Plainfield - The Unwarned F5 Tornado

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • August 28th 1990.
    The sky grows dark over the small town of Plainfield Illinois, while thousands of residents carry on with their daily activities, completely unaware that just to their northwest one of the worst tornadoes in US history is racing directly towards them.
    On August 28, 1990. A catastrophic F5 tornado would strike the town of Plainfield claiming the lives of 29 and hit without a Tornado Warning. In this video we will discuss the fascinating meteorology that caused this tornado, the people it impacted and the failures at the National Weather Service that allowed it to strike without warning. This is the true story of the 1990 Plainfield Tornado: The Unwarned F5.
    F Scale explanations:
    F0 Light Damage (40-72mph)
    F1 Moderate Damage (73-112mph)
    F2 Significant Damage (113-157mph)
    F3 Severe Damage (158-206mph)
    F4 Devastating Damage (207-260mph)
    F5 Incredible Damage (261-318mph)
    Twitter: / celtonhenderson
    Want to support what I do? This is the best place to do so:
    Patreon: / celtonhenderson
    Sources:
    en.wikipedia.o...
    www.tornadotal...
    www.flickr.com...
    www.weather.go...
    www.weather.go...
    • Eight Minutes in Augus...
    • August 28, 1990 Plainf...
    tornadoarchive...
    All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @CeltonHenderson
    @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +1251

    Thank you so much for watching. These videos take forever to make so it means the world to see everyone enjoying it. Be sure to let me know what I should cover next and if you had any personal experiences with this tornado. Also subscribe so you don’t miss the next one

    • @ddwalker3744
      @ddwalker3744 Год назад +41

      I was 10 years old in 1985 and a huge F-5 hit my city of Niles Ohio, the sound, the damage and the aftermath is something I will never forget

    • @willdavis2005
      @willdavis2005 Год назад +18

      Beautiful video! I can’t believe you only have 16K subscribers 🤯

    • @JustTyFr
      @JustTyFr Год назад +6

      Chiraq

    • @highriskchris
      @highriskchris Год назад +13

      1965 Palm Sunday Outbreak

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +13

      @@highriskchris ;)

  • @bigtony77
    @bigtony77 Год назад +3277

    As a child in the 90s, the 'green sky' was something we were taught to look out for after this event. thanks for posting

    • @Ace-1525
      @Ace-1525 Год назад +265

      Former farm kid from Pennsylvania here, and my grandpa taught me the same thing!
      Was at a county fair a couple summers back, and the air just felt & smelled Wrong.
      I kept looking at the sky, just watching the clouds turn that distinct turquoise before a bad storm. Wasn’t going to worry too much [we always have t-storms in the summer] until the color started to shift to a jade green, and I told them we needed to get inside ASAP.
      They laughed me off because there wasn't anything about a tornado in the weather apps.
      Not even two minutes later the wind picked up, an announcement was made, the hail started falling, and everyone was running for shelter.
      We did all make it out okay, and I'm glad grandpa was looking out for me.
      (Also taught them never to doubt my sky-watching habits lol)

    • @jenniferbeyer6412
      @jenniferbeyer6412 Год назад +82

      Yes the green sky is a sign.

    • @ragestorms1942
      @ragestorms1942 Год назад +78

      Green sky is large hail aloft reflecting off of the sunlight

    • @chelsd7724
      @chelsd7724 Год назад +48

      We moved from Utah to Nebraska 2.5 years ago and our friend is a spotter for the fire department so he taught us what to look for! I’ve lived through bad earthquakes but when the wind stops and it all goes silent I know we have about 2 mins to find shelter if we are out and about. I still wouldn’t move back to the Rockies I’m a flat lander for life now 🙌🏻 I agree with ace’s comment because the smell is just different not like an incoming thunder storm like we are all used to out here. Very hard to explain the smell if you’ve never experienced it I guess. Stay safe out there tornado season is just around the corner again

    • @jrnfw4060
      @jrnfw4060 Год назад +59

      @@Ace-1525 Isn't it sad how folks refuse to listen until something actually happens. Just because a kid or a woman issues the warning, they blow it off, whereas if a grown man were to issue the SAME warning, it would be taken more seriously! What's with this automatic mental discrimination?

  • @katwright5555
    @katwright5555 Год назад +2638

    I was in this tornado. My aunt and cousins had to be dug out of their basement bc the house collapsed over them. Thankfully they were all okay. It literally felt like a freight train. It shook the ground like nothing I’ve ever felt.

  • @Lambosown
    @Lambosown Год назад +4503

    I grew up in the Chicago suburbs as a 2000s kid. It is weird that even as a tornado fanatic, today is the first time I have ever heard of this incredibly deadly tornado that ravaged the suburbs?
    Update: I had asked my parents and, inevitably, they remember the day clear as glass and have their own stories. I'm old enough to call it the Sears tower instead of the Willis tower, but not old enough for there to have been any mention of this tornado growing up.

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +411

      This one is infamous in Chicago. The only one that rivals it is the 1967 Oak Lawn F4.

    • @McAwesome363
      @McAwesome363 Год назад +115

      @@CeltonHenderson The Lemont 1976 F4 is also quite infamous as it was one of the first strong tornadoes with good video footage. Fortunately the damage was limited as the path went over large areas of forest preserves and Argonne National Laboratory.

    • @FalseHope61
      @FalseHope61 Год назад +59

      I live in Michigan city, about 40 miles east of Chicagoland area. Had no idea there was an F5 in our area. Normally the lake creates a bubble and you’ll notice strong storms die out within 20 miles of the lake. It seems to be the southeast moving storms that hold together and give us an ass whipping

    • @rbibbe34
      @rbibbe34 Год назад +64

      Absolutely. Man, if you ever go through Plainfield any local will tell you about it.
      One of the strongest and worst tornadoes in History.

    • @sirwahwee4488
      @sirwahwee4488 Год назад +30

      This one wasn’t deadly, but more recent, the Ef3 that tracked over Naperville and Woodridge

  • @aubsmart86
    @aubsmart86 10 месяцев назад +245

    I grew up in Joliet, and this was the most terrifying tornado of my entire life! It stopped right before our street. I will never forget the sound! It sounds like a massive freight train coming straight for you. Our neighbors lawn furniture was hovering in the air 2 to 3 feet off the ground when we ran to the basement. We had debris in our yard that came from miles away, and two by fours impaled into our house. Our friends in Plainfield only survived thanks to their basement stairs as the rest of the house was blown away. I’ve been terrified of tornadoes ever since.

  • @racingaerials4493
    @racingaerials4493 10 месяцев назад +279

    WGN's Tom Skilling just retired this year. He was the chief meteorologist for Chicago's news station in 1990. I went to a conference where he was a speaker, and when this storm was brought up, he broke down. He still feels personally responsible for every life lost that day, and we all couldn't imagine how much this day weighed on him. A freak tornado, still the only F5 tornado recorded in the month of August.

    • @BillyMinnow
      @BillyMinnow 9 месяцев назад +34

      I'm going to his retirement party today. Its rumored he went against the advice of the NWS and warned people of the tornado threat. I wanted to ask him about it. Guess I wont be doing that anymore lol

    • @ReformedSooner24
      @ReformedSooner24 8 месяцев назад +8

      That’s far better than trying to brush it off on someone else or play it off.

    • @Rockyrennz
      @Rockyrennz 8 месяцев назад +10

      Tom skilling was an amazing meteorologist

    • @Dad.and.Addison
      @Dad.and.Addison 7 месяцев назад +20

      It wasn’t his fault it also wasn’t the nws fault. They are unpredictable and back then Doppler wasnt very good. Can’t blame someone for something they can’t see or predict. They have no control over Mother Nature.

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Dad.and.AddisonCAPE of 8000? Yeah sure, thunderstorms may have trouble getting organized depending but if they do it's going to be a very, very bad time

  • @YouTalkinToMeBro
    @YouTalkinToMeBro Год назад +1398

    I remember this like it was yesterday...the scariest sky I've ever seen.
    I was working alone for a construction company just east of Plainfield in Romeoville.
    I was just wrapping up the job and the hail, wind, and rain was blowing my van around like a toy.
    I had to pull over and take my chances of what may happen.
    Within 5 minutes it was completely over and my way home was the same path as the monster.
    I lived outside of Crest Hill at the time, and used to live in the apartments that were hit, about a year earlier.
    I've never been so scared in my life, and haven't been since.
    I'm now 61 and was 28 at the time.

    • @paulmeissner66
      @paulmeissner66 Год назад +31

      I took the day off as it was very hot that day or I would have been very close as well

    • @TheIrishRushin
      @TheIrishRushin Год назад +19

      I was just up the road in a similar situation when Utica, Illinois was completely destroyed only 10 minutes from my house. I was under the overpass where the loves truck stop is now.

    • @irishrebel1360
      @irishrebel1360 Год назад +15

      I stay in Scotland and its really only wet and cold. This looks scary but mesmerising also if you get what I mean. Sorry for the folk who lost obviously 😢

    • @BRNREK47
      @BRNREK47 Год назад +4

      My dad was working in the same area that day too for a company called Strongberg construction. I remember him describing heading east on I-80 out of that area around 3:30 PM that afternoon. He said it was pretty intense. later that night we saw on the news what had happened. That summer was particularly bad for thunderstorms in our area. Not too many storm seasons I can recall over the last 35 years where the winds would make large trees sway significantly. I may be inaccurate about that observation but that summer did scare the hell out of me me weather wise and I haven't seen anything like it since.

    • @LBGirl98
      @LBGirl98 Год назад +8

      Thank God you made it through.

