Weather Service confirms two tornadoes hit Garfield during Tuesday morning storms

A tree rests on a house Tuesday morning in Pea Ridge after storms hit the area earlier that morning. The National Weather Service has confirmed the Tuesday morning storms spawned two tornadoes in Garfield.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)
A tree rests on a house Tuesday morning in Pea Ridge after storms hit the area earlier that morning. The National Weather Service has confirmed the Tuesday morning storms spawned two tornadoes in Garfield. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)

GARFIELD -- The National Weather Service has confirmed storms early Tuesday morning resulted in two tornadoes in the Garfield area.

Garfield Mayor Gary Blackburn said the storm downed trees "all over town" and damaged a number of homes, including two residences on Alvin Seamster Road that lost their roofs in the storm. Blackburn said there were no injuries reported from the storm.

"It came through the Pea Ridge Park," Blackburn said. "We border the park on the west side of town. It was pretty much in a straight line from there. It took the roofs off two houses then jumped over to the Ashmore subdivision."

Blackburn said there were mature trees blown down by the storm, including 15 trees at one residence. He said the city has cleared the roadways with some assistance from the Benton County Road Department in areas near the city and will be doing tree removal work "for the next couple of months."

Travis Cott, administrative officer at the Pea Ridge National Military Park, said there were trees blown down in some areas but no damage to buildings or to the split rail fences and other exhibits in the park.

Cott said one trail, the Williams Hollow Loop, was closed while staff walked the trail to check for downed trees or other damage.

"The path of the tornado went through that trail area," Cott said.

Lt. John Langham with the Pea Ridge Police Department said there were some trees blown down, but most of the reports of storm damage was about tree limbs and items that were outdoors but not secured, like trash cans and trampolines, being blown around. Langham said there were no injuries reported to the Police Department.

The first tornado developed around 12:33 a.m. Tuesday over the northeastern side of Pea Ridge National Military Park, northwest of Elkhorn Tavern, according to preliminary data provided by the weather service's Tulsa office. It moved east-northeast for 2.8 miles, uprooting several trees along North Old Wire Road and Limekiln Road. It dissipated east of Limekiln Road.

The weather service reported the second tornado developed at 12:35 a.m. It touched down north of U.S. 62 over the far southeastern portion of Pea Ridge National Military Park and moved east for 2.4 miles, damaging the roofs of two homes, destroying an outbuilding and uprooting trees on Alvin Seamster Road. Tree damage was noted as far east as Pinebrooke Road, and the tornado dissipated before reaching U.S. 62.

Both tornadoes were rated as EF1 with estimated peak winds of 90 to 100 mph, according to the weather service.

The storms also resulted in wind damage across much of Pea Ridge with trees uprooted or snapped in places from the west side of town toward the west side of Pea Ridge National Military Park.

In addition, the storms late Monday and early Tuesday produced five EF1 tornadoes in eastern Oklahoma, according to the weather service.

photo Workers assess damage Tuesday in Pea Ridge after storms hit the area hard. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)
photo Damage is seen Tuesday in Pea Ridge after early morning storms. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)
photo Damage is seen Tuesday in Pea Ridge after early morning storms. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)
photo Utility crews work on power lines early Tuesday morning in Pea Ridge. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard)

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