Jarrell tornado survivors remember ‘The Last F5’ to hit Central Texas, 25 years later

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2022
  • For the past few months, the KXAN First Warning Weather team has spoken with survivors and witnesses of what happened May 27th, 1997. Many are still haunted by that day and the powerful storms that ripped through their lives and killed 27 of their family and friends.
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Komentáře • 194

  • @soyounoat
    @soyounoat Před rokem +64

    10:39 - Her father's last words, "Hold on tight" in ink on her arm.

    • @johnholder4208
      @johnholder4208 Před rokem +25

      His name was Billy, we worked together down in Austin. 4 days after the tornado we got the news that his body has been found. After all this time, it still makes me cry to think about it. He was true mentor and a good friend.

  • @danadoozer9990
    @danadoozer9990 Před rokem +28

    This tornado chills me to the bone. It was just so vicious, the way it granulated all the debris and just left NOTHING.

  • @urmailman
    @urmailman Před rokem +50

    Our middle school was on a Texas history trip (down from Plano) and stayed at a motel in Jarrell or JUST outside of Jarrell the very same day. I was 12. I remember being in the motel parking lot and not being able to see past the parking lot because the atmosphere was so black. Like walls of black surrounded the motel...like nothing existed beyond the black or the hotel lights behind me (still kinda haunts me to this day) The lighting was so intense and ill never forget the fear I saw in one of the teachers faces when we were told to go inside. There is no doubt we narrowly escaped this tornado and I am so lucky to be typing this now. I am only now realizing 25 years later that I was seeing the darkness of death right in front of me. Us kids had no idea the severity of it. Big thanks to the teachers for keeping us calm. God bless

  • @heatherhillman1
    @heatherhillman1 Před rokem +24

    When it goes all calm and quiet is exactly when you should be worried.

    • @wadewilson8011
      @wadewilson8011 Před rokem +9

      That's what Tim Samaras told Carl Young before they got hit by a sub-vortices of El Reno.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před měsícem

      ​@@wadewilson8011 How did you know that?

  • @nunyabidness1888
    @nunyabidness1888 Před 10 měsíci +12

    At 16:42 several of the residents comment how the authorities wouldn't let them go back to their homes. That is true. The people who were displaced and removed from that area were sent to the Baptist Church in Jarrell. They were angry because for three days, they were not allowed into the destroyed area where their homes were at. Believe me, it would have been an incredible cruelty to allow them back into that area before it was secured and cleared by the emergency responders. We knew the residents were mad at us, but it didn't matter. They just didn't understand.

    • @theresedavis2526
      @theresedavis2526 Před 8 měsíci

      They should've been told then. Why shield them?

    • @nunyabidness1888
      @nunyabidness1888 Před 8 měsíci +10

      @@theresedavis2526 And tell them what? That we were picking up body parts ground up in mud and debris? That we honestly couldn't tell what were human or animal remains from the pot roast that came out of someone's freezer? That the pile of skin and intestines we were putting in a trash bag with a stick could only be identified as animal by the color of the fat attached to it? No, we chose to keep that nightmare to ourselves and not share it until we were absolutely certain all traces of bodies, body parts, whether animal or human had been removed. We also had a duty to determine where the bodies/parts originated and did rudimentary surveying to mark locations, measure them from existing concrete slabs and so forth in order to help determine where they came from and perhaps their identity. All this while everything there was covered in a foot of mud and ground up debris from homes, etc.
      We explained to the families and residents what was prudent to say. Remember, many of the first responders there knew these victims too. Some were related to them.

  • @shelleystrain7198
    @shelleystrain7198 Před 2 lety +43

    I remember this day all too well. I remember how it was early in the morning and it was so muggy. What was turning out to be a beautiful day would be a very sad day for me and my family. My dad took his life early that morning. Later on that day, we were at my parent's house. I was outside talking to people I knew and it was so muggy still. I remember looking up at the sky and these huge, white football shaped clouds were moving really fast from southwest to northeast. I remember thinking how fast they were moving and the wind wasn't blowing at all. Anyway the next day I saw on tv where a huge tornado had hit a small town in Texas and that there were people missing and homes missing. I remember seeing pieces of the roads were gone. I was grieving my dad, so I just remember some of the news footage. I do remember people were talking about that tornado. Years later, I started watching documentaries on CZcams and have read several stories about that tornado. My heart goes out to the people that lost their lives that day and to the people that lost their loved ones. God Bless you.

    • @celiajane4250
      @celiajane4250 Před 11 měsíci +3

      So sorry for you, that you had to go through all that.