  • @animalbites77
    @animalbites77 Год назад +2028

    I was 2 years old when this happened so I have no memories of it. We lived in Rockdale at the time (Which was a little village inside Joliet) and my mom and grandparents would talk about this a lot. I remember my mom saying that the Plainfield Tornado was the tornado that made my mom want to be a storm chaser, but my dad and grandparents said "Absolutely not." She didn't chase them physically, but she studied them, learned about them and became the family weather informer. I remember she'd call me when I lived on my own yelling "GET IN THE BASEMENT!!" and THEN the sirens would go off. I miss my mom. I hope if she did get reincarnated, she'd be a great meteorologist in her next life.

    • @Lexylulee
      @Lexylulee Год назад +76

      This is my MOM! She is a true weather girl! She tells me when to go take shelter also!!

    • @dmay4433
      @dmay4433 Год назад +9

      👩‍👧😇🤟

    • @satanicbladez9266
      @satanicbladez9266 Год назад +45

      i’m so sorry for your loss

    • @DaiseeSade
      @DaiseeSade Год назад +7

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @garysprandel1817
      @garysprandel1817 Год назад +29

      Sorry for your loss. Wasn't my mom but my grandpa on mom's side. Tornado sirens would be going off and we'd bolt next door to gram and gramps place for the basement and mom,gram and sis would be yelling for gramps, dad and me to get our azzes down in the basement and all the while gramps would be watching and pointing out things to watch for. Most of the time because this was the 70s and conditions on the other end of the county would trigger the sirens countywide ( this was when the sirens did double duty of calling the volunteer firemen to the station as well as tornado warning) but when gramps said go you went. Remember getting dad and gramps in a bit of trouble with mom and gram as I got up to about 14 or 15 as one time gramps and dad were out on the front walk and remember gramps pointing off to the northwest and both him and and dad kind of looking like they were about to bolt but then stopped and kept looking. I joined them on the front walk and saw my first funnel cloud heading due east about a block away. Everything was in the clear shortly after that. Of course absolutely excited about seeing my first tornado mentioned how cool it was to mom and sis.....yeah dad had some explaining 😂

  • @j.b.3825
    @j.b.3825 Год назад +583

    Excellent video!
    Actress Melissa McCarthy is from Plainfield and survived this tornado. She was in town, home from college, was visiting a friend, they noticed the ominous sky all of a sudden and ran to the basement, emerged a minute later and the second story of the house was gone. She tells the story during her hot sauce interview on the “Hot Ones” RUclips show.

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +16

      Yep! I was close by in Frankfort

    • @BigSkinty91
      @BigSkinty91 11 месяцев назад +7

      😮

    • @legitbeans9078
      @legitbeans9078 6 месяцев назад +5

      Dang. If only it had taken her instead of those teachers. Horrible actress.

    • @minigrinpins2528
      @minigrinpins2528 6 месяцев назад

      @@legitbeans9078what the hell is wrong with you?

    • @honeyfrost3355
      @honeyfrost3355 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@legitbeans9078 she was good in gilmore girls. That all she should have done.

  • @skrounst
    @skrounst 9 месяцев назад +492

    If I was a meteorologist and saw a CAPE value of 8000, I'd just go ahead and issue a tornado warning immediately.

    • @karashriner6182
      @karashriner6182 8 месяцев назад +14

      Same

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 7 месяцев назад +61

      Exactly. When I saw that I went "oh shit". The CAPE on the day the infamous Jarrell tornado granulated a whole subdivision wasn't even that high

    • @skrounst
      @skrounst 7 месяцев назад +39

      @@jakeg3733 Yeah and the sheer wasn't that impressive either. The Jarrell tornado scares me for that exact reason. If you look at the set-up for that day, nothing stood out and said "disastrous tornado". Yet it was one of the biggest, strongest tornadoes ever recorded in human history.

    • @alwaysreadin163
      @alwaysreadin163 6 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@skrounstthat's utterly horrifying. I thought I remember in Carly Anna WX video on Jarrell she said that something caused a shift so that better shear was in place which helped kick it into existence.

    • @skrounst
      @skrounst 6 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@alwaysreadin163 Yeah, gravity waves I think! Which are kinda like ripples in a pond (except in the atomosphere). That added enough of a disturbance to get an updraft spinning, Then once it started spinning there was absolutely nothing to stop it. Tricky part is, you can't forecast gravity waves

  • @nurserock77
    @nurserock77 10 месяцев назад +148

    August 27th 1990 was my 13th birthday. The entire day was a hellish, relentless combination of hot+humid, which by all indications, gave no signs of letting up anytime soon. On August 28th, it was more of the same weather. My parents had taken the week off and we spent the day in our backyard pool, much as we had all week.
    I'll never, EVER forget.....my Dad pointing out the dark clouds as they approached and saying, "thank God, it's finally going to cool down."
    We prepared for the storm by covering the pool, putting away patio furniture and carrying out other tasks that wouldn't matter in a few minutes. Then, all hell broke loose.

    • @opo3628
      @opo3628 8 месяцев назад +14

      It’s VERY surprising that the possibility of tornadoes didn’t occur to your dad. Living in a tornado-prone area, the day was horribly hot and humid, and then you suddenly see a hideous giant storm approaching - nothing about that should have been at all welcoming.

    • @Questfinder1
      @Questfinder1 7 месяцев назад +4

      My 8th birthday. Hey fellow 27th born.

    • @EphemeralProductions
      @EphemeralProductions 7 месяцев назад +5

      Now I want to hear the rest of the story! May I request the details of what happened after that?! :)

    • @Kay042609
      @Kay042609 6 месяцев назад +1

      This was the day I was born

    • @aseaver1988
      @aseaver1988 5 месяцев назад

      Ikr! Perfect example of how to get people sucked into a story with just the right amount of details promising excitement and just a touch drama...keeps you on the edge of your seat, leaning forward with a feeling of rushed anticipation of what's to come..truly has all the hallmarks of a great story teller.@@EphemeralProductions

  • @styropyro
    @styropyro Год назад +1232

    excellent presentation of a notorious illinois F5!

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +82

      Appreciate it dude, super interesting meteorology with this one, I didn't even get a chance to talk about the lightning polarity flip prior to tornadogenesis.

    • @iam5000feettall
      @iam5000feettall Год назад +9

      hello i love your videos mr styro

    • @CamcorderHomeVideos
      @CamcorderHomeVideos Год назад +17

      ​@@CeltonHenderson Excellent quality, especially for a channel of this size!

    • @sethhtes110
      @sethhtes110 Год назад +6

      Good to see you here, huge fan! Revisiting these events after I seen an image and some videos I took after the December 2021 tornado outbreak. I’m in Western Kentucky, and the late night tristate tornado was probably the most horrifying experience in my 20 years living here. Drove through Mayfield and Bremen after to see the damage. Absolutely horrific.

    • @PhotoStormMediaOfficial
      @PhotoStormMediaOfficial Год назад +6

      @@CeltonHenderson I think something similar happened to the El Reno supercell in 2013, a barrage of predominantly positive polarity CG's around the updraft base, right before the tornado forms. It's really fascinating!

  • @dreamypencil
    @dreamypencil Год назад +682

    My grandparent’s house was destroyed by the Plainfield tornado. My family attended St Mary Immaculate. Your video gave me goosebumps.
    I was nine years old, and school had just started back up. The school bus dropped me off around 3 and sky was a sinister shade of green. My mother quickly ushered me and my sister inside before the sky opened and poured torrents of rain along with golf ball-sized hail. Me, being a stupid kid, ran outside so I could put some of the hail in the freezer. It was one hell of a storm and I think we may have lost power. We lived in Joliet at the time and were well out of the tornado’s path.
    My dad worked at a manufacturing plant on Rt 59. You can see it on the map at timestamp 5:36. Upper right corner. He had just gotten to work when the power went out. He and a bunch of his coworkers watched this behemoth of a tornado plow right past the open dock door while hail and debris pounded against the metal building. They were out of the tornado’s path, but barely. He said the twister was massive.
    My grandparents lived on the same block as St Mary’s. Timestamp 6:53. Their house was just outside the upper part of red ring, so the tornado grazed them. Their roof was ripped off, trees uprooted. Their neighbors two doors down lost their entire house. My grandfather said he heard a sound like an oncoming train and barely had time to run down into the basement before the twister hit.
    My grandmother wasn’t as lucky. She was having her hair done at a strip mall that also housed the grocery store mentioned at 7:01. She and her stylist ran into the bathroom and knelt, clutching each other, and praying, as the building collapsed around them. They climbed out of the rubble with the help of first responders. For the rest of her life, she had panic attacks whenever there was a thunderstorm.
    After the storm passed, my dad came home and told us the news. I’m a little fuzzy on what happened next, but I think dad made some calls, then left again to go help our grandparents.
    I was very fortunate that my dad and my grandparents all survived the event. Scared everyone shitless. Some people lost friends. I will say the outpouring of support afterwards was very heartwarming. We got free food from the Red Cross when we were out there helping our grandparents bag up trash.
    That said, your video is one of the best accounts of this I’ve seen. You’ve more than earned my subscription.

    • @kieracarillo
      @kieracarillo Год назад +32

      Your story is incredible. That must have left an intense affect on your family and the community. Thank you for sharing!

    • @kaitispang9595
      @kaitispang9595 Год назад +12

      I was 8, we'd just left fox valley mall for school supplies n clothes, lived in Yorkville so outta the path barely but we got hit, my dad worked at allsteel he got home said his s10 truck was bouncing 6 inches off the ground n had hail damage until he sold it 15 yrs later I'll never forget this I remember that church w the white bubble like covering been in 3 tornados since but none come close

    • @kaitispang9595
      @kaitispang9595 Год назад +15

      I remember starting school the next week and a girl that was in the tornado from Plainfield transferred to my school she was cut up w a black eye, think her last name was bahr this dominated the news for the next month I believe your grandmothers story was on the news or in the beacon newspaper it sounds awfully familiar

    • @TrucksNTrains-m6x
      @TrucksNTrains-m6x Год назад +5

      @@kaitispang9595 A family member I had lived in Plano at the time, she said that that storm was supposed to hit the Kendall County area, but it shifted towards Joliet. It could’ve been us who got hit.

