An F4 tornado destroyed dozens of homes and businesses in Allendale, Illinois before moving into Indiana, injuring 55 people.
An F2 tornado injured six people along an intermittent path in eastern Illinois, destroying six homes and damaging 46 in Mill Shoals.
A tornado also hit south and east of Newnan, Georgia, dealing F3 damage to a motel, ripping the roof off and collapsing walls injuring 8 people.
This storm injured three people on one farm according to Thomas P. Grazulis, but no injuries are listed in official records.
An F2 tornado touched down on the eastern end of the city of York and made a sporadic path of damage northeast across the Susquehanna River near Wrightsville to its endpoint.
In York County the tornado crossed 8 miles of its path length, causing damage to 16 homes, a business, a church, 5 garages and 3 barns.
The tornado continued east for another 7 miles across Lancaster County, causing damage in Columbia, Mountville and just to the west of Millersville.
In Lancaster County 4 homes were destroyed, 9 houses were damaged, and an excavating company warehouse was knocked down.
[13] A violent F3 wedge tornado ripped the roofs off of several homes in North Platte, Nebraska.
A series of tornadoes caused more than $130 million (1989 USD) in damage across the Northeastern United States on July 10.
The storm system affected five states with severe weather, including hail up to 2.5 inches (6.4 cm) in diameter, thunderstorm winds up to 90 mph (150 km/h), and 17 tornadoes.
A destructive tornado outbreak affected a large swath of the southern and eastern United States as well as Canada in Mid-November.
Nine more fatalities were reported at a single elementary school by an F1 tornado on the 16th in Newburgh, New York (although analysis has concluded that this was more likely the result of a downburst).
An F1 tornado began south of Chipley, Florida and moved to north of Cottondale, along a path of 10 miles (16 km) with a maximum width of 50 yards (46 m).