  • @seniordavidmanderson9232
    @seniordavidmanderson9232 Před rokem +37

    Hello, I am retired senior citizen and my grandson is a new meteorologist (congrats). We had family gathering last month and of course my first question to him, "which tornado was most powerful," without hesitation he said, "Jarrell." Then he pulled out his laptop and proceeded to show me some Jarrell ground/aerial photos, and those vacant concrete slabs were visually shocking. He also said, "twisting speed was 300 mph but what made this tornado so extraordinary was it's slow movement intensifying it's destruction substantially." So here i am and what i researched myself in 30 days was mesmerizing yet eerie. First and foremost R.I.P. to those that perished and my condolences to all family members/friends.
    27 deaths caused by the tornado occurred within one subdivision of Jarrell, a neighborhood of 38 well built houses called Double Creek Estates. Each residence was completely swept away and reduced to a concrete slab. The twister produced some of the most extreme ground scouring ever documented as the earth at and around Double Creek was scoured out to depths of 18 inches reducing lush fields of grass to vast expanses of mud. The tornado left an unbroken swath of barren earth vacant of fences, telephone poles, trees, pavement and homes that once dotted the landscape. Cars and heavy wreckers were granulated into small pieces and scattered across the earth never to be identified, think about that for a ..moment.
    The cause of death for most of the victims was tactfully listed by the county coroner as "multiple trauma", although the truth was obviously far more grisly and difficult to explain to next of kin. Human and animal body parts reportedly littered the area for miles, creating an unbearable stench of decay. Police were forced to close off the entire area as a biohazard zone for weeks as cadaver dogs worked to find human body parts buried throughout the wreckage. Pieces were spread out on the floor of a local volunteer fire department - recovery teams tried to distinguish human remains from animal remains. Most had to be identified through dental records. Many were never recovered at all. What a nightmare.
    Timothy P. Marshall is a structural and forensic engineer as well as meteorologist. He has conducted more than 10,000 damage surveys of tornadoes, hurricanes and hailstorms. Tim is best of the best and after surveying Jarrell he said, "Houses were obliterated. The destruction was so intense, it serves as a baseline for which all other tornadoes are rated against."
    Regardless if tornado is moving forward at 8 mph or 80 mph, fact remains that so many surveyors consider Double Creek storm to be the most catastrophic tornado in terms of intensity still today 2022. I've seen photographs of Bridge Creek, Hackleburg-Phil Cambell, Bakersfield Valley, Smithville, Pomeroy, Udall, Brandenburg, Pampa, Parkersburg, Loyal Valley, Philadelphia-MS, Plainfield, Greensburg, Xenia, El Reno, Joplin and they do not compare to Double Creek Estates duration intensity, Nothing Does.
    I've learned and seen enough
    What did i learn ?
    That "Dead Man Walking" is an understatement
    And my advice ?
    If you see one,
    RUN !!!!

    • @eltiofresca4998
      @eltiofresca4998 Před rokem +1

      Well, your meteorologist grandson didn´t understand the situation a lot (no offense). Jarrell wasn't the strongest, the tornado moved incredibly slow therefore did way more damage than it could with only its winds, they were definitely EF5 but not 310+.

    • @eltiofresca4998
      @eltiofresca4998 Před rokem +4

      But if we are talking about damage, Jarrell was the strongest one, if you mean windspeeds, then I don't agree, sorry.

    • @seniordavidmanderson9232
      @seniordavidmanderson9232 Před rokem +7

      @@eltiofresca4998 Wikipedia has May 3, 1999 Bridge Creek-Moore Oklahoma tornado as fastest ever recorded. Do not get confused, it's not the fastest twisting tornado ever, just the fastest recorded by Doppler on Wheels (DOW) and less than 1% of all tornadoes ever recorded has had their speed measured by DOW because it's almost impossible to accomplish.
      Imagine driving a huge Doppler truck right next to an F/EF5 tornado going through traffic, cornfields, creeks, trees, rivers, fences, buildings, etc. Besides it's not accurate, hence the +22 / -22 mph variable added to all measured DOW readings. Also, was the Bridge Creek-Moore reading 200 feet high into the tornado or was it measured at ground level?
      "Tornado winds rapidly decrease near the ground due to friction. So having measured tornado winds several hundred feet above ground does not guarantee that we know what the speeds are at roof-top level. Survey team does not take into account radar-estimated-winds into the equation" - NOAA
      There is currently no way of knowing the true wind speeds of any tornado. The most accurate way is to survey ground/aerial damage then stamp an EF0 1 2 3 4 5 label on it. Bridge Creek-Moore vs Double Creek-Jarrell, all the evidence is there to witness and there is no comparison. Double Creek Estates is the worst localized damage in Tornado History.
      In 1997, mobile Doppler radars were in their infancy, and none were deployed on the Jarrell storm. Based on its destruction the Jarrell tornado 'easily' earned an F5 rating on the original Fujita scale, which corrresponded to 'estimated' gusts of 261 - 318 mph. So how do they come up with all these 'estimated' mph gusts? From professional surveyors surveying the damages. Not readings from Mobile Doppler on Wheels.

    • @eltiofresca4998
      @eltiofresca4998 Před rokem +1

      @@seniordavidmanderson9232 if we are talking about strongest, then check out smithville, did more violent damage than jarrell (you already checked it out but considering how many tornadoes you checked out i dont think you digged in them properly)

    • @Frapucheno
      @Frapucheno Před rokem +3

      @@eltiofresca4998
      he has I can attest the scouring isn’t the same
      Jarrell was lethal bro

  • @fakenorwegian4743
    @fakenorwegian4743 Před rokem +15

    This was a well produced, respectful segment.

  • @TrungHoang-jm5kt
    @TrungHoang-jm5kt Před 9 měsíci +9

    I think Gary England from KWTV and Jim Spencer from KXAN are the best storm trackers ever.

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Před rokem +18

    I've been through 2 storms that hit the coast of New England, 1978 4' of ocean slush in our living room, 1991 swept the house out to sea but this storm and that image of the walking man is etched into my mind, knowing how violent and slow it progressed over those poor people breaks my heart, even all these years later. RIP🙏

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem

      This thing literally mutilated people and livestock. Turning them into hamburger and the ground scouring is just on another level. No Tornado did what this thing did

  • @LweissTTU
    @LweissTTU Před 17 dny +1

    I worked at DPS headquarters that day. At the time my office was below ground. My daughter called terrified because she thought the tornado was coming towards where we lived in South Austin. I left to go home, and I was driving down North Lamar heading south, I looked in my rear view mirror, and looking north, it was pitched black. Once I got home, I found out what had happened in Jarrell. It was a day, and time, I won’t ever forget.