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +35

      Wow, so glad everyone survived! I love researching and chasing tornadoes but it breaks my heart to see them cause such catastrophic destruction. Thank you for sharing.

  • @dogs2malamutes1
    @dogs2malamutes1 Год назад +332

    I remember this day. I left work at 3:30 in Skokie and it was so unbearably hot and humid it felt like walking into a furnace. It was hard to breathe. I actually commented to my coworker that it felt like tornado weather. The next day I happened to be on the outskirts of the Plainfield area and observed the stripped trees and devastation. It was sobering. 💔

    • @peacefulpossum2438
      @peacefulpossum2438 Год назад +18

      Yes! I remember how hot it was. My mom was working in Naperville that day and left work around that time and remarked to a coworker how bad it looked in that direction. She drove into Plainfield just after the tornado went through on her way home to Coal City. She had to stop in the street to get her bearings and find the turn onto Rt. 30 because nothing looked familiar. People were coming out of their houses in shock. Somehow the road was clear enough for her to make it to I-55. I remember she worried all night about a former coworker who lived in Plainfield, but got news the next day at work, that she was okay.

    • @debracarter9935
      @debracarter9935 10 месяцев назад +6

      Coal city has had IT'S fair share of tornadoes these past few years!😢😥 (We live in Morris)

  • @bishop239
    @bishop239 11 месяцев назад +53

    Joliet resident here:
    I wasn’t born yet when this tornado hit, but seeing the path of the twister pass no more than 300 feet away from my current home gave me such an eerie feeling. When growing up with tornados, you know there’s always a risk. You just never imagine something like this happening.

    • @CaseohClippedgg
      @CaseohClippedgg 5 месяцев назад +3

      Blud wasn’t even alive and still yapping

    • @Agm0325
      @Agm0325 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@CaseohClippedggnahhh you did him wrong-😂😂😂😂

    • @pawn6
      @pawn6 4 месяца назад

      @@CaseohClippedgg Bro thinks hes cool 💀

    • @crystalhudson9882
      @crystalhudson9882 4 месяца назад

      But that could be

    • @crystalhudson9882
      @crystalhudson9882 4 месяца назад

      True

  • @ricknolan1880
    @ricknolan1880 Год назад +33

    Lived in the apartment complex in Crest Hill years before around 1982-83. When I saw them flash pictures on the news afterward, my mind went right to a guy that lived above me on the second level. I had a basement apartment for that exact reason. I would have been at work in Romeoville that day but always wondered who survived since I worked with people from Plainfield and Joliet. Gives you perspective on life. Providence can go both ways.

  • @yanxiangfo
    @yanxiangfo Год назад +285

    Imagine just chilling in Plainfield and getting no warning about a devastating tornado, truly terrifying in prospective. Thanks to you Celton for uncovering this historic tornado.

    • @LilB11138
      @LilB11138 11 месяцев назад +10

      Imagine making this comment while probably being one of the first to whine about severe weather being less severe than it turns out to be. THIS tornado is part of the reason why forecasters today stay on the side of caution. Y'all only care about "no warning" when people are killed. Otherwise most of you are annoyed because the "weather people didn't get it right and spread panic".

    • @compudude86
      @compudude86 10 месяцев назад

      I remember seeing something a few years back, it was during the afternoon, around the DeKalb area somewhere, a small tornado, think it was little, EF0 or below, forming along the back of a neighborhood being filmed. Problem with these areas, it's kind of a tornado alley in/around the suburbs, it's a long the I-88 corridor, a dividing line between civilization and farmland, and the unpredictability of the effect of corn crops on our weather systems when it comes to spawning tornadoes.

    • @DavidStephenson-p8w
      @DavidStephenson-p8w 10 месяцев назад +4

      If you grow up in Illinois, especially the areas outside of Chicago, you learn to look at the sky and see the signs of severe weather. I was home on leave in Channahon and I knew someone was getting a tornado to the north when the green sky and hail started. I can remember listening to WCSJ as they were almost hit and the DJ saying he had never seen anything like what he saw out his window.

    • @Cheijnugget
      @Cheijnugget 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@LilB11138Where on God’s Green Earth is your base to that atrocious accusation?

    • @nesiagrubbs9193
      @nesiagrubbs9193 9 месяцев назад

      Very scary.

  • @TheDeathToaster
    @TheDeathToaster Год назад +154

    I was 5 when this happened. I still live in Joliet and still have nightmares about this monster. Our house was not directly hit but the wind was so strong it uprooted a big elm tree in our backyard and crashed it through our back window. I'll never forget it, no sirens but we knew to get in the basement.

  • @sillysilas2024
    @sillysilas2024 Год назад +182

    I live within miles of the path of this tornado, and even to this day in school it’s still talked about. I’ve driven through the path of it and last year my science teacher told us that this tornado is the reason tornado education is done at our school.

    • @missyelliot6237
      @missyelliot6237 Год назад +6

      Lining up in the hallway and tucking yourself into a little ball against the walls & covering the back of your neck.
      I am also from the area lol.

    • @sillysilas2024
      @sillysilas2024 Год назад +3

      @@missyelliot6237 yup tornado stuff is taken super seriously because of it

    • @Acewing42
      @Acewing42 11 месяцев назад +5

      Grew up in this area as well. Drills and tornado prep were always hammered home, year after year.

    • @LilB11138
      @LilB11138 11 месяцев назад +6

      Tornado education existed well before then, it just wasn't as prioritized until after. I started Kindergarten in 1992, and we had at least 2 tornado drills a year and a full section of class to talk about it, all the way through my school career. Now, yet again, it's on the backburner. At least where my kids attend school.

  • @BeerMeTV-q9v
    @BeerMeTV-q9v 11 месяцев назад +10

    Grew up in the area and live about ten minutes from Plainfield now. I've heard stories about this, but didn't know much about what actually happened, being only 2 when it took place. Became a skywarn spotter last year, and as terrified as I am when it comes to tornadic storms, the best weapon to combat that fear is knowledge.

  • @bradybunch92
    @bradybunch92 11 месяцев назад +11

    This is one of the best documentaries on RUclips! The explanation and graphics are superb! Incredible job!!

  • @kmagnussen1052
    @kmagnussen1052 Год назад +296

    I am a storm spotter in Texas. Made a trip to Chicago in November of 1990 with my girl friend to see her grandmother. As we were driving through Joliet, I noticed tornado damage and pointed it out to her. We drove toward the Joliet Mall and saw the houses obliterated. Warnings are great it is 90% of the battle but you need a good shelter. Contrary to popular belief people do die in basements.

    • @crazedvole
      @crazedvole Год назад +94

      Tornados may be the best example of "If it's your time, it's your time." You hear stories about people caught in the open and living, then others take shelter and die. I saw this one just a few months ago where this weak tornado goes across a highway, knocks over a pickup truck with the driver in it. The pickup is on its side, gets spun 360 degrees, the tornado puts the truck back on all four tires and the teenager drives away. Not his time. Then there is the famous video of the people who hid under the bridge and lived. Others tried it and died.

    • @electrik_loss
      @electrik_loss Год назад +44

      That last statement is a hard-pill to swallow, but it's sadly true. If I'm not mistaken, both the Parkersburg and the Hackleburg-Phil Campbell EF5s produced such damage. Also, if a tornado is able to dislodge a foundation (see Jarrell and Smithville), it's not out of the question that it could collapse. Scary shit

    • @adamdion7574
      @adamdion7574 Год назад +28

      @@crazedvole and that guy with the pickup truck got offered a brand new one by Chevrolet. His old one, as I heard, will be sent to a museum

    • @garymahon1955
      @garymahon1955 11 месяцев назад +22

      I survived near misses in 1967 and 2015 tornadoes in N. Ill. I sadly now live in an old mobile home on someone's farm in sw Wis. No basement here, and no where to get down in a ditch. On a hill. All i can do is pray here.

    • @opo3628
      @opo3628 8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed. Sometimes you can do everything right, but the tornado is just so damn powerful that if you’re caught in its path you’re dead regardless.

  • @peacefulpossum2438
    @peacefulpossum2438 Год назад +217

    My mom, who lived well south of Plainfield and ordinarily worked in Joliet, was working north of Plainfield that day. As she and a coworker went to their cars, they remarked on how bad the weather looked in that direction. She drove into Plainfield right after the tornado went through. She had to stop in the road to get her bearings because nothing looked familiar. I was complete devastation and surreal. Surprisingly, she was able to cut across on Rt. 30 to I-55 and make it home. As she did, emergency vehicles were moving in to block the roads into town.
    My hometown has a fall festival at the end of September every year with a parade, and I recall that the Plainfield marching band kids wore black pants and white shirts because their uniforms had been lost. People all along the route rose to their feet as they went by.

  • @midnitediverb7972
    @midnitediverb7972 8 месяцев назад +34

    I am completely tripped out right now. This video popped up on my feed..
    I was in that tornado when I was 11 in the Rockford / Marengo, Illinois area.
    It was so crazy watching this I haven’t seen that footage for so long. Since I saw it with my own two eyes 😎
    I watched a medium size tornado tear right through my backyard and flip my dad’s Dodge ram toss it into nothing… tore the tractor right out of our barn.
    Awesome job on the video !
    You can’t understand what it meant to me to see this again .

