On Tuesday, June 16, 1992, eastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota were heavily impacted by the storm as it moved from the Rocky Mountain Region across the Upper Midwest. At least two dozen tornadoes were reported that day, with more than three times that many reports of large hail and strong winds, causing widespread swaths of damage to crops, buildings, and other personal property across much of eastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota. The first tornado, spawned by a supercell thunderstorm, touched down in
Charles Mix County, South Dakota about 1:00 pm. The last tornado was reported shortly before midnight that evening, ending an 11-hour period of intense severe weather across eastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota. Until the record was broken in 2010, the 27 tornadoes that touched down in Minnesota on June 16 marked the largest single day tornado outbreak in Minnesota since accurate records started being kept in 1950. Remarkably, there was only one fatality from this outbreak, that coming from an
F5 tornado in
Chandler, Minnesota. In addition to the F5, three
F4 tornadoes were reported in
Murray County, Minnesota, and
Mitchell and
McPherson counties in Kansas. Damage estimates for the two days were in excess of $160 million. This outbreak played a large part in a record setting month in June 1992. The 399 tornadoes that touched down in that month was a United States record at the time, breaking the old record of 335 tornadoes set in May 1991. This record was eventually broken, when
543 tornadoes touched down during May 2003. This record, though, would be broken in turn when over 750 tornadoes touched down in April 2011. ==Confirmed tornadoes==