  • @jessicamessicak
    @jessicamessicak Před rokem +8

    I was 9 years old living in Hewitt. It was a very eerie day, 1st time hearing Tornado sirens. 🙏

  • @coryanntopanga
    @coryanntopanga Před 2 lety +50

    I remember watching an indepth documentary about this day. It was well done, capturing the living nightmare the people of this town went thru. What made my hair stand on end the most was the freeze frame of the tornado as it swept across the land. It looked like a gigantic monster. The vortices that danced around this tornado gave it the appearance of having legs, walking ominously across homes and pastures on a mission to devastate everything near. This thing stripped the skin off of cattle, wiped out entire family's, scalped the earth of grass and turned straws of hay into flying daggers. There are giant machinery and appliances that were never found. It was just... gone. I've watched many many documentaries on tornadoes, but none of them made me feel the way that particular documentary did. It scared the crap out of me and I wasn't even there! I was in a small town outside of Houston far away. My God. Smh Rest in peace to everyone who died and my heart and sympathy will forever be with those who survived. 🙏❤️❤️❤️

    • @flowerfaerie8931
      @flowerfaerie8931 Před rokem +7

      I saw that documentary as a young kid. At that time I didn’t really understand what exactly had happened and lived in fear of some shapeless malevolent entity called the “deadman” for some time. Looking back I’m still not entirely convinced it wasn’t exactly that, this thing was a monster.

    • @Strafuzz
      @Strafuzz Před rokem +5

      Hell on earth

    • @nileprimewastaken
      @nileprimewastaken Před rokem +4

      that is one of the most famous tornado pictures ever. basically there was a native american legend that if you see the "dead man walking", you will die. lo and behold, this monster f5 just so happens to morph into the shape of 2 legs and a scythe just before completely wiping a neighborhood off the map.

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem +5

      It literally ripped people to shreds some were only identified by their dental records. No other Tornado I knew of did this kind of damage. Mainly bc it literally stalled

    • @wadewilson8011
      @wadewilson8011 Před rokem +3

      ​@@TJ89741 mainly because of the incredible windspeeds. The stalling just made it worse.
      Two example of forward speed has little to do with the damage intensity:
      The 1990 Hesston KS tornado was an F5. It was slow moving and didn't do the damage done in Jarrell.
      Smithville was a EF5 that had a forward moving speed of around 65mph. And it did the same damage as Jarrell, just not on a grander scale.

  • @artisticdriver4218
    @artisticdriver4218 Před 2 lety +15

    God Bless the survivors

  • @A_Muzik
    @A_Muzik Před 2 lety +8

    My heart especially goes out to Kristin.

  • @DavidLopez-ex9sd
    @DavidLopez-ex9sd Před rokem +6

    I remember a family of 3 from Laredo lived there in Jarrell unfortunately the young mother and her two sons tried to escape but they didn't make it..

  • @missy448
    @missy448 Před 2 lety +12

    Wow! Such a great mini documentary. Great work KXAN, and bless all the families in Jerrell. We will never forget. ❤️

  • @tunabean2109
    @tunabean2109 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Wow this was in depth. I’m so sorry to everyone who went through this.

  • @NeonClock
    @NeonClock Před rokem +15

    There are some Tornadoes where you can go, "That Tornado was really a F4 Tornado." but it's given a F5 rating. This Tornado... this Tornado was a certain no-doubter that it was a F5.

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem

      Absolutely right and it moved so slow

    • @Spade_WX
      @Spade_WX Před rokem +1

      Nope. If it went normal tornado speed it would have not done that much damahe

    • @wadewilson8011
      @wadewilson8011 Před rokem +3

      ​@@Spade_WX you're completely WRONG. The 1990 Hesston KS tornado was slow moving and it didn't to the damage intensity that was done in Jarrell.
      Smithville was fast moving and did the same damage as Jerrall. So your research isn't credible if you believe the Jarrell tornado wasn't powerful. You don't know what you're talking about.

    • @bearzdlc2172
      @bearzdlc2172 Před měsícem +1

      @@wadewilson8011 jarrel was not that powerful. it literally only did so much destruction because it sat in place. smithville did the level of damage jarrel did in half a fucking second of traveling.

  • @sherry8894
    @sherry8894 Před 7 dny

    So terrifying! Certainly a day nobody could ever forget. RIP to all who lost their lives that day!And their families ❤

  • @WanderingRoe
    @WanderingRoe Před rokem +12

    The Jarrell tornado scares me more than any other which is saying something. May every lost soul RIP and I pray for comfort for the survivors…

    • @danadoozer9990
      @danadoozer9990 Před rokem

      Same here, that tornado was horrifying!

    • @bearzdlc2172
      @bearzdlc2172 Před měsícem

      not really. jarrel is not scary at all. you can just get away from its path easily and you live. and it was in broad daylight. an actual scary tornado would be hackleburg which was long tracked, couldnt tell it was coming and moving nearly 70 mph and doing ef5 damage nearly its entire life span. jarrel is not scary at all

    • @pamelaleigh4225
      @pamelaleigh4225 Před měsícem

      ​@@bearzdlc2172competitive
      tornadoes! Well, I bet the victims were scared. And the damage... unprecedented.