  • @karenleclercq7199
    @karenleclercq7199 Год назад +6

    The Plainfield tornado hit Oswego first, our sky turned green and then the hailstorm started and wind increased something told me to turn off electricity and got in our florist cooler. The roar was so strong and I prayed that my other cat would be safe as she didn’t come. Finally many hours of looking for her she showed up. Our trees were taken down everywhere, transformers were arcing and smell of gas was strong. It moved my greenhouse 3 feet and insurance company had to bring in special crews to fix it, there was so much glass from the greenhouses that crews had to come and remove it and then replace it. My house was closer to the storm itself, it took down a huge tree and it covered the driveway. Tore off my front storm door took out windows but one window didn’t break it just dropped down unbroken. All the neighbors no longer had trees. It destroyed everything. Businesses in Oswego were destroyed on its way to Oswego High. We had no electricity either. I heard this Tornado touched down in Sugar Grove without sirens, we had no sirens either. Never understood why. Unfortunately we had a family member die in Plainfield. What good is a siren never used. It was a horrible experience. My cat that finally came out of its hiding place was safe but after the storm if she heard thunder she would come to me shaking and crying never did that before. Oswego was fortunate that no one died but we did get a lot of damage. I pray that I will never see or hear one again.

  • @garylawson5381
    @garylawson5381 Год назад +136

    Tornado warnings have come a long way since my childhood. In the end, the strength of the tornado decides who will live and who will not. I say this from experience.
    I was outside to see up close a top end EF3 approach my hometown. The tornado took many well built homes completely off their foundations and destroyed the high school. My son, a senior at the school was there. When it was over he struggled with his own injuries to help severely injured students lying next to him.
    Eight of them lost their lives March 1st, 2007.

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +15

      Yeah I’ve read about this tornado before, so glad to hear your son survived. Alabama has had more than its fair share of devastating tornadoes over the years. It unfortunately just happens to sit right where the atmospheric conditions are perfect for their development, especially in the spring.

    • @missyelliot6237
      @missyelliot6237 Год назад +3

      Damn. I’m happy your son was okay!!

    • @garylawson5381
      @garylawson5381 Год назад

      @@missyelliot6237 Thank you.

    • @keshia84
      @keshia84 Год назад +7

      I'm glad your son survived, and God bless him that inspite of his own injuries he helped others . Prayers for the families of the eight victims who lost their lives that day 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼Also on this date my little sister was born

    • @jeffkelly4721
      @jeffkelly4721 Год назад +1

      This is a complete lie.

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Год назад +74

    I'm fascinated with tornados, the shear power, the randomness, the horrific scenarios they can create, I can see why some victims feel as though the tornado was looking for them.

    • @laur131306
      @laur131306 Год назад +15

      It's quite amazing, isn't it? To see mother nature fully flex her muscles and remind us all just how vulnerable and weak we all are. It's a force that can't be fought or taken down...you just have to stay put and survive it. It's absolutely remarkable!

  • @garyrice5892
    @garyrice5892 Год назад +128

    I remember that day well. I was working at that time for the City of Aurora in the Building Department. I vividly recall the pea green sky and the smell of freshly plowed earth. Not long after staff came to tell me that Plainfield had been hit. Seeing the other worldly devastation with my own eyes in the days that followed will always live in my memory. Thanks for your video, which brought new insights to me 33 years on.

    • @medmuscle
      @medmuscle 7 месяцев назад

      I also work for the Building Department for a small town in TN. Were you an inspector?

  • @dflan9543
    @dflan9543 10 месяцев назад +4

    My father was a firefighter at the time for the Plainfield fire department. So many stories. He had mentioned that he didn’t get a chance to sleep for days and days. The photos he has are incredible. I gotta find those photos.

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад +2

      Please post them somewhere!

  • @Zombiecatlisa
    @Zombiecatlisa Год назад +6

    My mom was 17 and attended Plainfield High when this happened. I grew up hearing a lot about how it affected her. I think the teacher that was killed was her history teacher, and there was a boy around her age that was out delivering papers when he got caught in it too.
    Living in the midwest, you start to grow desensitized to just how dangeround tornados can be. This is a good reminder to me that if this tornado was the tiniest bit over in one direction, I might not have been born.

  • @bigdaddy-fk5bi
    @bigdaddy-fk5bi Год назад +47

    Good job buddy. I lived every minute of this from 12pm on. I was working a job in WOODSTOCK IL. right dead center os the path of the parent thunder storm north or Aurora. My crew and i say the storm coming so we picked up our tools ad beat it. there was an erie sense of dread and a sense of emergency to get out of there, we drove the front of the storm down to stone park, just before i got in my car to run home, i looked up and to this day i have never seen a cloud top to huge, high, and just boiling, it just went straight up and up and up. THERE WAS NOTHING ON THE RADIO OR TV, I MEAN NOTHING, BUT I WAS LOOKING AT A MONSTER. i drove home, straight south and joined up with rt 30 north of plainfield, it right on my ass.. i have bad ears and the pressure was so low i was getting dizzy and my ears wanted to pop. i was concerned for my brother and mother so i stopped there. thats when it caught me, the house was a ranch with no basement and i really thought we were gonna die. you never saw the tornado, it was hidden by rain, hail, debris, and flying mud and dirt, once it passed i went home, i lived in the CREST HILL LAKES APARTMENTS, yes, the apartment complex in the video. i swear when i got to the complex, debris was still falling, it looked like a home depot was thrown into a wood chipper,, then i saw, right where i would have parked had i have got straight home and not to my mothers house, a series of cars smashed to the pavement by the water tower. i would have been under that tower. all of the debris was pushed up into large piles and they burned it all for weeks, they burned everything, wood, plastic, insulation, the piles glowed at night. THERE WAS NEVER A SIREN, WARNING ON THE TELEVISION, NOTHING. for years after that they would sound the sirens when a squirrel would fart in the woods. this was a great video. it showed the path of my entire day. by the way, this happened so fast that a group of 11 young boys who were playing in the parking lot after school had no where to hide so they ran into a cornfield and were elctricuted when power lines came down on them. if you know where to look you can still see scars from this storm all these years later.

    • @eliwilson3902
      @eliwilson3902 11 месяцев назад +2

      I wasn't born until 2001 and my family didn't move to the area until only a few years before I was born so I only ever really heard little tidbits about this growing up. I don't think anyone ever mentioned there were no sirens. Now I understand why growing up we would get sirens 3-4 times a year though. The closest thing we've really had in my lifetime was the Washington IL tornado, and I remember that storm but the actual tornado was thankfully far from me.

    • @kaylamclaren5320
      @kaylamclaren5320 8 месяцев назад

      @@eliwilson3902i was also born in 2001, and grew up in the tiny village just south of Joliet. tornado siren test day is the first Tuesday or Wednesday of the month, every month for us (forgive me, i'm tired and haven't lived in the state for almost 3 years). we lived within a 3 minute drive of the siren but i remember as an older teenager telling my mom that it was very hard to hear at our house. that was when i found out that sometimes, the placement of the sirens fail to overlap and leave spots where there are homes nearly or entirely out of range for the sound. we were pretty much right at the edge of the ring of range when i checked the map

    • @lisaess
      @lisaess 8 месяцев назад +2

      those poor boys 😢

  • @sethferri
    @sethferri Год назад +85

    You, my friend, are a professional with reporting. 10/10 coverage of this horrific tornado.
    Cheers from Canada & happy new year!

    • @dwaynerowell4234
      @dwaynerowell4234 Год назад +2

      I'd like to wish you and yours a Happy New Year, my friend. I am looking forward to your future posts as your skills in producing quality content are that of a true professional!
      By this time next year (2025), I'm betting that the number of users who are subscribed to your channel, triples, if not higher!

    • @WilliamL.PilgerJr.-bq1pb
      @WilliamL.PilgerJr.-bq1pb Год назад

      DIDN'T CANADA HAVE
      A 🌪️ FEW YEARS AGO ?
      THAT JUST SAT THERE
      BIG AS ALL HxLL ALSO
      Weed Me

    • @sethferri
      @sethferri 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@WilliamL.PilgerJr.-bq1pb you having a stroke or?

    • @WilliamL.PilgerJr.-bq1pb
      @WilliamL.PilgerJr.-bq1pb 11 месяцев назад

      Hi@@sethferri
      IT'S THE OR !!
      Weed Me

  • @Turmpett
    @Turmpett Год назад +46

    I live in Lockport IL, around 20 minutes from Plainfield, and I heard stories of my dad when he was with his parents hiding in their basement after the road nearby was broken into smithereens in Plainfield. He was waiting for something bad to happen for 2 and 1/2 hours. Obviously my dad is fine, but he said that trauma still scares him today, so I still feel bad.

  • @jlo1858
    @jlo1858 6 месяцев назад +5

    I will never forget this day. 😢 One my classmates lost their life in this tornado. He is still in my prayers to this day. R.I.P. to all those who lost their lives that day. 😢🙏

  • @stonecutter2
    @stonecutter2 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks for a great video about this.
    I was at football practice in Aurora this day, and we were only about 9 miles from where the F5 touched down. It was a HOT August day, just miserable heat and humidity. We saw this storm head towards Plainfield in its final stages before it became the F5. It was seriously the most terrifying storm I've ever seen, and we had a great view from the highest point of our school (at that time). We were doing plays on the chalkboard when the earliest part of the storm chased us off the practice field.
    We ran down to the locker rooms FAST when they realized just what was coming towards us and passing us. SO glad our coaches were so vigilant that day. The feeling of genuine terror as we did the duck and cover was thick in that locker room. I felt so awful for Plainfield high schoolers that day and all who suffered from this. Just terrible. To this day I'm still very respectful of the power of storms and tornadoes. When I hear of a possibility of storms, I pay attention.

  • @YankeeCountess
    @YankeeCountess Год назад +41

    I remember this day; it was the first day of school and while my hometown was roughly 10-15 miles to the north of Plainfield, I remember those storm clouds forming around the time school got out, and how terrifying it looked. That was one of the tragedies I remember about this story, was that it hit around the time kids were getting out of school

    • @chironrocket6340
      @chironrocket6340 Год назад +1

      Me too. I was just starting my senior year at St. Francis in Wheaton the day this went down. Ironically, I live in Plainfield now.

