Canada’s worst twisters left a trail of death and debris
OTTAWA — A tornado carved a destructive path through the Ottawa-Gatineau area on Friday, tearing roofs off homes, overturning cars and felling power lines. According to Environment Canada, Canada gets more tornadoes than any other country except the U.S.
Other high-profile twisters include:
• 1912: Known as the “Regina Cyclone,” Canada’s deadliest tornado ripped through six city blocks in Regina, Sask., on June 30, killing at least 28 people, injuring 300 others, and leaving a quarter of the city’s population homeless.
• 1922: Multiple tornadoes hit southern Manitoba on June 22, killing five people and causing $2 million in damages, equal to nearly $30 million in 2018 dollars.
• 1946: Canada’s third deadliest tornado tore through the Detroit River on June 17, killing 17 people and damaging 400 homes in Windsor and the surrounding areas.
• 1974: A series of deadly tornadoes — known as the “1974 Super Outbreak” — struck Ontario and multiple U.S. states between April 3 and 4.
• 1985: Fourteen tornadoes hit multiple Ontario communities on May 31, including Barrie, Grand Valley, Orangeville and Tottenham.
• 1987: Canada’s second worst killer tornado struck Edmonton on July 31, killing 27 people. Sometimes known as the “Black Friday Tornado,” winds reached 400 km/h and hail as large as softballs fell from the sky.
• 1996: Tornado-related damage in Canada topped $50 million this year after multiple tornadoes ripped through parts of Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta during the spring and summer.
• 2000: Canada’s first deadly tornado in 13 years struck Green Acres campground near Red Deer, Alta., on July 14, killing 12 people and injuring 140 more.
• 2007: On June 22, the country’s first F5 tornado — the most powerful on the Fujita intensity scale — slammed Elie, Man., with winds exceeding 420 km/h. No fatalities were reported.
• 2011: Goderich was devastated after the province saw its strongest hurricane since 1996. One person was killed and 40 more were injured.