This fairly large tornado outbreak killed 6 people and inflicted ≥$224 million (2002 USD) of damage to the states of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska.
Another was an F4 tornado that occurred four miles east of Barnard, South Dakota and destroyed a pheasant farm.
At approximately 4:20 PM CDT, an F3 tornado tore through the town of Ladysmith, Wisconsin, causing $25 million in damage.
September 8 An F2 tornado struck Manti, Utah; a small town located 8.5 miles from the geographical center of the state, and at 5,600 feet of elevation.
After crossing an empty field, it was met by the east mountain which rises 4,000 feet above the valley floor.
Other damages include; a lumber store; uprooted trees, some of which were large; camping trailers, a semi-trailer; and downed power poles.
An F3 tornado in Indiana became one of the longest tracked tornadoes in the state's history after it formed along a squall line and tracked 112 miles from near Ellettsville in Monroe County to northeast of Hartford City in Blackford County.
The Veterans Day outbreak was an unseasonably strong and destructive severe weather event that spawned 83 tornadoes in 36 hours across a widespread swath in the Central and Eastern United States.
A severe weather event spawned 48 tornadoes across a widespread swath in the Central and southern United States.
On December 17, a long-track F2 tornado killed 2 people and also badly damaged the Lucky Lady Trailer Park near Springfield, MO.
[16] An unseasonably strong severe weather event spawned 48 weak tornadoes in 43 hours across a widespread swath in the Southern United States.