  • @PacificAirwave144
    @PacificAirwave144 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I'm an Oregon native...you celebrate a good lightening storm here--such beauty! Visited the Austin, TX area a couple times mid-Summer...one trip to Ft. Myers, FL mid Summer. The storms they get out there are crazy, scary! Exploring South of Ft. Meyers and there were 4 or 5 thunderclouds piling up. 15-20 miles away. I pull into a huge roadside turn-out to get some pictures and a lightning bolt hit the palm trees 60' away. In the care...leg going like a sowing machine...I was so scared! No storm clouds for 15-20 miles. I can't imagine going to sleep in the mid-West with storm warnings. Enjoyable little storms here in Oregon. Glad to come across this video.

  • @celiajane4250
    @celiajane4250 Před 11 měsíci +2

    An F5 tornado hit Lubbock Tx 5/11/1970, killing 26 people, 255 people with significant injuries, and 1,500 with minor injuries. I lived in Amarillo at the time, and saw the destruction in Lubbock. 1,100 homes destroyed, 8,876 homes damaged. The tornado contributed to the Fujita scale development.

  • @chloehennessey6813
    @chloehennessey6813 Před rokem +6

    A man in a city 50 miles away found photo albums from families in Jarrell.
    50 miles.
    Photo albums, clothing articles.

  • @TJ89741
    @TJ89741 Před rokem +7

    What I couldn’t believe about this monster was how fast it went from pencil to wedge and how slow it moved. This was probably the worst ground scouring ever recorded. This thing grinded things into hamburger including people and animals. Probably a once in 500 year event. Imagine 250-300 mph winds sitting over the same area for multiple minutes at a time. I call this Tornado The Mutilator

  • @smalltownglobalproductions
    @smalltownglobalproductions Před 21 dnem +1

    Everybody is talking about it being sunny but it is often sunny before the storm comes in. The storm uses the heat of the day and the cool of the evening with a cold front to mix together. That is what forms tornadoes.

  • @sawyersgirl5142
    @sawyersgirl5142 Před rokem +3

    I was 16 when that happened. I was in Dallas, creepy storm from what they showed on tv back then was worse than the current videos on CZcams.

  • @dtex301
    @dtex301 Před 11 měsíci +3

    My father and I watched the Jarrell tornado from our home in Salado. Close to Eight miles away, yet we could feel the air being sucked from our lungs.we couldn’t hear the roar of the tornado but we could feel the rumbling on the ground.

  • @alexis_ianf
    @alexis_ianf Před 2 lety +15

    Even in my early years I was fascinated with Tornados I first heard about Jarrell in a documentary airing on NatGeo it discuss how F5 tornado can grow in sized from a tiny rope to a large wedge tornado the winds are so intense it actually suck dust making it bigger. Though it missed some important details like its struture being a multi-vortex tornado with three sub vortex inside the parent cerculation can actually effect ground damage one oddity about this tornado is its slow ground speed usually violent tornado travels travel at high speeds. But this tornado was so slow almost walking speed it actually cause more destruction litirally obliterating everything it tochess which makes among the most intense tornado if not they most intense so far

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem

      The sub vorticies did most of the damage and had the strongest winds

  • @HyBr1dRaNg3r
    @HyBr1dRaNg3r Před rokem +4

    You can say what you want about GW, but “it sucked the life out of the earth” was a good way to put it…This Jarrell tornado is just so nuts. Watching how small the damn thing was at the beginning and then it just exploded as it sat on the Double Creek homes and families😔 it was like a beautiful, slender apparition and then became like a finger of god…I’ve loved tornadoes since before Twister, but that movie kinda fails on how terrifying the violent tornadoes truly are…The “jumping” F3 in that movie got pretty close to the menace, if only they could have did the F5 as well as the f3😕
    I’ve also noticed how insanely different THE SAME tornado can look from multiple filming areas😨I can see how chasers can get caught off guard because they could be seeing something completely different that what someone on the opposite side would see😕
    Jarrell is such a unique event, best wishes to all impacted🥺

  • @markwillmann6804
    @markwillmann6804 Před rokem +3

    That day I was working for Austin Power and Light and was off of I-35 on the hill above KLBJ Radio doing maintenance and looking North...and you could see a storm coming...worked next 24 hrs...

  • @bmax1234
    @bmax1234 Před rokem +6

    The restaurant the chili’s manager referenced (roof came off) was a “El Chico”, NOT a El Fenix. Just FYI.

  • @aquillafleetwood4209
    @aquillafleetwood4209 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I used to live in Cedar Park!
    I live in eastTexas now! We
    have bad storms here too! I
    have a tornado shelter, so I
    feel safer!

  • @RagingMoon1987
    @RagingMoon1987 Před rokem +8

    Kristin LaFrance...she's a toughie!

  • @Sushi2735
    @Sushi2735 Před 11 měsíci +6

    I am 71 and have never see one in my life!! Thank God! But, lived in Atlanta when one hit downtown!
    THERE SHOULD BE BUILDING CODES THE REQIRE STORM SHELTERS IN THESE STATES, IN EACH NEW BUILD. WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE BUBBAS.???

  • @BunnyQueen97
    @BunnyQueen97 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I know it’s easy to say things when we aren’t there, but I grew up in Georgia and we had pretty crazy tornadoes and tropical storms. When Katrina hit, my mom got my ten year old self, my twin sister, her pretty big self, our two medium sized dogs, and our Guinea pig into the bathtub once.