    • @roo302
      @roo302 Год назад +2

      I was there in Joliet. Plainfield's first day was supposed to be the next day.

    • @AllysonCaffey
      @AllysonCaffey 11 месяцев назад

      I was a baby when this happened, but I take these storms seriously now..After Naperville as well in 2001.

  • @MrTjc116
    @MrTjc116 Год назад +45

    I grew up and still live in Plainfield, I was 6 years old when this hit. I was in my house and after there was nothing left. I was buried under a bunch debris but luckily had no injuries. I remember this day quite well.

    • @hpope1130
      @hpope1130 6 месяцев назад +4

      I was 6 & living in Plainfield too, over on Amhurst Ct, we were lucky & had minimal damage but my dad was a lineman and was sent out that day after the smaller ones hit but before the big one. My mom & I, after coming up from the basement and seeing the damage, thought we would never see him again. Thankfully he was able to hide in a storm drain & was unharmed. I still remember that day vividly.

    • @Ergo8152
      @Ergo8152 6 месяцев назад

      My bosses sister survived it in bathtub. Maiden name was Blevins

  • @MrStubob2
    @MrStubob2 8 месяцев назад +5

    I was in this storm going south on I-55 to St. Louis! I was working for Burlington Air Express delivering a load of auto parts to a Ford assembly plant! I remember everything that day like it happened yesterday! I entered I-55 off of I-171 around 3pm! When I was passing Bolingbrook I saw the most terrifying site I ever saw! To the west the storm clouds were the blackest ever seen by me! I knew this storm was bad at that point! I continued on thinking I could beat it, so I slammed on the gas and hauled ass! As I approached Plainfield I remembered both my tanks were on empty, so I was forced to stop get get some fuel really fast! As I am filling the tank a state trooper pulls in to gas up and I asked if there is a tornado and as soon as he said yes the rain started to come down sideways! I finished and proceeded to the on ramp for I-55 south and the wind was so intense that the cargo van felt I it was going to tip over! As I put some distance between me and Plainfield I looked in the rearview mirror and could see the ominous black storm getting farther away! I will never forget the experience!!!! !!!!!!!

  • @garylee12345
    @garylee12345 11 месяцев назад +18

    I was there. Ill never forget this storm. Houses were impaled with 2×4 lumber. I remember exactly where i was when this storm hit. Ive lived here all my life. I was a teenager at the time. Im now 50.
    3 story apartment buildings were leveled. This storm took out a path that involved 3 cities.
    Plainfield, cresthill & joliet.
    It was indeed an earie aqua green sky then pitch black !
    We just had the tornado 🌪 sirens go off last night in Plainfield

    • @ReformedSooner24
      @ReformedSooner24 8 месяцев назад

      Must be reassuring that they actually sounded given this particular episode in Plainfield’s history

  • @LeightonRebecca
    @LeightonRebecca Год назад +27

    My friend and I were walking to her house after school, in Sandwich, Illinois, and this storm went right over us. A lady yelled out to us that a tornado was coming and to hurry home. Super scary!

  • @TapedSticks
    @TapedSticks Год назад +56

    This man really paid attention is science class. Props to this guy.

    • @ragestorms1942
      @ragestorms1942 Год назад +6

      I loved science when I was in school I remember Bill Nye the science Guy lol

  • @Fleabio
    @Fleabio Год назад +52

    I remember this happening as a kid I was 9 and lived about 45 miles away and I think this is what set off my fear of tornadoes and storms.

    • @snickerdoodles787
      @snickerdoodles787 Год назад +3

      The movie twister started mine. We dont even get tornados where i live

    • @NatalieMarie917
      @NatalieMarie917 Год назад +4

      ⁠@@snickerdoodles787SAME! And I was way too young when I saw Twister for the first time (probably 5 y/o.. 6 y/o max).
      While I’m at it, I have arachnophobia because of the movie Arachnophobia, which I probably saw that same year. That one pisses me off more because I encounter way more spiders than tornado warnings.

    • @snickerdoodles787
      @snickerdoodles787 Год назад +1

      @NatalieMarie917 lmao omg that's crazy! I got arachnophobia from 8 legged freaks lol

    • @mokje_
      @mokje_ 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@snickerdoodles787 Funnily enough, twister started my obsession with tornadoes!

  • @Hextraordinary13
    @Hextraordinary13 2 месяца назад +1

    My husband is a survivor of this storm & lost a dear friend when it struck the high school. Thank you for this educational video.

  • @veronicabonilla7086
    @veronicabonilla7086 11 месяцев назад +8

    I grew up in Aurora and we still remember this tornado. It’s crazy watching days after we had 11 tornados 🌪️ touch down in freaking February!!!

  • @JCBro-yg8vd
    @JCBro-yg8vd Год назад +51

    Another reason why there was no tornado warning was that the tornado track was on the border between two weather stations responsible for warning the area, and communications between the two offices were poor, having to rely on a third station to get adequate radar coverage since the storm was in the ground clutter of pre-Doppler radar. The forecasters also hesitated with a warning because of past criticism that they had issued warnings too often when nothing happened. It has led to what is called the "Plainfield Syndrome", where forecasters will issue a warning even if they believe a severe weather event is unlikely, rather than hold back and risk another disaster like this.
    As for the high school, had the tornado struck just a day later, hundreds of students would've been attending class, which could've increased the injuries and fatalities. In fact, school starting the next day was part of the reason why spotter networks weren't deployed, they were not as full as they would've been in June or July due to students going back to school.

    • @bobbiellison4315
      @bobbiellison4315 10 месяцев назад +7

      I am from this area and I can attest they are crazy with the tornado warnings now. They activate the sirens for just about every thunderstorm. I think that it's overkill and can cause apathy with the residents as they are so used to false flags. I think there needs to be a better balance.

    • @JCBro-yg8vd
      @JCBro-yg8vd 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@bobbiellison4315 Well, they always say that you should not depend on the sirens, because they may not be sounded in time or could fail if power is lost. I do agree that issuing too many warnings can cause problems, even if forecasters prefer to err on the side of caution.

  • @80sNewWaveGeek
    @80sNewWaveGeek Год назад +29

    I grew up in Downers Grove (~20 miles NE of Plainfield) and watched the storm on the Weather Channel radar that day as it happened. The sky grew dark but the weather didnt get too nasty for us. A week after the tornado, my father and I went up in a Cessna and saw the scoured ground from the air.

  • @arackofhats5235
    @arackofhats5235 Год назад +15

    Hey hi hello!
    I grew up in Plainfield and was in this tornado. Thanks for covering this! I was very young when it rolled through, so I don't remember much, but my parents had told me a lot about what happened that day. One of the more interesting things my dad always talked about is that it was a weird day the rain had died down beforehand and it sounded like a train horn, he had gone out to look at the weather during the heights of the storm (Midwesterner will understand lol) he had said that the tornado moved almost horizontally he said it moved like a huge barrel across the grounds. According to him he's never seen anything like it since.
    Great video man, keep up the great work

    • @bobbiellison4315
      @bobbiellison4315 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yep we're all professional porch storm spotters 😂

  • @MrNaimehob
    @MrNaimehob 11 месяцев назад +22

    My grandma was a teacher at the high school. Mrs. Pauley. She broke her ankle the day before the tornado and stayed home. Thank goodness! I still have the home video my grandpa filmed from their walkout basement during the storm the next day.

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад +6

      You should post it!

  • @echopathy
    @echopathy 8 месяцев назад +4

    This is nice work, man. Visually compelling in its animation, compositing, editing, etc. Great info. Sounds good too. Kudos!

  • @TheCat92067
    @TheCat92067 Год назад +24

    I recall this afternoon vividly. I worked at Fox Valley Mall and lived in the West side of Joliet. I recall the darkness, and watching as cars had to turn on their headlights at midday. No sirens and not realizing until it was time to drive home (normally via Rt 59 thru Plainfield) that I had to find another way home and that it hit both Plainfield and Joliet, close to my house and where my mom worked in Joliet.
    The worst was seeing the names of the dead. I recognized 3 people from when I worked in the Plainfield branch I had transferred from weeks earlier. They were regular customers whom I’d gotten to know in the previous year. May they all rest in peace.
    Years later while dating my soon to be husband, I found out my soon to be sisters in law lost everything when their apartment building was destroyed by that tornado.
    Anyone living in Will County at the time could tell you where they were and what they were doing when it hit.

    • @carch7243
      @carch7243 Год назад +2

      I worked at Fox Valley when I lived in Joliet. Did you get to experience driving home on 59 during the winter? There was nothing out there to block the snow. I drove home one night praying that the car in front of me was on the road, because all I could see was his tail lights. Ah, the memories.

    • @bobbiellison4315
      @bobbiellison4315 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@carch7243haha I remember going to the mall from Romeoville via 59 in the dead of winter. Snow and ice covered roads. 59 is like 8-10 lanes wide now and last I checked...still under construction.

