, 1974 tornadoes that were well up in numbers on that fateful day. I was a student in my second year at Reinhardt Junior College in Waleska, Georgia and one of those twisters literally bounced over the 500 plus acre campus in the early day light morning ... and I head that frightening "freight train sound" going over my dorm and hitting about a mile or two up one of the roads (Georgia S.R. 108) that led on to the towns of Tate and Jasper, Georgia. That evening, via TV national and local news, we all were informed about other areas hit...Xenia was mention, I recall. I was at that time 23 and-a-half (a " little late bloomer" for college but thankful cause, it (Reinhardt, now for about 30 years a four year university) is still a warm place in my heart... It's where I met my wife of almost 48 years. Good documentary on this tragic historical eventful day in U.S. history.
@JohnMiller-oz7gv
@JohnMiller-oz7gv Ай бұрын
That was good. Well done.
@KatieReadsKoziesAndMore
@KatieReadsKoziesAndMore Ай бұрын
I remember that day. Fortunately for me, I lived in Cincinnati and we were spared. But the horror of Xenia and, to a lesser degree, many smaller areas were horribly scarred by this act of nature.
@andifisaytoyoutomorrow0
@andifisaytoyoutomorrow0 Ай бұрын
I was 12 that year and out playing baseball when the sky got incredibly dark. We lived in Franklin, about 30 miles away from Xenia. We had baseball sized hail that beat the windows out of homes and cars minutes before Xenia was hit. It was truly horrific but pales to what those people went through. That tornado was an absolute monster.
@debroahisaacs2452
@debroahisaacs2452 Ай бұрын
I remember this tragedy. I still think of it from time to time and what Xenia went through. I can't believe it's been 50 years. 😢
@Inspiredteacher1
@Inspiredteacher1 Ай бұрын
I was 10 years old. My heart goes out to the victims of that multi-vortex monster and I'm also thankful we haven't been hit like that here in Columbus, Ohio. I pray I'm able to leave the area in time if one does come this way.
@jeffreykeith6494
@jeffreykeith6494 Ай бұрын
I was 9. We lived in Colesburg, KY. To date, one of the scariest memories in my life.
@bonnies4230
@bonnies4230 20 күн бұрын
I remember visiting my sisters college roommate in Xenia in 1975 and I remember her telling us about that tornado and how they found her pink Cadillac on the roof of the Elementary school several blocks away. I would say that really was an EF6 tornado.
@jeffbryan4019
@jeffbryan4019 Ай бұрын
Most violent tornado outbreak in our nations history .
@user-gl9jc2xu3z
@user-gl9jc2xu3z Ай бұрын
When Xenia was hit April 2024, my uncle’s home was completely destroyed in Ky. They were at my folks home on a visit for Easter when they lost everything. Exactly to the date 40 years forward, they were on a trip to Florida when they were caught in a tornado in Georgia. My cousin was killed and 2 other passengers were critically injured, including my uncle and her brother. The brother broke his neck and made a miraculous recovery. One passenger walked out of the wreck which was hit by a semi propelled into their car during the tornado.
@cynthiawilliams737
@cynthiawilliams737 Ай бұрын
Gil Whitney WHIO Channel 7 Weatherman saved numerous lives that day with his broadcast telling people to get to a safe place I lived in Xenia Ohio at the time & kids just got home from school & were watching afternoon programs when he broke in & announced this we always thought of him as a hero but today you would think he never existed, he saved lives that day!
@cynthiawilliams737
@cynthiawilliams737 Ай бұрын
I lived in the Arrowhead homes worst hit in Xenia the National Guard was called out & no electricity or phone for a week & when we actually could drive to grocery the destruction was enormous it took a good 3 yrs. to put our town back together & a few people just left empty lots & moved out!
@danielmorse4213
@danielmorse4213 14 күн бұрын
Thank you.
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