  • @mattkowal90
    @mattkowal90 Před rokem +2

    Looking up violent tornadoes that have struck in Texas since Jarrell, there was only one more violent (F4-F5) that occurred before the Enhanced Fujita-Scale was implemented, a F4 that struck Loyal Valley about one month after the Oklahoma City Metro F5 in 1999. The first violent tornado to strike Texas in the new millennium was Granbury on May 15th, 2013. After that: Garland-Rowlett on 12/26/2015, Eustace-Canton #1 on 4/29/2017, and two that struck West of Texarkana on November 4th, 2022, that hit Powderly with the other hitting Clarksville.

  • @vinny4411
    @vinny4411 Před rokem +5

    Dead man walking into Jarrell…

  • @Strafuzz
    @Strafuzz Před rokem +3

    There may have been bigger and more destructive tornados. But this one shakes me to my core. Horrible.

    • @wadewilson8011
      @wadewilson8011 Před rokem

      There have been bigger tornados. There have tornados that destroyed larger areas (coveted more land). But NONE have been more destructive: Not in the area that hit Double Creek subdivision. Only the 2011 Smithville tornado came close to the same kind of damage intensity as Jarrell.

    • @danadoozer9990
      @danadoozer9990 Před rokem

      Yeah, this one scares me the most. Just knowing that mother nature can produce a beast like this is terrifying. Storms like this are why I take tornado warnings very seriously

  • @Chrisx005x
    @Chrisx005x Před 2 lety +23

    It's honestly a miracle that more people weren't killed by this tornado considering it was an F5 with the attitude of an F6 hyperbolically (Jarrell to me, pound-for-pound is still the very worst damage over a confined area in climatological history. Definitely a candidate for literally being the most intense tornado ever) saying of course and that a lot of the survivors became motorists in their cars to outrun the funnel which saved their lives. Almost one hundred percent of the time that leads to bad results. But in the case of Jarrell, if you were above ground not in shelter and in the core path because of the crawling forward velocity, you basically had no chances. And I'm not morbidly obsessing over the shock value of that or certainly not glossing over the loss of life either. It is what is. I'm so sorry that there even was a death toll with the natural disasters that day in '97. They all have their own unique stories passed on from their loved ones and they're all fondly remembered.

    • @rossie714
      @rossie714 Před rokem +3

      Love your rational take on this. The slow forward movement had everything to do with nature of the damage left in its wake. People tend to be hyperfocused on wind speed, but in that regard Jarrell likely didn’t exceed F-3. It was the duration of the pounding that elevated damage to F-5. Even the crazy things-animals skinned, pavement sheared from roads etc. can happen in F-3 winds if subjected to them over a long period of time.

    • @Chrisx005x
      @Chrisx005x Před rokem +2

      @@rossie714 Thanks for the mutual support. I've heard that before that Jarrell possibly only had sustained at that time F3 level winds (To be fair, I don't think that could be true because violent tornadoes that were confirmed to have closer to two hundred mile per winds officially with mobile doppler units and such and even moved more slowly than Jarrell didn't even leave a trace of damage comparable to the vein of Jarrell's so that structural impacts registered would have to correspond to F5 level winds and not to mention visually the sizzling upward motion revealed the horizontal vortices within the main condensation funnel's multi vortex wedge and that's always consistent with EF4-to-EF5 rated tornadoes. Yeah, they were strong tornadoes, but again the science with the damage intensity was far removed from the desolation at the Double Creek Estates. 'Cause even a meandering tornado can only do so much if it's limited by its overall strength. With the cape values being so high that day the actual rotation for all signatures on radar were going to be visually telling anyway. Granted there wasn't a lot of lift or the low level shear in the atmosphere that day, but as I understand it with cape levels literally exploding and manifesting what little tilt is there, in theory any kind of circulations would a have a lower cloud base and therefore be more likely to be intense by default. Case in point with the Smithville EF5 parameters among other tornadic events as I've had it both taught and reexplained to me. Even in the tornado's earlier development in southern Bell county before it crossed the Williamson county line, dissipated shortly and then of course became the monster that it was, it didn't seem like it was just an F2 over Prairie Dell. It looked as if it had unseen power and especially since from what I've read it lifted the top off a reinforced concrete shelter. It probably was just an earlier phase in its genesis. It's been rumored that it was a landspout/mesocyclone hybrid and the overall timing was dialed in perfectly for the conditions. All tornadoes even seemingly innocuous ones are important though for their research and everyone's safety of course. But I'm just saying the other thing as well) although on the other hand I've came across one report that suggested it might've had for brief seconds four hundred mile per wind gusts on the backside of the suction vortices past the helicity of the very core and that possibly could be fact. We'll never know sadly, but it is what it is. I wouldn't hold it past it that somewhere in the background if there ever is any kind of measuring stick for an EF6 tornado, Jarrell arguably came the closest to that being remotely actualized and perhaps encapsulated that somewhere in the background? I've studied unbiased rankings of the most destructive tornadoes in recorded almanacs and I came across a series of metrics that connoted the Smithville EF5 as being the very strongest considering it was basically a quickly moving Jarrell scenario and curved an underground pipe allegedly backwards among some other unprecedented feats in its wake. And the debris granulation in certain locations rivaled that of Jarrell's with it leaving no trace of shrubs in addition to dismemberment of both humans and animals all too unfortunately, but still think Jarrell was the very strongest that we know of considering simply what it did even with the sheer force of the lofted debris playing a heavier role in the destruction aside from just the winds themselves. 'Cause while Smithville and other tornadoes possibly had more overall potential to them, nothing equates to that severity of damage over a singularly confined place where literally even the earth's crust looks like it was ravaged and or raked. There was no powder left. I know the Phil Campbell EF5 (Although, there's debate of that of course especially when stacked alongside Mayfield from last year and the Tri State event, but still) had the longest path of continuously recorded EF5 damage in history, but its lethality was astronomically lower than Jarrell's because it was basically unsurvivable above ground. I wish in an ideal world that everyone had military style underground bunkers or at least shelters in all corners of both the Midwest and Deep South. At least in the most tornadically prone areas of the country. We would dramatically reduce the overall amounts of all fatalities of course.

