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Greencastle, Indiana ~ Saturday, September 6, 2008
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What happened on this day in 1965?
Posted Friday, April 11, 2008, at 12:13 AM<< Previous | Read comments | Respond | Email link | Next >>
Does anyone know what happened on this day in 1965? I'm sure a lot of you can come up with an answer of your own, but the response I'm looking for is the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak.
A total of 137 Hoosier lives were lost that day. It was the third deadliest outbreak of its kind to hit the United States. The National Weather Service in Indianapolis has a section on its website that gives a brief description of the events that happened across the Hoosier State that day, along with a number of photographs taken on that day. Here's the link: http://www.crh.noaa.gov/ind/april111965.... I'm happy to say that I am way too young to have been alive on that day but since I am a severe weather enthusiast, I've done a fair amount of studying on the topic. Probably the best picture I've ever seen is the pair of twin tornadoes making their way into the town of Dunlap. It looks like two giant legs getting ready to trample the town. I'm curious if any of you have stories that you'd like to tell about the day. Please respond to this blog and let me know about them. I'm sure a lot of people would be interested to read them. Comments Showing most recent comments first [Show in chronological order instead] |
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I was 14 at the time. I can remember all the news coverage on tv. I was an Indianapolis News carrier, and I remember all the pictures in the paper the next day with all the destruction. The paper was .40 cents a week back then. That's right Thomas Paine, they didn't call them the palm sunday torndados for nothing. LOL
Recalling repressed memories clouded my brain, of course it was Sunday!!
I remember going to see Lafayette and the devastation to the downtown area there. National guard troops were patroling to keep looters away, but this was several years after the palm Sunday tornadoes I believe.
I well remember that day and probably always will. I think it was on a Sunday and it was the first really warm day we had had that year. Very humid and sunny. I was 12 at the time and I was helping my neighbor pick up golf balls he had hit into a field in front of his house. Nothing out of the ordinary had been predicted, that I recall. I remember looking at the sky to the west and it had turned a sickening greenish yellow color and we talked about how it looked so strange. Not long after that the wheels came off and we had the most awful storm. Wind and rain like I have never seen since. I was sure the end of the world was at hand. We lost a few trees, luckily none hit the house. I remember it lasted a long time. That was before instant news so it wasn't until the next day that we heard how bad it had been.
The following weekend was our spring break and we took a family trip to Chicago. My Dad took a route that took us through some of the hardest hit areas. We had never seen such destruction and devastation. I remember we went through Marian and Goshen on the way up and it was very chilly and grey that weekend. Coming home we tried to see little Russiaville, but it wasn't there anymore and they routed traffic around it.
Since that day in 1965 I have always kept an eye on the weather, especially predicted storms. When asked why I get so nervous when a storm is rolling in I usually respond.... "I lived through the Palm Sunday tornadoes." I will never forget how scared we were......