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад

      I remember those days growing up It kind of felt cozy when the street lights were on during the day

  • @RikkiSpanish
    @RikkiSpanish Год назад +40

    Fantastic job! One of my favorite things about your videos is the way you show the path of the tornado moving over the map, as if we are following it in real time. It's a fabulous touch. 👌
    I'm glad that the Plainfield tornado is starting to get some real attention. It's also both funny and a little sad that it's getting more recognition from those of us who were either small children back in 1990 or weren't even born yet, but better late than never. Some people may not find Plainfield as interesting because there really isn't much of any video footage or photos of the weather as it happened. IMO, the lack of imagery makes it even frightening. This monster literally came without any warning. The victims had no idea what was in store for them that hot, muggy afternoon(late August here in the Rust Belt can be absolutely sweltering! 🥵).
    This tragedy was obviously a huge ding on the reputation of the National Weather Service. The investigation afterward felt as if the NWS field office in Chicago was treated with kid gloves. Perphaps this tragedy was more the a result of the limited technology and understanding of severe weather at the time than human error. This wasn't like Joplin 2011, where the public had adequate warnings, but many chose to disregard it. It's all up for debate, which makes it all the more surprising that more people don't mention this storm as much as other famous F5 tornadoes from this era. Nonetheless, it does feel as if some serious overhaul was done in order to make sure that Illinois doesn't see a repeat of Plainfield.

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +13

      Thank you, I try to have the tornadoes move on the map to help give perspective and help the viewers put themselves in that situation. Plainfield's lack of documentation is super interesting to me, I can't even imagine just seeing a wall of green clouds and rain without a tornado warning followed by just death and destruction. Its terrifying.

    • @MichaelLovely-mr6oh
      @MichaelLovely-mr6oh Год назад +7

      This phenomenon is known as the Plainfield Syndrome. In its basic concept; the National Weather Service is in a "damned if we do and damned if we don't" type of situation with regards to the Plainfield Syndrome as they are afraid of issuing either too many warnings or not enough warnings.

    • @rbibbe34
      @rbibbe34 Год назад +3

      My mom and dad still talk about it every august. We were close but a town over from Plainfield. I was a baby.
      They went to help and said it’s something you’d never expect to see, just utter devastation . My mom still says she’s never felt such heavy and muggy air in her life!

    • @peacefulpossum2438
      @peacefulpossum2438 Год назад

      I remember that initially there was denial that it was a tornado. Reports were that it was straight line winds, which even the general public knew couldn’t be true.

  • @tornadotrx
    @tornadotrx Год назад +13

    Amazing video Celton. Constantly stepping it up for the rest of creators making weather content. Keep it up!!

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +1

      Appreciate it dude, the stuff you manage to create is witch sorcery to me lol

  • @RStark-bt7hl
    @RStark-bt7hl Год назад +3

    Thanks for making this video. I still think about this day from time to time and my heart goes out to all who lost loved ones!

  • @RStark-bt7hl
    @RStark-bt7hl Год назад +3

    I was 19 yrs old living in Oswego Illinois when this tornado came through. It pretty much skimmed over the top of Oswego and only damaged a few buildings. At the time I lived with my family in a small neighborhood with cornfields behind it. After the tornado passed over Oswego, we could see where it landed and watched it tear through cornfields as it headed northeast toward Plainfield. I drove with a few friends through the country towards Plainfield, and by the time we arrived at highway 126 that goes through downtown Plainfield, the police had a roadblock set up a few miles south of Plainfield. I worked for demolition crew in Plainfield for the rest of that summer through fall tearing down the remains of houses that were destroyed by the tornado. That was the most difficult job I’ve ever had.

  • @bigbadgreen1
    @bigbadgreen1 Год назад +8

    I remember this day and never will forget. Still have issues after all these years. I worked for the Village of Plainfield and was to be a senior at PHS.

  • @djrandyification
    @djrandyification Год назад +23

    I was 12 years old delivering newspapers on my bike in Minooka for the Joliet Herald when this happened. I have never in my life seen the sky such an ominous green color. So crazy finding out later that day Plainfield had been hit so hard.

  • @michaelbenefiel4680
    @michaelbenefiel4680 Год назад +70

    I used to be a firefighter back then in a small suburb of Aurora called Moecherville. I was there about an hour after the tornado hit and tore up Plainfield I remember it like it was yesterday and it is forever etched into my brain! They had called different fire depts. around the area to come in and search and rescue. I saw train cars laying on their sides in a cornfield, I saw them large dumpsters up in trees wrapped around the trees! What were once homes reduced to like toothpicks laying all over roads! The sheer power of tornadoes is unbelievable until you witness it in person! We didn't have cell phones back then otherwise I would have taken all sorts of pics to corroborate my story!

    • @compudude86
      @compudude86 10 месяцев назад

      I made a mention on a different comments, were police/fire departments in the area notifying other departments around that a tornado was out? Because I remember we got a siren from the fire station in Rolling Meadows and my dad who worked for Elk Grove public works called my mom that he got a radio call to get back into the garage immediately that a tornado was down out that way

    • @bobbiellison4315
      @bobbiellison4315 10 месяцев назад +2

      I lived in the area most of my life, Romeoville, Plainfield, Joliet and other towns. How have I never heard of Moecherville? Is it an actual town, or like a subdivision/community.?

    • @michaelbenefiel4680
      @michaelbenefiel4680 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@bobbiellison4315 It is just a small subdivision of Aurora on the East side of Aurora.

  • @eliwilson3902
    @eliwilson3902 11 месяцев назад +2

    My parents didn't move to Plainfield until the late 90s but I always grew up hearing about this from teachers who experienced it when I was in school. Was very exited to see this video in my feed.

  • @n_jineer673
    @n_jineer673 11 месяцев назад +3

    I live in this town, and was born in the early 2000s. I heard lots of stories growing up, and still hear plenty to this day about peoples experiences with this tornado. I actually went to the rebuilt high school that was destroyed, and there's a whole memorial in one of the hallways to the tornado.

  • @loganneal4590
    @loganneal4590 Год назад +5

    Great video Celton! I was born and raised in Missouri (still live here) and I have never heard of this storm. I couldn’t imagine a storm of that magnitude with no warning whatsoever. With hindsight, it makes you wonder if anyone could have been saved if the sirens would have been activated and the news stations mentioned at least a possibility of a tornado. Thanks for you hard work man, these are great and continue to get better!

  • @timme2844
    @timme2844 Год назад +26

    I remember this day like it was yesterday. We were living in Rockford/Machesney Park at the time. I came home from work that day around 11. I stepped outside to get to my car and was shocked by the humidity/moisture that was in the air. I was born in this area but raised some 400 miles south near the Ohio River where August humidity was downright brutal but this end of the state rarely experienced that kind of oppressive moisture but on that day it was miserable! At around 1:30 my wife woke me telling me they had just issued a tornado warning for the county just to or east. We were under a severe thunderstorm warning. I stepped outside to look at the sky before the thunderstorm arrived and was immediately concerned by that ominous greenish tint in the clouds. I knew it was going to get bad and honestly was preparing to hear the tornado sirens any moment. The hall came the wind got crazy (neighbor lost his tree) and the power went out. We sat in the basement till everything passed. I went back outside and will never forget how the sky looked off to our southeast. The sky looked like the clouds were swirling a drain kind of like watching the water drain out of a bath tub. I knew then someone, somewhere was going to get hit by a tornado of they weren't already. Also after those storms cleared the temp must have dropped 20°. Sure enough it wasn't but an hour and we started getting the reports about the tornado going through Plainfield.

  • @de-tached
    @de-tached Год назад +14

    This informational account was well delivered with accurate and appropriate video supplements to support the topic. It lacked unnecessary hype or embellishment and gave a clear an informed picture that is very viewer relatable. I'd score: 98/100. Really well done, thanks for the effort!

  • @scottw6704
    @scottw6704 10 месяцев назад +3

    Really helpful meterological info here that's not included in most tornado documentary videos. Thanks!

  • @anthonyforeman6379
    @anthonyforeman6379 10 месяцев назад +2

    This was the summer before 5th grade, we lived in Crystal Lawns in Plainfield. My dad called and told us a bad storm was headed our way, it had just gone through where he worked in Aurora. It was sunny and clear at our house, we were all outside swimming, so we didn't give it much thought, but he sent my Grandpa, who lived a few streets over, to pick us up.
    He was going to take us to our Aunt's house since she had a basement, but it got really bad before we got out of the neighborhood, so he took us back to his house.
    We parked in the garage and were all trying to uncover the crawl space entrance when it hit. I remember the back door flew open and then it seemed like the house and garage were just gone. My brother ended up partially under the car with my Grandma, who had just come out of the house, on top of him. The door to the house landed against the car and I ducked under that and got in the tornado position. My oldest brother was at the front of the car and a wall fell on him and pinned him to the car, but luckily when the roof blew off it took the wall with it. The garage door hit my Grandpa and broke his arm, which fortunately was the worst injury any of us sustained.
    Luckily we did not make it into the crawlspace, as the house had a cinder block foundation and the tornado ripped up the entire floor of the house and threw cinder blocks all around where we would have been.
    And funnily enough, storms help me sleep, as I have the completely illogical and false sense of security that it can't possibly happen again.
    Thanks for making this video, it is very well done and I especially appreciate the detail of showing the animation of the tornado moving along its path.

  • @nicolefranger9684
    @nicolefranger9684 Год назад +9

    Went to school in Plainfield, always heard about how bad it was but had never seen the footage. Great video!

    • @carch7243
      @carch7243 Год назад +4

      There isn't any footage, only the aftermath

    • @LilB11138
      @LilB11138 11 месяцев назад +3

      This isn't footage. Use this very app as search the Plainfield tornado. That's footage

  • @Kimock7Autism
    @Kimock7Autism Год назад +26

    I visited the area around Plainfield HS the next day. I was 20 years old and brought a disposable camera and lended my help where I could. It was a terrifying stomach sickening experience I'll never forget. Was like a massive bomb was dropped - very little structure of anything was left. My best photo is a two-foot piece of wood that pierced a wire fence like a bullet

    • @missyelliot6237
      @missyelliot6237 Год назад +3

      Damn. That is insane. Do you still have the photos??

    • @alliedluck9141
      @alliedluck9141 11 месяцев назад +1

      that’s insane. you should post a video of the photos

    • @debracarter9935
      @debracarter9935 10 месяцев назад +1

      I cried when I saw [the devastation] and how NOTHING was recognizable. It truly was stomach turning.

