Sunday,  May 5, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 289 • 16 of 31 •  Other Editions

(Continued from page 15)

basements. Basement water levels ranged from a few inches to very deep water all the way up to the first floor of homes. Many homes had basement walls collapse. The overwhelming load on the drainage systems caused sewage to back up into many homes across the region. Also, many vehicles stalled on the roads with many others damaged by the flooding. Power outages also occurred across the area. Many families were displaced from their homes with many living in emergency shelters. Countless homes were condemned across the region with many considered unlivable. Thousands of acres of crops were also flooded and damaged with many seeds and large quantities of fertilizer washed away. Rainfall amounts from this historic event included, 3.65 inches in Miller, 3.82 inches in Britton, 4 inches in Eden, 4.47 inches in Andover, 4.90 inches in Webster, 5.68 inches west of Britton, 5.7 inches in Garden City, and 5.82 inches in Conde. Locations with 6 or more inches of rain included, 6 inches in Langford, 6.33 inches in Gann Valley, 6.72 inches in Clark, 7.41 inches in Ashton, 7.49 inches in Stratford, 7.55 inches near Mellette, 7.97 inches in Aberdeen, 8.02 inches in Redfield, 8.73 inches in Columbia, and 8.74 inches in Groton. The 8.74 inches of rainfall in Groton set a new 24 hour state rainfall record. Adding in the rainfall for the previous day, Aberdeen received a total of 9.00 inches; Columbia received a total of 10.19 inches; Groton received an astonishing two day total rainfall of 10.74 inches.

1960: Sapulpa, OK was visited by an F5 tornado along its 70 mile long path. Three hundred homes were damaged in town. Also on this date, the U.S.'s record 5 minute rainfall amount was set at Alamogordo, NM, with 2.03".

1964: An F5 tornado destroyed a dozen farms in Clay and Hamilton Counties, NE.

1989: Damage was in the millions as a tornado cut a swath across Cleveland, Lincoln, and Catawba counties in North Carolina. The F4 killed 4 and injured 52.

1995: Two billion dollars damage was done in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex by a historic hailstorm. It's the most expensive single thunderstorm on record in the U.S.

2000: Possibly the largest hailstone ever recorded in Indiana, 4.5" in diameter, fell at Cayuga in Vermillion County.

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