June 14th didn't pile up big numbers — 41 reports total — but it punched where it counted: six tornadoes in one afternoon, nearly all packed into a single corner of the map.
The rotation set up over Pennsylvania, where survey crews confirmed a run of EF-1s — Blooming Valley, Grand Valley, West Liberty, Pine Glen, and a Kirkwood track that ran close to three miles at an estimated 95 mph — with two more dropping across the line in Ohio. Ohio also took the day's hardest wind: a 90 mph gust near Homeworth, plenty to lay a tree across a roof.
Hail was light and scattered. The biggest stone was a 1.75-inch golf ball near Dortches, North Carolina, with smaller stuff dotted across Virginia, Maryland, and Michigan. Nothing roof-ending on the ice side — this was a wind-and-rotation day, not a hail day.
That makes it the sneaky kind. Tornado and straight-line wind damage hides from the driveway — the shingles read fine from the ground while the ridge, the flashing, and the back slope quietly let go. If a warning or a hard gust crossed your stretch of PA or Ohio, get someone up top before you call it a clean miss.
For the crews, the work this week is narrow but obvious: the confirmed Pennsylvania and Ohio tornado tracks are about as tight a canvass list as anyone hands you. Want to see how the season's twisters are stacking up by state? The Top States for Tornadoes guide keeps the count. Every state that reported on the 14th is mapped below — find yours and zoom in.