  • @galahadkoa1
    @galahadkoa1 Год назад +11

    I grew up near where this tornado hit. I remember the sky turning green and then the wind picked up quite a bit with heavy rain. It went through fairly quickly, but we knew there was more to this storm due to damage and down trees even in the area where I lived. My older cousin lived next door and not too long after the storm went through he came over and said a tornado had gone through the Cedarwood Apartments and the authorities were looking for volunteers to help. He left to help with his brother. My mom, aunt, and I went driving around to see what happened (not a bright idea in hindsight). I remember we were going down one of the main roads through Joliet and signs were torn down, there was debris in the road, and parts of buildings blown off. I didnt realize how bad it was until I saw the Chicago Police drive by. At that point it sunk in how bad things had to be for Chicago emergency vehicles to drive 45 miles to come to where I live. There were emergency vehicles from literally everywhere you could think of. Roads were closed past a certain point so we never saw the exact spot where the tornado went through.

  • @zeezhuang5374
    @zeezhuang5374 Год назад +3

    Dude how is your channel this small??? You’re so underrated man LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @drewdavis8752
    @drewdavis8752 11 месяцев назад +3

    I am a meteorology student living in Plainfield. To say I don’t pass these daily and still see trees that are hollowed out from this is an understatement. The neighborhood that was struck first on the northwest side of town is forever impacted. No indications of expansion and many empty lots for sale. Tragic and sad what happened.

  • @mrgreen8357
    @mrgreen8357 Год назад +31

    I was there I lived in Plainfield after moving from Chicago we moved there in 1989 and I was home alone and didn't know anything about tornadoes at 9 years old I was born in 1980 that tornado just missed our house and we only lost some shingles that's the tornado that made me fear and respect and eventually obsessed with tornadoes and I moved to Kansas when I was 20 and been chasing tornadoes ever since

    • @WendyOWilbury
      @WendyOWilbury 8 месяцев назад +2

      Not surprisingly, that same tornado made me obsessed with them, too. "Green mammatus clouds"..... never saw anything like that before or since.

  • @silverheart.
    @silverheart. Год назад +11

    My dad worked at the vulcan quarry at this time and he was part of the cleanup crew. He said they visited plainfield a day after and he said the damage was horrific and there was just nothing left. Its crazy how i live not even 15 minutes north of plainfield and the town rebounded since then.

  • @chiaracelli
    @chiaracelli Год назад +74

    My mom was a construction worker (flagger) and it was one of the first days at her job. Her coworkers jumped into their trucks before realizing and returning to get her after 30 minutes. She was short and petite-she had to lay down in a ditch and hold the tall grass to not get sucked away.

    • @marissahicks3529
      @marissahicks3529 Год назад +8

      Holy hell. She totally should’ve sued. I hope she’s doing ok now ❤

    • @Sconi71
      @Sconi71 Год назад +7

      ⁠@@marissahicks3529Sue what? The Tornado? Scheeez

    • @EmeraldEsmerelda
      @EmeraldEsmerelda 9 месяцев назад

      @@Sconi71You can’t be that dumb 😅

    • @EphemeralProductions
      @EphemeralProductions 7 месяцев назад

      @@marissahicks3529somehow they didn’t realize she was there, in their panic. They can’t really be faulted for that

  • @confessorsedai
    @confessorsedai 10 месяцев назад +2

    I was born in ‘89 and I grew up right outside Joliet in Shorewood, which is near Plainfield, and I vividly remember hearing about this for years. Didn’t know it was an F5 though!

  • @Spazzzzz67
    @Spazzzzz67 11 месяцев назад +5

    I lived in Plainfield across from Lake Renwick with my parents I worked at Dominick’s in Joliet when this storm hit….I remember driving to work that day around 11am thinking Wow!! It is so muggy while listening to the forecast on the radio saying conditions are ripe for some afternoon storms not really thinking much about it because it was almost September.Clocked in at 11:30 a few hours later the sky just kept getting darker and darker.. We had huge glass windows in the very front of the store and it looked darker than night and the store manager told everyone get into the back rooms!! 15 minutes later we came out and it was already getting clear.. A little while later my buddies parents came shopping and said don’t you have kin in Plainfield? I replied yes my parents live there,He said the Tornado touched down there it’s pretty bad you better get home especially by St.Mary’s church and the high school …My heart sank the church was right behind my house I clocked out and sped home only getting as far as Essington and Caton farm rd! First responders said you have to leave your car here and walk! Then I really panicked and starting jogging all the way to Von Esch rd and through those neighborhoods seeing all the destruction!! I’ll never forget it started crying and running faster thinking my folks were gone? I practically ran 5 miles without ever stopping once all the way home close to 59 and route 30 to find my stepfather pushing a broom down the driveway whilst drinking a beer I was relieved and concerned at the same time because even though they were safe they had no idea of the actual destruction behind them or in other areas that I had been through… My stepdad and I rode our ten speeds around all night helping folks anyway we could… 29 lost on that horrific day such a tragedy! I used to love storms! Whenever one comes through I think about those victims and families while I’m in my basement 😢😢❤️❤️🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @maverickhuntersyd
    @maverickhuntersyd Год назад +65

    Crazy hearing about this. I've lived in Plainfield my whole life (born in 2001) and never heard of this tornado. Closest thing I can recall is teachers in the early 2000's telling us to be good and pay attention during tornado drills because some kids in the Plainfield high school "watched the school crumble around them" and "survived by listening to their teachers" pretty chilling now that I think about it.

    • @Xontar02
      @Xontar02 11 месяцев назад +6

      I'm shocked you lived in Plainfield and never heard about the tornado that demolished your high school.

    • @Luhblakkmusix
      @Luhblakkmusix 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Xontar02 I lived in Naperville for all of middle school and freshman year of high school and never heard about it also born 2001 this is the first I’m hearing of any natural disaster happening in Illinois

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@LuhblakkmusixI lived in Naperville my whole life I think you just weren't paying attention

    • @spiritualhammer392
      @spiritualhammer392 5 месяцев назад +1

      So hard to believe so many young people's parents never talked to them about life before they were born. It's weird. We knew everything about my parents and grandparents' generations.

  • @pr1ckt
    @pr1ckt Год назад +7

    i grew up in this town about 15 years after it happened. i was told stories from about all my teachers in grade school about having their homes flattened in seconds. even almost 2 decades after this storm happened it still lived with the town and will forever

  • @cyaninkling2521
    @cyaninkling2521 Год назад +13

    I only just recently moved from Aurora to Plainfield a few weeks before this video went up and supposedly my home was built about 30 years ago and now looking at this tornado's path of destruction it looks like the area my home was built is in the path that took a direct hit from this tornado. Of course the home was built after it but its interesting to know the history of where I live, and I already love this town, very peaceful but convinient

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад

      It wasn't a replacement home?

    • @mamsy1169
      @mamsy1169 28 дней назад

      Growing up in the area and having family that lost their house in the tornado - I had always wondered why part of the neighborhood looked “new” and part of it didn’t. I knew about the tornado since I was at the mall/by the mall in a car when it was hitting, but didn’t know that family had lost their house in it. I have VHS tapes from the aftermath.

  • @michaelcunninghamiii5252
    @michaelcunninghamiii5252 8 месяцев назад +3

    I graduated from planfield highschool. Class of 2021. At the front of the school there are 2 bricks in the wall that are labeled. One is from the 1800s when the school was first built. The second one is from the 1990, when the tornado hit. It’s interesting to look at. Also the only building that was still standing besides the 1 hallway and that was the observatory right next to the football field

  • @pauledgewater
    @pauledgewater Год назад +20

    I remember that day. I lived in Chicago back then, and I was driving my car westbound in the afternoon, and I could see the supercell from what must've been 40 miles away. It was a beautiful, sunny and hot summer day where I was, but I knew something really bad was happening in the south east. RIP to all the victims.

  • @chimppower2748
    @chimppower2748 11 месяцев назад +33

    As a plainfield resident I can confirm this is the second worst thing to happen to our town, the worst being when our Walmart closed down

    • @jesussamurai8433
      @jesussamurai8433 10 месяцев назад +4

      That was devastating to us romeoville folks as well because now our walmart is crazy packed.

    • @chimppower2748
      @chimppower2748 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@jesussamurai8433 hey you guys stole our checkout lanes at least! My friend said you guys got way more when ours closed 😂

    • @dmitrykarkov4747
      @dmitrykarkov4747 9 месяцев назад +2

      We should just close all of them and bring back local businesses

    • @chimppower2748
      @chimppower2748 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@dmitrykarkov4747 agreed from a leftist perspective. But disagree on a common sense perspective

    • @dmitrykarkov4747
      @dmitrykarkov4747 9 месяцев назад

      @@chimppower2748 we need to go through less things. I am willing to accept a higher cost for goods, AND less goods, because I think it will lead to BETTER goods and more sustainable goods. It’s like getting off drugs. Short term feels bad, but long term is so much better. I’m ready to give up on the livestock diet that big food(now big food/pharma) foists onto us. I’m ready for everything to not be super convenient. We need to use more of what we have and throw away less. The wealth inequality and the globalist bullshit, and the mega-corporations… fucking ENOUGH. Dude look at our pop culture. It’s not liberated, it’s immoral and tacky and gaudy. We could do a lot better as a country, and as a people. We could have employee owned businesses where people are actually motivated to do a good job. We could have an entire cultural revolution, which I think would be the best case scenario. People are fed up with this fake ass system. Left vs right IDGAF it’s irrelevant to me. Our country is becoming an embarrassment.

