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Memorial to the 1890 tornado, on Main Street in downtown Louisville; images of the destruction, furnished by The Filson Historical Society, ring the structure at pedestrian level The Mid-Mississippi Valley Tornado Outbreak was a major tornado outbreak occurring in the middle United States on March 27, 1890. To this day, this outbreak is still the 25th most deadly storm in U.S. history. At least 24 significant tornadoes were recorded to have spawned from this system. The most notable of the spawned tornadoes was one measuring F4 on the Fujita scale, which visited Louisville, Kentucky. The tornado carved a path from the Parkland neighborhood all the way to Crescent Hill, destroying 766 buildings ($2½ million worth of property) and killing an estimated 74 to 120 people. At least 55 of those deaths occurred when the Falls City Hall collapsed. This is one of the highest death tolls due to a single building collapse from a tornado in U.S. history. The day after the destruction, the Louisville Courier-Journal labeled the tornado "the whirling tiger of the air". Due to the fast pace of reconstruction, there was almost no sign of this tornado having occurred just one year later. See also Columbia Building History of Louisville, Kentucky List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks Southern Exposition Super Outbreak References Yater, George H. (1987). Two Hundred Years at the Fall of the Ohio: A History of Louisville and Jefferson County (2nd edition ed.). Filson Club, Incorporated.  External links "Whirling Tigers of the Air: A Century of Louisville Tornadoes". Archived from the original on 2006-09-10. http://web.archive.org/web/20060910010635/http://www.louisville.edu/library/ekstrom/special/tornado/tornado.html.  — Historical tornado damage images and narrative from the University of Louisville Photographic Archives "The Great Cyclone of 1890: Tragedy Struck Louisville" — Article by Civil War historian/author Bryan S. Bush v · d · e 25 deadliest US tornadoes Rank Name (location) Date Deaths 1 "Tri-State" March 18, 1925 695 2 Natchez, MS May 6, 1840 317 3 St. Louis and East St. Louis May 27, 1896 255 4 Tupelo, MS April 5, 1936 216 5 Gainesville, GA April 5, 1936 203 6 Woodward, OK April 9, 1947 181 7 Amite, LA and Purvis, MS April 24, 1908 143 8 New Richmond, WI June 12, 1899 117 9 Flint, MI June 8, 1953 116 10 - - - Waco, TX Goliad, TX May 11, 1953 May 18, 1902 114 114 12 Omaha, NE March 23, 1913 103 13 Mattoon, IL May 26, 1917 101 14 Shinnston, WV June 23, 1944 100 15 Marshfield, MO April 18, 1880 99 16 - - - Gainesville and Holland, GA Poplar Bluff, MO June 1, 1903 May 9, 1927 98 98 18 Snyder, OK May 10, 1905 97 19 Natchez, MS April 24, 1908 91 20 Worcester, MA June 9, 1953 90 21 Starkville, MS and Waco, AL April 20, 1920 88 22 Lorain and Sandusky, OH June 28, 1924 85 23 Udall, KS May 25, 1955 80 24 St. Louis, MO September 29, 1927 79 25 Louisville, KY March 27, 1890 76 Source: Storm Prediction Center