    • @patricklaurojr7427
      @patricklaurojr7427 Před rokem +1

      More ppp weren't killed cuZ wasn't a big town was nothing like size if joplin or moore

    • @Chrisx005x
      @Chrisx005x Před rokem

      @@patricklaurojr7427 That's a fair statement, yes. But again, some of the survivor testimonies I've read would've more-than-likely added to the death toll in droves had they not outran the storm. Not the smartest idea, I know. But Jarrell literally was the lone exception to an almost one hundred percent of the time rule. Not to mention the lone families that had underground shelters and that the tornado killed almost as many people in the '99 Moore / Bridge Creek F5 in relatively an eighth of the same distance. I think the Smithville EF5 honestly rivals Jarrell in so many categories to measure overall strength and perhaps it had more potential considering it did Jarrell-like damage in many spots given the fact it was moving seven times faster than Jarrell's recorded speed, but still think that Jarrell consistently takes the cake in terms of actually generated damage power. However, this discussion of the strongest tornadoes is kind of trivial since all violent-to-seemingly innocuous funnels should all be taken seriously for research.

    • @patricklaurojr7427
      @patricklaurojr7427 Před rokem +1

      @@Chrisx005x yea I agree with smithville that is a very under rated tornado because wasn't a big town amd wasn't many cameras on it. That thing threw suv into water tower threw a double wide trailer almost 200yards without hitting ground and than bounced another 100. Literally took a guy in his car and kept the guy in car airborne for quarter of mile. And dug 2 ft into ground fields looked like was just plowed by a machine. I'll send you a a link of a phenomenal best timeline of smithville I ever seen. FYI I also feel Tuscaloosa got robbed out of f5 as well. Check this link out

  • @ancientanunnaki8251
    @ancientanunnaki8251 Před měsícem +1

    I was home in Copperas Cove tuat day doing laundry in my garage and when I went outside and looked at the sky, it looked ominious.

  • @kevinalford2165
    @kevinalford2165 Před rokem +2

    At 7:08 you can tell that is one of the most intense tornadoes off all-time

  • @Overlycomplicatedswede
    @Overlycomplicatedswede Před 14 dny +2

    This tornado has a very recognizable picture taken of it and this tornado also nearly hit a airforce base with nuclear weapons on planes at that base
    nothing about this tornado isn’t terrifying

  • @leapinglizard3937
    @leapinglizard3937 Před 21 dnem +1

    Remember the monster that "walked" into Jarrell.
    Remember the town that gave us the knowledge.
    Remember the 27 that still watches over us all.

  • @GrandmaBev64
    @GrandmaBev64 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow. These are getting worse and worse.

  • @BunnyQueen97
    @BunnyQueen97 Před 11 měsíci +1

    It didn’t throw the cars into the distance, it OBLITERATED THEM. That’s crazy. I lived really close to the town that took the harshest blow from deadliest fire in CA history, people were incinerated when their propane tanks exploded. There’s something really humbling when nature zaps us like helpless bugs.

  • @johng.7560
    @johng.7560 Před měsícem +1

    The really sad thing is that they could have even ridden a bicycle away from the tornado and survived, it was moving so slowly. They certainly could escape it in a car, one time when the accepted instructions for staying safe were dead wrong.

  • @protow5041
    @protow5041 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I live in California and even I know that if the clouds look green that you take shelter and turn on the news

  • @dabs4602
    @dabs4602 Před rokem +1

    We live in a fairly tornado active are in southern Canada and I remember my dad saying when we were young kids if you ever see the sky turn green get in the nearest ditch. that was only place to take any shelter.

  • @ned6938
    @ned6938 Před 6 měsíci

    I wad a truck driver at the time and was staying about 10 minutes ahead of that storm trying to head south.

  • @inthedarkwoods2022
    @inthedarkwoods2022 Před rokem +7

    If you love your family, you will have a storm shelter

    • @steveprevesk6627
      @steveprevesk6627 Před rokem +4

      I completely agree with your statement. in fact I will go as far as to say if you are a parent of a family living in tornado alley and you don't have a storm cellar it's negligence. One more thing, there are companies who sell above ground storm shelters and that's a good thing. They claim they can withstand an F5 tornado. But an above ground shelter in this tornado? The Jarrelll tornado? I don't believe for one second you would've survived in anything but maybe a deep storm cellar. The outflow seen in the video demonstrates this was a multi generational event that we might not ever see again.

    • @inthedarkwoods2022
      @inthedarkwoods2022 Před rokem

      @@steveprevesk6627 You are wrong if you don't think an above ground storm shelter is just as strong as a below ground. The difference is above ground per FEMA standards has to use steel reinforced rebar (every 12 inches) to compensate for strength. Above ground storm shelters can and do survive the strongest tornados. You don't have to be below ground to be 100% safe. That is a myth.

