Violent tornado tears through Oklahoma town
- KWTV/KOTV via AP / A tornado crosses a highway in Enid, Okla., Thursday. No fatalities were reported, but 40 homes were damaged.
- The Associated Press / A man clears debris Friday at a commercial woodworking shop in Enid, Okla., in the aftermath of a tornado that barreled through Oklahoma Thursday.

KWTV/KOTV via AP / A tornado crosses a highway in Enid, Okla., Thursday. No fatalities were reported, but 40 homes were damaged.
ENID, Okla. — Raeann Hunt scrambled to her cellar as a tornado bore down on her Oklahoma community.
“It is headed right for us,” she recalled thinking, as she peeked outside, unable to contain her curiosity.
Huddled inside the dark 8-by-8 foot concrete shelter with her husband, brother-in-law and a neighbor, she heard roaring, metal slapping on the door and glass breaking.
Afterward, they emerged unscathed, but found the windows smashed out of the one-story brick home in Enid and the roof badly damaged.
The scene was repeated Thursday night across the city of about 50,000 people about 85 miles north of Oklahoma City as the EF-4 tornado hit. It was on the ground for 9 miles, packing winds of 170 to 175 mph and measuring 500 yards across at its widest, said Rick Smith, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

The Associated Press / A man clears debris Friday at a commercial woodworking shop in Enid, Okla., in the aftermath of a tornado that barreled through Oklahoma Thursday.
For those 30 to 40 minutes, at least 40 homes were damaged, some blown off their foundations. But no one was killed and only minor injuries were reported.
“People around here have a plan,” Hunt explained, noting that residents of this tornado-alley state are trained to either take shelter in a room near the center of their home or get underground.
Basements aren’t common in Oklahoma because of the red clay soil and elevated water tables that make it difficult and expensive to install them, but many homes — like Hunt’s — have storm cellars or safe rooms with reinforced concrete walls where people can take cover.
People here also know to flip on the TV and set up weather alerts on their phones — particularly in the springtime, when the risk of violent twisters is highest.
“Especially in Oklahoma, we have great meteorologists,” said Justin Hunt of Enid, who described the storm’s aftermath as a “disaster.”
Storm leaves rubble in its wake
Commercial buildings just south of the city were turned into a pile of twisted metal, splintered wood and insulation by powerful winds that pushed the buildings completely off the concrete foundations.
The tornado knocked down utility poles and left power lines wrapped with huge chunks of debris. A home had part of its metal roof torn off and trees were left stripped of bark and limbs. At another home, a section of one wall had peeled away to reveal the interior of the home with some furniture still in place.
“Usually when we come to a neighborhood that’s been hit this bad, there’s one or two deaths,” Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt said during a news conference Friday. “We’re just so thankful there wasn’t a loss of life.”






