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      During the evening hours of May 22, 2004, a long-tracked and extremely large F4 tornado formed during a tornado outbreak and tore through multiple counties in southeast Nebraska. The tornado damaged many towns along its path, but its most significant destructive effect occurred at the town of Hallam. The Hallam tornado is recognized by NOAA as the second-largest tornado on record, peaking at 2.5 miles (4.0 km) wide at Hallam, behind only the 2013 El Reno tornado.


      Tornado summary



      The Hallam tornado formed west and northwest of Daykin at 7:30 pm CDT at an F1 intensity on the Fujita Scale. One satellite tornado, rated F1, formed and quickly dissipated northeast of town. The main storm turned and traveled east-northeast from Daykin to a point south-southeast of Western and then to about 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Swanton. During this time, the tornado fluctuated between F0 and F1 in intensity, damaging farmhouses and silos. The tornado remained confined within the F0-F1 range until it hit southern Wilber, where it intensified to F2 strength and blew roofs off of structures. The tornado continued east-northeast, grazing the east side of Wilber as it moved towards Clatonia. Here it is estimated that the tornado reached F3 strength.
      After passing just northwest of Clatonia, the tornado became violent and moved through Hallam at 8:35 pm CDT, where damage reached high-end F4 in intensity. At Hallam, the tornado was a record-breaking 2.5 miles (4.0 km) wide, making it the widest tornado ever recorded at the time. Most houses in Hallam were completely demolished, along with farming equipment and other structures. A coal train was tossed off its tracks on the west side of town. Hallam escaped the most intense winds of the storm though, which were to the south. East of Hallam, damage was rated F2-F3 as the tornado turned east and began to cycle with a new circulation forming within the storm to the south of the tornado. It decreased in size to about 1 mile (1.6 km) as it passed north of Cortland, where it turned northeast and passed 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Firth. Norris School District 160 suffered severe damage, with the middle school being hit the worst. The auditorium roof and other walls within the school caved in. Buses were tossed and homes northeast of the school were flattened.
      The tornado then reached F4 intensity again as it continued northeast to Holland before weakening again as it passed north-northwest of Panama, where mostly F1 and F2 damage was observed. The tornado then tracked north-northeast to Bennet, where some houses received F3 damage. At Bennet, the tornado turned east-northeast and began to thin out. Damage east-northeast of Bennet was in the F0-F1 range. The tornado finally dissipated a mile west-southwest of Palmyra at 9:10 pm CDT.


      Damage



      The storm was long-lived, having been on the ground for more than 100 minutes. It was also a long-track tornado, having covered 52 miles (84 km). Even though it damaged towns and demolished many buildings, there were no damage-cost estimates available. The Hallam tornado became the widest on record until it was surpassed on May 31, 2013, by the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado, which had a width of 2.6 miles (4.2 km). Its width has since also been tied by the 2016 Jiangsu tornado. However, the Hallam tornado still holds the record for the largest condensation funnel recorded.


      See also


      Weather of 2004
      List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks
      List of F4 and EF4 tornadoes
      List of F4 and EF4 tornadoes (2000–2009)


      Notes




      References




      External links

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    2004 hallam tornado

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    2004 Hallam tornado - Wikipedia

    After passing just northwest of Clatonia, the tornado became violent and moved through Hallam at 8:35 pm CDT, where damage reached high-end F4 in intensity. At Hallam, the tornado was a record-breaking 2.5 miles (4.0 km) wide, making it the widest tornado ever recorded at the time.

    The May 22nd, 2004 Tornado Outbreak - National Weather Service

    May 22, 2004 was one of the worst severe weather outbreaks that affected south central and eastern Nebraska during the afternoon and evening hours. In south central Nebraska, no less than 17 different tornadoes rolled across the area, and the devastating Hallam, NE tornado also occurred in eastern Nebraska on this day.

    Hallam Nebraska Tornado May 2004 - National Weather Service

    The tornado clipped the southern portion of the town of Wilber, with the main part of the tornado passing just south of Wilber. There is a hook echo that has completely wrapped around to form a "donut" shape echo between the towns of Wilber and De Witt.

    Hallam Tornado 2004 - Village of Hallam

    May 22, 2004 · During the afternoon of May 22, 2004, a long-trackF4 tornado formed during a tornado outbreak and tore through multiple counties in southeast Nebraska. The tornado damaged many towns along its path, but its most significant destructive effect occurred at the town of Hallam.

    Tornadoes of 2004 - Wikipedia

    The Hallam, Nebraska, tornado on May 22 was the widest tornado ever recorded at the time at 2.5 miles (4.0 km) in diameter. The F4 tornado caused one death and 37 injuries in the city of Hallam. It was later surpassed by a massive 2.6 mile (4.2 km) twister that struck El …

    May 22, 2004 | The Hallam Tornado - KMTV 3 News Now Omaha

    May 22, 2023 · Significant damage to a home in Hallam. The tornado passed east of Hallam, missing other communities in southern Lancaster County like Hickman, Firth, Panama, and Bennet. Despite missing the towns, the tornado made a beeline for Norris High School.

    Tornado outbreak sequence of May 2004 - Wikipedia

    The Hallam, Nebraska tornado outbreak was an outbreak of 56 tornadoes in several Midwestern U.S. states on the evening of May 22, 2004 and the first of a series of tornado events. Most of the tornadoes occurred in Nebraska and Iowa .

    The 2004 Tornado In Hallam Was One Of The Worst Disasters In …

    Jan 11, 2018 · The 2004 Hallam tornado in Nebraska was one of the largest and most destructive tornadoes on record, causing significant damage and loss.

    PHOTOS: Remembering the Hallam tornado, one of the widest in …

    May 22, 2023 · The Hallam tornado on May 22, 2004, stayed on the ground for 52 miles, bringing death and destruction. One death and 38 injuries were reported.

    Hallam Tornado May 2004 WFO Omaha Text Information …

    the tornado from wilber to north of clatonia to hallam grew to its most intense stage. THE TORNADO'S PATH WIDTH ALSO INCREASED TO AN UNPRECIDENTED TWO AND ONE-HALF MILES. THE F-SCALE RATING FOR THE STORM WAS …