  • @emilybergner7199
    @emilybergner7199 Год назад +12

    I was 12 when the tornado happened and lived in Plainfield close to downtown. Our church and school (St. Mary’s) were destroyed along with the high school that I would attend the next fall. Our house was minimally damaged but I remember we had to pick through our grass and remove all the bits of debris - insulation, nails, bits of concrete, glass. We had a big piece of someone’s roof in our yard (never found out where it came from). A boy whose family we knew, our school principal, and music teacher died. Walking south on Rt 59 from our home was surreal. Trees whittled away, cars thrown into farm fields, buildings gone or badly damaged. School had been due to start within a few days and I would have been at volleyball practice in the school gym had it happened a few days later. The school gym was destroyed. What a strange experience.

  • @user-WC1984
    @user-WC1984 Год назад +7

    I was 6 year old when the tornado went directly over our house. I will never forget how the supercell looked as it was approaching our house. To this day I have never seen a storm that looked that violent! My family and I nearly made it to the back door of our house before all the windows blew out. One of my brothers was at the high school for football practice and clearly remembers the entire team piled up in the hallway as the roof of the field house rippled like a wave before it was torn off. We were fortunate to come out of the ordeal with our lives.

  • @dizzykasgames
    @dizzykasgames Год назад +29

    I actually go to PCHS right now and they have a statue near the school and have a big tornado memorial by one of the entrances. It’s fascinating, really.

    • @dizzykasgames
      @dizzykasgames Год назад +1

      PCHS aka PHS

    • @CeltonHenderson
      @CeltonHenderson  Год назад +6

      Yeah I can imagine Plainfield central high makes sure this event isn’t forgotten.

    • @roo302
      @roo302 Год назад +7

      My Mother was a member of the first graduating class that attended the old building for all four years {class of 1961}. She was working for the architects and structural engineers that were responsible for the design and oversaw construction of the new building. It was the last project she worked on, then retired.

    • @mony.v5049
      @mony.v5049 9 месяцев назад

      @@roo302 That's awesome to hear, I graduated from PHS in 2021 and thought the building was just beautiful and unique.

  • @ETHANTHEGOAT33
    @ETHANTHEGOAT33 9 месяцев назад +20

    I can confirm that every thing in Plainfield, Illinois has been recovered because I live in Plainfield, Illinois, and everything has been rebuilt, but it will never be the same used to be

    • @skippydads99
      @skippydads99 9 месяцев назад +2

      Never be the same as it used to be. U braindead hick. 😂😂

    • @elementalfury1486
      @elementalfury1486 9 месяцев назад

      @@skippydads99guy corrects ppls grammar but spells “you” as “u”…
      Get a life bozo

    • @elementalfury1486
      @elementalfury1486 9 месяцев назад

      @@skippydads99guy corrects ppls grammar but spells “you” as “u”…
      Get a life bozo

    • @elementalfury1486
      @elementalfury1486 9 месяцев назад

      @@skippydads99guy corrects ppls grammar but spells “you” as “u”
      Get a life

    • @professormancaptain4210
      @professormancaptain4210 9 месяцев назад +4

      ​@skippydads99 weve been typing on typo machines for over a decade. Corrections of this style have been irrelevant since like 2011. Catch up.

  • @mbalash3755
    @mbalash3755 Год назад +2

    Very well explained. I’ve never seen how they form like this. Thank you! Scary stuff

  • @L0qxn-LoganWx
    @L0qxn-LoganWx Год назад +28

    This is unbelievable how this was unwarned. I can't imagine having a tornado destroy or slab my home without no warning. Keep it up, Celton!

    • @nik1128
      @nik1128 Год назад +9

      That was what was so bizarre. We knew nothing until I got off my school bus and saw this funnel cloud in the distance headed right for us!

    • @Paniekzaaiertje
      @Paniekzaaiertje Год назад

      There was no warning. You said ‘without no warning’, but the video clearly states there was no warning at all.

    • @nik1128
      @nik1128 Год назад +7

      @@Paniekzaaiertje ...huh

    • @Paniekzaaiertje
      @Paniekzaaiertje Год назад

      @@nik1128 I was talking to @L0qxnWx. He said he can't imagine having his home destroyed without no warning. 'Without no warning' means the same as 'with warning'. And the video states there was no warning, so his comment doesn't make any sense.

    • @roo302
      @roo302 Год назад +3

      They claim that this storm changed the rules about setting off the sirens.

  • @rj-zz8im
    @rj-zz8im Год назад +9

    I remember this tornado like it was yesterday. I grew up just south of there, and was/am a huge weather geek. There was warnings, because otherwise I wouldn't have been glued to my weather radio and calling my aunt who lived in Shorewood, IL. This was pre-internet and pre-cable (for me living in a rural area), so there was 100% warnings. Regardless, the strength was way more intense than what our area would expect, as was the type of set-up, being in August, and being such an isolated storm. The scar left to the landscape always fascinated me, as I traveled across it for many years.

    • @debprivate7840
      @debprivate7840 Год назад +5

      What he didn't mention in this video but I've seen in others, the warnings happened after it already hit. Also the tornado never made it to Shorewood. There was a warning for Shorewood but not for Plainfield.

    • @youngloc5239
      @youngloc5239 3 месяца назад

      @@debprivate7840 The op is saying that they were a huge weather freak. While others were relying on how humid, hot and a green sky. The op was glued to the weather radio. That's what gave them a head start on a possible tornado coming so they forewarned their aunt from another town. The op was just unsure about the size since nothing of the size came to that area

  • @ElijahCLive
    @ElijahCLive Год назад +7

    Nice coverage of a monster tornado. Everyone needs the intel to be aware of possible tornado formation in their area especially if the tornado sirens don’t trigger for warning. On April 27, 2011 in Alabama, our area sadly got to experience a devastating tornado. It was basically a historic day of how many tornadoes touched down in the U.S. Now I have a deep fear of tornadoes. RIP to the lives lost around those days and deep condolences to their families.

    • @bdpage2023
      @bdpage2023 Год назад

      I remember that evening in 2011. I was just north of Birmingham. We had plenty of notice to take shelter. It didn't hit us. I found out later that the big ones there come through Tuscaloosa and head east.

  • @melissaprete8767
    @melissaprete8767 8 месяцев назад +2

    My dad taught at a previous school with the teacher who was killed at the high school. Our family used to camp with his. He was a wonderful man lost too early. RIP S.H.

  • @danmcneile5965
    @danmcneile5965 10 месяцев назад +1

    I remember that afternoon. I was driving from Peoria to Bloomington on I-74 and was fascinated with the sky to the north. Even with the storm 80 miles away, it dominated the sky with clouds billowing miles high until they flattened into an anvil. The sun from the clear Central Illinois sky gave all kinds of colors to the clouds including white, yellow, orange and gray-black. I kept thinking, "wow, that isn't just any storm. That's a monster!" When I got to my newspaper office in Bloomington the reports started coming in about Plainfield and Joliet reporting tornadoes. I was saddened and not surprised after seeing that storm from a distance.

  • @FriendlyKat
    @FriendlyKat Год назад +12

    16.3k subs and you're putting out amazing content like this? Subbed! You deserve more!

  • @nationalskyline
    @nationalskyline Год назад +4

    Great video! Your channel is highly underrated.

  • @creamypeanutbutter6269
    @creamypeanutbutter6269 Год назад +6

    been living in plainfield since 2006 i remember hearing something about a tornado here before but i had no idea it was this severe

  • @hansonel
    @hansonel 11 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent documentary.
    I lived in the North burbs of Chicago about 50 miles north of Planfield and about 15 miles north of Downtown Chicago. I remember this supercell system going through the region. In our area if produced high straight line winds of at least 60-70 mph. It only lasted a minute of so but there was no warning for that either. My dad opened the windows to "equalize the pressure" while my mom, my sister and I went down to the basement. The winds were strong enough to knock down big old trees and blew a dumpster out of an alleyway into our street.

  • @Dahn.Baern.
    @Dahn.Baern. 9 месяцев назад

    Subscribed. Awesome work man. I think you’re one of the more concise and to-the-point narrators in the tornado video world. Seems like the majority love to hear themselves talk and put their face on camera for 80% of the video

  • @fungillooo
    @fungillooo Год назад +5

    You deserve way more subs man. great video!

  • @pretizco3679
    @pretizco3679 Год назад +12

    Amazing informative video, keep up the great work!
    Happy new year btw

  • @89128
    @89128 Год назад +11

    My wife and I remember that day well. We were south bound on Lake Shore Drive in Chicago about 5PM. I looked to the west and saw that the sky was black, I told my wife this is tornado weather. When we got home we found out about Plainfield.

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад

      It's crazy how we just know

  • @ericpeterson2936
    @ericpeterson2936 11 месяцев назад +3

    My cousins were in a house in the upper corner of the Wheatland Plains hood. One was in the shower and it was the ONLY portion of the upstairs left of the house. I was in the Sears portion of the mall that day and they wouldn't let us outside. Thankfully. Born and raised in the Joilet (rhymes w toilet) area 47 years, I can vouch it was a horribly amazing monster. When I went to help cleanup (I was a junior in high school about 16), I will never forget the power of such a storm. A roof in it's entirety ripped off a garage, then set onto the yard with barely a shingle missing. Reminded me of Lincoln Logs! It's unreal MORE lives weren't lost tbh. It was a great event that made the system most improved today.

    • @bobbiellison4315
      @bobbiellison4315 10 месяцев назад

      Jo-lett? I don't think that's correct

    • @nannerz1994
      @nannerz1994 10 месяцев назад

      Fox Valley Mall Sears?

    • @ericpeterson2936
      @ericpeterson2936 10 месяцев назад

      No. The Joilet one which was pretty much on the border of Plainfield over bah derr.

  • @Triton-54
    @Triton-54 8 месяцев назад

    I was 10 yo when that storm hit, I was 3 miles north of its track. Never have I heard it discussed in such detail. GREAT JOB !!!