BOONE”S CHAPEL, Ala. — The home Willard Hollon had shared with his son and granddaughters is gone now, as is the one where his daughter lived, both twisted from their foundations by a tornado and tossed into the woods nearby. The storms that devastated the Deep South destroyed his family, too: Willard, his son Steve and daughter Cheryl all were killed when the winds roared through.
The storms that smacked the Midwest and South with howling winds and pounding rain left 17 people dead in four states. The system plowed through North Carolina on Saturday, bringing flash floods, hail and reports of tornadoes from the western hills to the streets of Raleigh.
Emergency crews scrambled to rescue hikers, clear trees from roads and survey damage. No immediate toll on injuries was available, but the prospects were grim for areas badly hit.
Meanwhile, residents were reeling in Alabama. Steve Hollon had recently retired from the Air Force and moved into his father”s home with his wife and two daughters while they remodeled a house of their own up the road. Steve Hollon had come to this small community about 25 miles from Montgomery to be closer to his dad.
Williard”s brother, Henley Hollon, lived across the street. He had come outside after the storm passed to make sure everyone was all right. The winds whirled, the lights went out and all he saw were a set of wooden steps and flowerbeds, the blooms still on the plants as though nothing happened. An American flag once displayed outside Cheryl”s home had been draped over a tree branch about 100 feet away.
“When I shined the light out there I could see it was all gone,” Henley Hollon said.
A weather service meteorologist estimated that the tornado”s winds reached 140 to 150 mph.
Hymnals still rested on the pews at the nearby Boone”s Chapel Baptist Church, even though the walls and roof had blown away. Tammie Silas joined other church members to clean up the debris and came upon two photos of the Hollon family.
“This is all they”ve got left,” Silas said as she clutched the pictures.
Willard Hollon”s wife, Sarah, his granddaughters and Steve”s wife all survived.
A neighbor, retired Alabama Power employee Don Headley, echoed what others in an area accustomed to nasty weather and the threat of tornadoes had said: When the storm bore down on them, they thought the worst had already ended. He had been on his patio and thought he and his wife were in the clear.
“The rain was just in sheets. There was a big bang. It sounded like something was tearing off my roof. Limbs were rolling off the roof,” he said.
The noise ended in less than a minute, and Headley went back out on his patio. Where he had been standing moments earlier a two-inch wide limb was now driven through the patio roof, he said.
Autauga County Chief Deputy Sheriff Joe Sedinger said seven others were hurt in the area, including a firefighter injured during rescue operations. He said the storm hopscotched for several miles, leaving some areas devastated and others untouched.
In Alabama”s Washington County, about 50 miles north of Mobile, a mother and her two children were among those killed, said county coroner Rickey Davidson. Jean Box, 38, and her two teenage sons, Shelton and Hunter, died when the storm demolished a double-wide mobile home in the Deer Park community, said Washington County Chief Deputy Terry Beasley.
The woman”s husband survived and was in the hospital, he said. Winds had thrown things 100 yards from where the home had stood.
In Marengo County in west-central Alabama, four separate tornadoes hit over the span of about five to six hours, and a man was killed when his mobile home was tossed nearly a quarter of a mile, emergency management director Kevin McKinney said.
Another death was reported in Mississippi”s Greene County, said Jeff Rent, a spokesman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. He did not have further details, and the Greene County Sheriff”s Office did not immediately return a phone message Saturday.
A state of emergency had been declared for the whole state of Alabama, and even the first NASCAR race of a busy weekend at Talladega Superspeedway was postponed.
Tornadoes first started touching down Thursday in Oklahoma, where two people were killed before the system pushed into Arkansas and left another seven dead, including three children.
In central North Carolina, a Lowe”s store in Sanford in the central part of the state was flattened. Company spokeswoman Julie Yenichek said none of the store”s employees were injured and she thinks all of the customers were safe because they all went to the back of the store, which acted like a makeshift shelter.
Farther north, officials handed out sandbags to District of Columbia residents to protect against rising water.
Back in Boone”s Chapel in Alabama, Henley Hollon talked about his family with Gov. Robert Bentley, who visited to comfort victims. The two looked at Hollon family photos that neighbors had pulled from debris scattered over a quarter-mile, as Hollon told Bentley he and his wife didn”t have time to get into a hallway when they realized the tornado was hitting.
“If God wanted us, we was in the big room, where He could have got us,” Hollon said. “I don”t try to outguess God.”
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