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Tyler, MN Tornado, Aug 1918

Tyler, MN Main Street 1908 Tyler MINN tornado  8-21-1918.jpg Tyler MINN tornado  8-21-1918 2.jpg Tyler, MN Main Street after Tornado The Town after the Tornado Congregational Church after Tornado Residence Section after Tornado Residence Section after Tornado

TORNADO KILLS 35, INJURIES OVER 100

Tyler, Minnesota, Torn to Pieces; Property Loss a Million

Brave Nurse Loses Her Life Attempting to Save Patient

TYLER, Minn., Aug. 22.----Between thirty and thirty-five persons were killed and more than 100 were injured by the tornado which struck Tyler about 10 o'clock last night and tore the town to pieces in a twinkling. Twenty-seven bodies have been identified.

The tornado tore through the heart of the town, sparing only one building, a motion picture theatre, in which 200 persons were sheltered. The greatest loss of life was in a restaurant. Eighteen persons' were in the place when the brick walls collapsed. Sixteen were killed, and the other two were seriously injured.

Persons engaged in rescue work said that 125 injured victims was a conservative estimate. In addition to the business places, forty residences, the hospital, electric light plant and other buildings were destroyed. The storm raged until 11:25 P.M. and dozens of victims were pinned under debris for two or three hours, before rescued.

The tornado roared into the city from the east. Roofs were ripped from stores and houses, crashing glass whistled through the streets and falling walls re-echoed to thunder crashes before many residents realized what happened.

Destruction of the electric plant with the first shock of the storm plunged the city into darkness. It was not until early this morning that citizens were able to notify adjoining towns of the devastation.

Three of five patients in the Tyler hospital were killed when the building was destroyed. Miss Rose Nelson, head nurse, made an effort to save one of the patients and lost her life. There were eight persons in the building; only two escaped injury.

Home guardsmen from Pipestone arrived here this morning and assisted in the rescue work. Many of the injured were removed to hospitals in neighboring cities. Physicians said they feared a number of the victims would not survive.

Reports that the tornado destroyed the Northwestern Station and a passenger train later proved untrue. The storm, however, wrecked the roundhouse nearby.

It was estimated the property loss would be one million dollars at least.

Tyler is a town of 1100 inhabitants in the southwestern part of Minnesota.

Governor Sends Aid

ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 22.---An appeal for help, sent out from storm-stricken Tyler by the Chamber of Commerce, was relayed today to Governor Barnquist's office. The State Adjutant General immediately arranged to sent to Tyler from Pipestone this morning.

The tornado which struck Tyler was one of several severe storms which swept parts of Minnesota last night. Considerable damage was wrought at Verdie, in Southwestern Minnesota, and one death was reported.

The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia, PA 23 Aug 1918

Continued on page 2

1918 Tyler Tornado

I remember my maternal grandfather, John A. Lorenzen, telling a story about a tornado that went through town (I assumed he meant Lake Benton, MN) one night. He and my grandmother (Elaine E. Jackson) were not yet married, but they were on a "date" at, I believe, the Lake Benton ballroom that night. He remembers hearing what he thought was a freight train, and telling my grandmother this so that she wouldn't be afraid. He said that he helped with cleanup afterward. He said that the movie theatre was the only building that wasn't hit and that everyone in there survived. Was this the same tornado? Or were there several in the area?

Tyler Tornado, 1918.

A sister of my grandfathers and her husband (Mr. Paul P. Have and wife Caroline) were killed in that tornado. I haven´t much exact information about, what happened to them. But it´s told (by some older members of the family!), that not much was found, at spot where their house once was located. Except from a knife that was known to have belonged to Caroline.
Specified reports must have been reported somewhere, I guess!

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