    • @steveprevesk6627
      @steveprevesk6627 Před rokem +2

      @@inthedarkwoods2022 Well first, I'm not wrong because you don't know any more than I do that anything above ground could've survived those winds, for that long. I know all about shelters that survived Moore and Joplin but even those tornados do not compare with the slow forward speed of Jarrell. I've heard countless meteorologists say that unless you were below ground it was an unsurvivable event. What is a myth is anybody saying an above-ground shelter in Jarrell would've been 100% safe.

    • @Frapucheno
      @Frapucheno Před rokem +2

      @@steveprevesk6627 lmao Ironically enough there was a guy in double creek that built one and survived Jarrell 👀
      Whatever gave him that idea saved his life

  • @amandaread6842
    @amandaread6842 Před rokem +4

    There talking about the tornado that took the Igo family so show love please also Igo elementary school is the school my daughter goes to

  • @aliyeberzati2287
    @aliyeberzati2287 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I hope that they built more underground shelters

  • @lualncol
    @lualncol Před rokem

    Very good video.

  • @JeffGes
    @JeffGes Před 7 měsíci

    I drove down I-35 from Dallas and saw how badly damaged I-35 was in that mile-or-so north of town, and then I-35 veers to the west slightly, but the tornado kept going straight. It was awesome and horrible to see.

  • @relic21ja
    @relic21ja Před 11 měsíci +2

    Wow I remember this day I was at work on parmer ln Sonic drive in and it was cloudy and me and some co workers got on the roof to smoke some weed and you could see the clouds piling up it turned black almost green and the we saw it in the distance and then bang you could see it form Over round rock and then all the first responders you could see the light they were getting ready to go in

  • @chad3452
    @chad3452 Před měsícem +1

    this story should have way more likes 👇

  • @CarolRogers50
    @CarolRogers50 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It destroyed that town

  • @Spade_WX
    @Spade_WX Před rokem +3

    It really wasn’t that strong. It was only strong cuz it stalled. Anyone saying “it got to 400+ winds!” Is lying. Most winds is 200 which is F2-3

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem

      That’s true about the stalling part but any tornado with winds at or over 200 mph can produce F5 damage. Hence why the EF scale was born with more “ realistic “ wind speeds. And I think that scale is fraudulent in some ways.

  • @glendamaikell4224
    @glendamaikell4224 Před 2 lety

    Well done

  • @mwoo252
    @mwoo252 Před 11 měsíci +1

    My God

  • @robinnicol7534
    @robinnicol7534 Před rokem

    I just turned 12 years old 21/2 weeks prior to that

  • @kerielmore823
    @kerielmore823 Před 11 měsíci

    😢

  • @KerriFromTX
    @KerriFromTX Před rokem +1

    What do you mean by "the last F5 to hit" ? I'm confused because there has been F5s since Jarrell's. You mean the last F5 to hit specifically the town of Jarrell ?

    • @snoodlebug1800
      @snoodlebug1800 Před rokem +9

      Last F5 to hit the state of Texas :) the wording confused me too

    • @Astro95Media
      @Astro95Media Před rokem +8

      Interestingly enough ... it was the fourth-to-final tornado to be rated F5. Bridgecreek-Moore was the final F5 ever. Everything after that (starting with Greensburg) was EF5.

    • @RagingMoon1987
      @RagingMoon1987 Před rokem +4

      It's the last F5 to hit Texas as rated on the old scale.

    • @danadoozer9990
      @danadoozer9990 Před rokem

      Because the Fujita scale was changed and tornadoes are now on the EF scale instead of the older F scale. This tornado made meteorologists view everything differently, the damage was off the charts.

  • @TTT-du6oj
    @TTT-du6oj Před 11 měsíci

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @TheRivrPrncess
    @TheRivrPrncess Před rokem +4

    If it takes less wind to become an EF-5 on the new EF scale then there shouldn't be as many EF4's then there are since the new scale was in operation. There should be more EF-5's. The new scale is very faulty.

    • @carlmay9532
      @carlmay9532 Před rokem

      I’m trying to understand what you’re trying to say.

    • @TJ89741
      @TJ89741 Před rokem

      You’re right about that. So many tornadoes have been misrated because of that and that is a huge disservice to the public. Mayfield’s storm was an F5 Easily it ripped pavement off roads and scoured the ground at least a foot deep in some locations

  • @gina-gz2zs
    @gina-gz2zs Před 11 měsíci

    Did that sign read, early 1900s when the tornado hit?

  • @adammeade2300
    @adammeade2300 Před rokem

    Great documentary, but the sound engineer pooped the bed. Was constantly chasing the varying volume across different segments and interviews.

  • @user-xc9oh6fs4s
    @user-xc9oh6fs4s Před 10 měsíci +1

    Whares the sirens

  • @cinaannie7338
    @cinaannie7338 Před rokem

    😔😔😔😔😔🙏

  • @Sushi2735
    @Sushi2735 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I am so glad the the female news caster found this so extremely funny!!!!! I would think it was extremely funny if they FIRED HER LAUGHING BACKSIDE 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @michaelmagic988
    @michaelmagic988 Před 3 měsíci

    they should have interviewed the livestock that survived lol

  • @jhrdailies
    @jhrdailies Před 25 dny

    And an EF Scale itself also become outdated by time.. I mean well... It's also biased for not measuring the wind speed itself..
    EF5 are being underestimated since they're not happening anymore right? 😌😂

  • @Sushi2735
    @Sushi2735 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Why would you NOT find a way to protect your family! Move out of that hell hole of a state.
    Rent a house with a basement, anywhere but there!! If you can afford to burry five people, you can afford payments on a shelter!

