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The tornadoes would cause power outages in Bowling Green; 1,500 customers were still without power a week after the tornadoes. [26] The city of Bowling Green applied for a Disaster Recovery Grant through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which planned to install additional storm shelters in Bowling Green in the event of another tornado. [27]
As the EF3 tornado moved through areas just south of downtown Bowling Green, a second tornado formed as a result of a separate, smaller circulation within the same parent supercell. It first touched in the southeastern part of Bowling Green at 1:19 a.m. CST (07:19 UTC), near the Bowling Green–Warren County Regional Airport. It first damaged a ...
2021 Bowling Green tornadoes: 165 mph (266 km/h) December 11, 2021 17 (16 direct, 1 indirect) Kentucky: NWS: Traveled 29.87 miles (48.07 km) and peak width of 440 yd (400 m). Second deadliest tornado of the December 10-11 outbreak. One of the two tornadoes that impacted Bowling Green that night. [45] Tornado outbreak of December 10–11, 2021
Widespread destruction was seen across Bowling Green, Kentucky, after deadly tornadoes tore across the state’s western region on the night of December 10-11.Drone footage posted by the National ...
The night a tornado hit Bowling Green last year, Ginny Hensley was already on high alert. A tornado had struck her house in Glasgow, Kentucky, in 1997. On the night of Dec. 10, 2021, weather ...
With at least 78 deaths and more than 100 people reported missing in Kentucky, volunteers in Bowling Green have come together to offer relief when the city needs it most. According to the Warren ...
This tornado began in the southeast corner of Edmonson County after the Bowling Green EF3 tornado dissipated and moved northeast along I-65 into Barren County and Hart County, first passing directly through Park City, where many trees were snapped, barns and outbuildings were destroyed, and homes sustained roof damage. Past Park City, the ...
During the early-morning hours of December 11, 2021, two destructive tornadoes struck Bowling Green. The first was an EF3 tornado that heavily damaged or destroyed several buildings and homes and killed seventeen people. [19]