For the third night straight, tornadoes swept through the Midwest, including another rare set of twin twisters that touched down in South Dakota.

According to ABC News, the twin tornadoes were spotted rotating near Crow Lake, South Dakota, on Wednesday evening.

Another set of twin twisters bore down on Pilger, a small village in Stanton County, Nebraska, on Monday. The tornadoes demolished the town fire station and about 40 to 50 homes, said Stanton County Sheriff Mike Unger, according to CNN. More than a dozen people were injured, and two died.

Another tornado struck the south-central South Dakota town of Wessington Springs on Wednesday, ripping apart local businesses and destroying a bar and a car dealership. A number of farms also were damaged, while around a dozen homes were destroyed, reports ABC affiliate KSFY.

"The tornado hit across the street from the hospital -- really just one block away -- and there is stuff and debris everywhere," said JoAnn Hettinger, director of patient care at Avera Weskota Memorial Hospital, according to CNN. She said her facility received one patient, but luckily there were no fatalities.

Wessington Springs Mayor Melissa Mebius said the twister completely wiped out 23 homes, including hers, when it hit around 8 p.m. It also destroyed three businesses in the town of 1,000 people about 125 miles northwest of Sioux Falls.

"There are a lot more houses that nobody is going to be able to live in for quite a while," she said, reports USA Today.

The National Weather Service issued a 20-minute tornado warning Wednesday. At 7:45 p.m., a tornado "went right through the heart" of Wessington, meteorologist Todd Heitkamp said.

"We are extremely blessed we had no serious injuries, and we are extremely grateful for all the help we are receiving from the state, fire department, law enforcement (and other agencies)," said Jerauld County State's Attorney Dedrich Koch.

He added that warnings sounded four times before and during the storm.

"We do see our blessings right away," said Father Jim Friedrich of St. Joseph's Catholic Church. "It was very serious damage. What it hit, it hit very hardly. That's just why we are thankful that there was good warning."

"Right now the main issue is safety, cleaning roads and getting people into their houses," Mebius said.