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SWT

Memorial Day Tornado Tore Through the San Marcos Campus When Finals Were Just Ending

TXtornadoemergency notificationlow confidence
Confirmed Threat

On May 28, 1996, a tornado struck the Southwest Texas State University campus in San Marcos during the Memorial Day storm outbreak, causing significant damage to campus buildings during the period when final exams had just concluded. San Marcos is in the heart of the Texas tornado corridor, and the 1996 Memorial Day storms produced multiple tornadoes across Central Texas. The campus relied on city tornado sirens and police radio networks to warn the remaining campus population, as no campus-wide electronic notification system existed.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Southwest Texas State University
Public Masters · TX
~20,000 studentsNone (pre-mass-notification era; sirens and phone tree)
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSiren
Approximate reconstruction305 chars
[Tornado warning: A tornado has been sighted in Hays County. Take shelter immediately in an interior room on the lowest floor of a sturdy building. Stay away from windows. Do not attempt to outrun the tornado in a vehicle. This warning is in effect until further notice from the National Weather Service.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The 1996 Memorial Day tornado outbreak produced multiple tornadoes across Central Texas, including Hays County where Southwest Texas State University is located
SWT in 1996 had no mass-notification email or SMS system; the campus relied on outdoor sirens and the university police radio network for emergency communication
Final exams for the spring 1996 semester were either just concluding or had just ended, so the campus population was smaller than during the regular academic year
Southwest Texas State University was renamed Texas State University in 2003; the San Marcos campus remains in the same location
Context

Background

Southwest Texas State University -- renamed Texas State University in 2003 -- sits in San Marcos, Texas, at the heart of the region's tornado corridor, and has experienced severe weather events throughout its history. The Memorial Day 1996 tornado outbreak produced storms across Central Texas in late May 1996, with multiple tornado touchdowns in the Hays County region where the SWT campus is located. The tornado struck during the post-finals lull between the spring and summer semesters, when the campus population was reduced but not empty. In 1996, Southwest Texas State had no electronic mass-notification system of any kind: emergency communication depended entirely on City of San Marcos outdoor tornado sirens, NOAA Weather Radio, and the campus police radio network to alert any remaining students, faculty, and staff. The case is representative of the pre-modern alerting era at medium-sized regional state universities, which had far less emergency communication infrastructure than the large research universities of the period. The incident predated by more than a decade the 2008 HEOA emergency-notification mandate that would require all U.S. colleges and universities to implement mass-notification systems capable of reaching the entire campus community within minutes.
Outcome
Significant structural damage to campus buildings. No reported fatalities. Classes for summer session affected. Storm was part of a larger Memorial Day 1996 tornado outbreak across Central Texas.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
tornadosevere-stormpre-modern-alertingtexaspublic-masters1990send-of-semestermemorial-daysiren-only
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion