03/23/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/23/2026 14:57
Published on March 23, 2026
If the phrase "March 28, 2000" is triggering for you, we totally understand. If it's not, then allow us to explain why that date is imprinted in many a Fort Worthian's mind.
At approximately 6:18 p.m., an F3 tornado touched down about four miles west of downtown. (Note: F3 tornado winds can reach over 200 mph.) It pounced on the Monticello neighborhood like a feral feline, scratching its way east along West Seventh Street, clawing through Linwood, biting into the Montgomery Ward building and ripping other structures like prey.
Nearly every Central Business District building had at least some of its windows broken out, not to mention interior damage from wind and rain. Two people lost their lives and another 80 were injured.
In less than 10 minutes, the tornado caused $450 million in damage, leaving a trail of widespread damage and destruction. What made it even more shocking: It struck an area few ever expected a tornado to hit - right in the heart of a bustling downtown.
Picking up the pieces
The affected area resembled a war zone. Once gleaming skyscrapers stood shellshocked; smaller structures were reduced to rubble. Houses were missing roofs, windows, entire walls. Decades-old trees were ripped from the ground; vehicles were strewn like children's toys. Glass rained down from skyscrapers throughout the night and following days, the debris like shiny daggers. Folks were stunned.
Never in a million years did we think this was possible on our home turf.
The fallout was immediate, cleanup took weeks and some redevelopment spanned years. The damage was daunting, but residents rallied through the rubble. And incredibly (or, some might say, unsurprisingly), the city emerged better than before. New development sprung up downtown, filling in the empty spots and filling out existing sites. The skyline transformed.
This includes Fort Worth's own City Hall, formerly the Pier 1 Imports headquarters, built in 2004 on the patch of land that Calvary Cathedral once occupied.
It also resulted in an iconic art piece that stands proud at a major Westside intersection connecting Camp Bowie Boulevard and University Drive.
A quote from then Mayor Kenneth Barr in the 2001 Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo Souvenir Annual sums up the collective effort perfectly:
"As you can tell, Fort Worth is proud of its Western heritage. Our community is as tough as the array of boots that you see at the Stock Show. Over the years we have enjoyed good times and weathered tough times. Last year, a tornado damaged downtown property, but it did not damage the Fort Worth spirit."
Some of the structures that suffered significant damage included:
View various pieces of video footage captured March 28, 2000.
Note: Interestingly, there's a video clip in this collection that NBC 5 aired a month prior about staying safe during a tornado. Little did we know …
Videos courtesy of UNT Libraries Special Collections.
Photos courtesy of the Fort Worth History Center.
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