Tornado outbreak sequence of May 2019

Tornado outbreak sequence of May 2019
Map of tornado warnings and confirmed tornadoes from the outbreak.
Meteorological history
DurationMay 17–30, 2019
Tornado outbreak
Tornadoes400
(Record for a continuous outbreak in May)
Maximum ratingEF4 tornado
Duration14 days
Highest windsTornadic – 170 mph (270 km/h)
(Dayton, Ohio EF4 on May 27, Linwood, Kansas EF4 on May 28)*
*A 187 mph (301 km/h) gust was measured by a rocket
Highest gustsNon-tornadic – 100 mph (160 km/h) near Altus, Arkansas on May 18
Largest hail5.50 in (14.0 cm) in Wellington, Texas on May 20
Overall effects
Fatalities8 (+6 non-tornadic)
Injuries288
Areas affectedGreat Plains, Midwestern United States, Eastern United States

Part of the Tornadoes of 2019

Between May 17 and 30, 2019, a prolonged series of destructive tornadoes and tornado outbreaks affected the United States, producing a total of 400 tornadoes, including 53 significant events (EF2+). Eighteen of these were EF3 tornadoes, spanning over multiple states, including Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Indiana, Iowa, and Ohio, with additional tornadoes confirmed across a region extending from California to New Jersey. Two EF4 tornadoes occurred, one in Dayton, Ohio, and the other in Linwood, Kansas. Four tornadoes during this outbreak were fatal, causing a total of eight fatalities. The deadliest of these occurred on May 22 near Golden City, Missouri, where an EF3 tornado took three lives, including an elderly couple in their eighties. The damaging series of tornadoes that occurred in Indiana and Ohio on the evening of May 27 during this event is sometimes locally referred to as the Memorial Day tornado outbreak of 2019, which became the fourth costliest weather event in Ohio history. The near continuous stream of systems also produced to widespread flash and river flooding, along with damaging winds and large hail.