    • @theresedavis2526
      @theresedavis2526 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Actually, there was nothing much to bury. They were found in pieces and identified by their dental records. But I understand what you're saying. No excuse for no shelters!

  • @RedHotMessResell
    @RedHotMessResell Před rokem +2

    Didn’t Twister come out in 1997? That had to be a low blow for these people who had to go through this.

    • @eveslady100
      @eveslady100 Před rokem +3

      Twister came out 96

    • @pamelaleigh4225
      @pamelaleigh4225 Před měsícem

      My ex worked on "Twister". Started great, then got cartoonish, IMO
      .

  • @aliyeberzati2287
    @aliyeberzati2287 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Jarrell is the type of tornado 🌪️ from Hell itself

  • @rscii497
    @rscii497 Před rokem

    11:58 - Delicious

  • @lauralamkay1246
    @lauralamkay1246 Před rokem +2

    I don't mean any disrespect but the lady hunkered down with her mother with a mattress over them asking her mom if they were going to die,.!! Really?? You can't ask someone during a tornado coming if you're going to die.! You look to a positive side within yourself to survive through it.

    • @danadoozer9990
      @danadoozer9990 Před rokem +1

      I don't really think we can judge what somebody said in that moment. The sheer terror, who knows what you might say if you really do think you might die!

    • @davidwilson6577
      @davidwilson6577 Před 10 měsíci +1

      She was 8.

    • @theresedavis2526
      @theresedavis2526 Před 8 měsíci +1

      She was eight years old!

    • @pamelaleigh4225
      @pamelaleigh4225 Před měsícem +1

      What an odd comment.

    • @sherry8894
      @sherry8894 Před 7 dny

      What? She was a scared 8 year old child!!! What do you expect? I would have been scared to death myself.

  • @TexasCowgirl
    @TexasCowgirl Před 2 lety +5

    Texas is flat but Jarrell up I35 you can how a tornado could go on for miles.

    • @coryanntopanga
      @coryanntopanga Před 2 lety +4

      Not all of Texas is flat, but it wouldn't matter anyway. Tornados can travel across lands that aren't flat with ease. It feels like nobody anywhere is safe from them. I was shocked to see a tornado that strong hit in Michigan this past Friday. It was so sad to see the aftermath of it. I think it was an F3. Smh

    • @Sj430
      @Sj430 Před rokem

      @@coryanntopanga the Gaylord Michigan tornado was rated as a EF3. Where that tornado hit is rare for that part of the state. But the state of Michigan average 15 tornadoes a year. The tornado range between EF0-EF3. EF4 and EF5 tornadoes are rare for the state of Michigan. The state only seen 2 F5 tornadoes. The Flint/Beecher happened in June of 1953 and the last F5 the state has seen happened in April 1956. The only F4 tornado I know hit port Huron in May 1953. Don't know if the state has seen any more F4 tornadoes.

    • @marcotron08
      @marcotron08 Před rokem

      @@Sj430 the what now Michigan tornado?

    • @Sj430
      @Sj430 Před rokem

      @@marcotron08 the Gaylord tornado it happened back in may of this year.

    • @marcotron08
      @marcotron08 Před rokem +1

      @@Sj430 OK, just a... Interesting town name to say the least

  • @ChrisBeenRaw
    @ChrisBeenRaw Před 2 měsíci +1

    Why did the worst disasters occur on George W. watch?

  • @leonardhill4440
    @leonardhill4440 Před 3 měsíci

    Praise Jesus for technology

  • @mikestone7353
    @mikestone7353 Před rokem +1

    What did they think, that almighty God would forget and forgive the horrible suffering, brutality, and rape of our black ancestors for over three centuries? And they still to this day haven’t connected the dots, including unfortunately some of our own people.

    • @theresedavis2526
      @theresedavis2526 Před 8 měsíci

      Tornadoes, hurricanes, volcanoes, and other natural disasters have been occurring since the Earth began. God doesn't care who is affected. Many good have suffered with the bad. Sad but true.

  • @erinlorca1240
    @erinlorca1240 Před 10 měsíci

    Mallory is annoying.

  • @missthang4982
    @missthang4982 Před 10 měsíci

    Not enough video footage so it's boring

  • @ericzerkle5214
    @ericzerkle5214 Před rokem +1

    Thank goodness we now have GPS!

  • @no-purpose-here
    @no-purpose-here Před rokem +3

    we must know this isnt the last F5, we can only learn and rebuild from these storms. god rest the souls lost in this storm and bless the ones that are due for one.

    • @pixelapocrypha
      @pixelapocrypha Před rokem +2

      It's the last F5 because we don't use the F system anymore, we use the EF system specifically because this tornado changed everything about how tornados and the speeds required to do this kind of damage were understood. So no matter what, that is the last F5.

    • @KK-tu5vd
      @KK-tu5vd Před rokem +1

      It wasn’t the last F5. The Bridge Creek/Moore tornado on May 3, 1999 was the last F5.

    • @seanpellegrino2989
      @seanpellegrino2989 Před 11 měsíci

      It says the Last F5 to hit Central Texas in the title. I don't think they're implying it was the very last F5 ever in the title.

  • @onesecureone
    @onesecureone Před rokem +1

    Sorry people but the worst is still yet to come according to the bible