Several powerful tornadoes tore through northern Alabama on Thursday, killing at least five people, injuring dozens of others and destroying entire neighborhoods.
Tornados also swept into neighbouring Georgia overnight into early Friday, causing widespread damage southwest of Atlanta. No fatalities have been reported yet in that state.
The five confirmed fatalities were in Ohatchee, Ala., a town of about 1,200 people in the northwestern corner of the state where a twister ripped apart homes and downed trees and power lines, according to the Calhoun County Emergency Management Agency.
Calhoun County coroner Pat Brown confirmed to the Gadsden Times newspaper that three of those killed were family members in a house that was hit. In addition, an adult male died in his mobile home, and a female adult died in another mobile home.
No more fatalities were expected, Brown said.
Rescue crews were tending to injured survivors and searching for additional victims, the agency said.
Photos posted on social media showed a line of buildings near Ohatchee that had collapsed or been ripped apart, with roofs sheared off, exposing furniture and other contents. A white church steeple, still intact, rested next to a destroyed structure.
In Pelham, Alabama, about 60 miles southwest of Ohatchee, fire chief Mike Reid told news website Al.com that about 60 homes were damaged in the area, but no fatalities or injuries were reported.
Tens of thousands of people were left without power.
Allison Allred, a 23-year-old floral designer, hid in a hallway with her 73-year-old grandmother in their home in Georgia’s Bartow County, near the Alabama state line.
“I was crying. … We got really panicked. … My heart was racing. It was awful,” she said in a phone interview. “It had been hailing and it was raining so heavy you couldn’t see anything. It was very dark, but thankfully we are safe.”
A police officer in Florence was struck by lightning as he set up road barriers, the police department there said. The officer was “conscious and responsive” at North Alabama Medical Center, Florence police said on Twitter.
Alabama is part of the Dixie tornado Alley…
In Georgia, widespread damage was reported in the city of Newnan, about 38 miles from Atlanta. The city tweeted that the downtown area was hit particularly hard by the destruction.
At least two storms produced long tracking, violent tornadoes that swept across about 100 miles of Alabama on Thursday afternoon, said Chris Darden, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Birmingham.
More tornadoes may have touched down in the area, Darden said, but the number of twisters would be unknown until a survey can be completed in the coming days.
“The number is not as important as the magnitude of what has transpired,” he said. “We are seeing significant damage in several communities. There are many counties in central Alabama that have been hard hit with substantial damage.”
Forecasters also warned of dangerous thunderstorms, flash floods and possible twisters in eastern Mississippi, and northward into Tennessee and Kentucky. Also, flash flood warnings and watches extended to the western Carolinas during the night hours.
Multiple injuries had been suffered in Shelby County, southeast of Birmingham. No further details were immediately available.
“Shelby County has suffered significant tornado damage. We can confirm local residential structures have been completely destroyed,” Shelby County Sheriff John Samaniego said in a statement to Al.com. A search and outreach effort would “continue throughout the night and into the early morning hours,” he said.
The Jefferson County Sheriff alerted residents that another twister had struck there. “Jefferson County now has a CONFIRMED tornado on the ground. It is currently located in the area of I-59 and 459. SEEK SHELTER IMMEDIATELY,” the sheriff’s department said on Twitter.
First Lady Jill Biden canceled a trip to Alabama with actress Jennifer Garner that had been planned for Friday to promote President Joe Biden’s coronavirus relief plans, according to the White House.
In addition to deaths in Alabama, Mississippi had a storm-related death on Wednesday. Ester Jarrell, 62, died in that state’s Wilkinson County when a large tree toppled over onto her mobile home after heavy rain soaked the ground.
Alabama is part of the Dixie tornado Alley… Learn more about the different tornado alleays in the US here… [Q107]
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