iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app

Nashville Floodwaters Recede, Crews Search For Bodies

KRISTIN HALL and SHEILA BURKE   05/ 4/10 10:35 PM ET   AP

Tennessee Floods

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Cumberland River finally began receding Tuesday, exposing mud-caked homes and submerged cars as officials searched door to door for more victims of a record-busting flash flood and weekend storm already blamed for nearly 30 deaths.

No new fatalities were reported Tuesday and it was unclear whether anyone remained missing.

The weekend deluge swept many motorists to their deaths even after forecasters and Nashville's mayor warned people not to drive. But staying put carried frightening consequences for others as the swollen Cumberland and its tributaries started pouring into thousands of homes.

"I kept watching TV that was my source, and (Mayor) Karl Dean was saying stay put, don't drive," Nashville resident Cheri Newlin said. Police eventually told Newlin to evacuate on Monday, but by then, the water was so close that she had to flee by boat, leaving her three cats behind. She is now at a shelter and hasn't been able to get back to her house to check on her pets and assess damage.

By Tuesday, the flash floods were blamed in the deaths of 17 people in Tennessee alone, including nine in Nashville. At least nine people died in vehicles in Tennessee. Others were found in their homes or yards, including an elderly couple discovered in their Nashville home. A 21-year-old Nashville resident died when he tried to wade the waters in front of his home but got swept away in the current.

Sections of downtown and some of Music City's popular tourist attractions remained flooded Tuesday, including the Grand Ole Opry House and the Country Music Hall of Fame. Full damage estimates were unavailable, but the Opryland Hotel alone suffered more than $75 million in damage; it will be closed for three to six months.

The storm dumped more than a foot of rain from Saturday to Sunday, sending floodwaters rising rapidly in the middle of the night.

Residents in some of the hardest hit areas said they didn't know if they should flee or stick it out for fear that if they left their homes, they would be swept away by the muddy waters that turned streets into virtual rivers.

"We had less than an hour to get out," said Amanda Fatherree. She left her home on Nashville's west side Sunday after her mother yelled that the Harpeth River, normally located a quarter-mile away, had crept up to her back porch.

Nashville resident Judy Kestner had thought everything was going to be OK Saturday night when she went to bed. The water in her backyard had started receding, and there were no warnings of anything other than flash floods.

But then the howlings of her Siberian husky awoke her at 3 a.m. Sunday. The dog had been trapped in about 3 feet of rising water.

"It was up to her nose. She was barely getting air," said Kestner, 54.

Robert Strunk, a retired computer designer who now works at the Opry House, wasn't told to leave until nearly midnight Saturday, and by then, it was too late to drive. Instead, he waded through water up to his thighs carrying his two dogs away from his Nashville home.

"It's hard enough to walk with two dogs. I'm 77 years old. I couldn't carry clothes or anything," he said.

Officials said they made the right call to advise people to stay inside, pointing to a higher number of deaths on the roads and outside than in homes.

"At this point I'm not going to second-guess and say what should or could have been done differently," Mayor Dean said Tuesday.

Hundreds of people had been rescued by boat and canoe from their flooded homes over the past few days. Those rescue operations wound down in Nashville on Tuesday, though it remained unclear how many – if any – people remained missing in Tennessee. Police spokeswoman Rachel Vance said rescuers were going door-to-door in flooded areas to search for more drowning victims but no new deaths were reported as of Tuesday evening.

Authorities in south-central Kentucky were searching for a kayaker who was last seen Monday afternoon in the swollen Green River.

More than 13.5 inches of rainfall were recorded in Nashville on Saturday and Sunday, according to the National Weather Service, more than double the previous two-day record.

"You could tell as Saturday went along that this was a totally different event than normal," Dean said Tuesday. "And of course it was very clear by Sunday that we were in a very serious situation."

Flash flood watches were issued on Friday, but National Weather Service meteorologist Larry Vannozzi said the service also took the rare step on Saturday to relay an emergency message warning people to stay off the roads.

"We didn't just barely beat the record and we didn't beat it by a decent amount. We absolutely crushed the record for two-day rainfall in Nashville," he said. "I don't want to seem too dramatic here, but this is off-the-charts record stuff."

The water swelled most of the area's lakes, minor rivers, creeks, streams and drainage systems far beyond capacity. Much of that water then drained into the Cumberland, which snakes through Nashville.

Bridges were washed out and thousands of homes were damaged. As the water began to recede late Monday, bodies were recovered from homes, a yard and a wooded area outside a Nashville supermarket.

The Grand Ole Opry said it was moving its shows to alternate concert halls as water damaged parts of the arena. Floodwaters also edged into the Country Music Hall of Fame and LP Field, where the NFL's Tennessee Titans play. Ryman Auditorium, the longtime former home of the Grand Ole Opry, appeared to be OK.

Businesses along Nashville's riverfront lost electricity Tuesday because of the flooding, and restaurants and bars clustered on a downtown street popular with tourists were closed. Laurie Parker, a spokeswoman for Nashville Electric Service, said a main circuit failed before dawn, knocking out power to downtown businesses in a 24-square-block area. Parker said the power in that district would be out the rest of the week.

The weekend's storms that spawned tornadoes along with flash flooding also killed six people in Mississippi and four in Kentucky. One person was killed by a tornado in western Tennessee.

____

Associated Press writers Travis Loller, Lucas L. Johnson II, Teresa Walker, Randall Dickerson and Joe Edwards in Nashville; and Janet Cappiello Blake in Louisville, Ky., contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Cumberland River finally began receding Tuesday, exposing mud-caked homes and submerged cars as officials searched door to door for more victims of a record-busting flash ...
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Cumberland River finally began receding Tuesday, exposing mud-caked homes and submerged cars as officials searched door to door for more victims of a record-busting flash ...
Filed by T.J. Ortenzi  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 259
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
10:45 AM on 05/06/2010
this makes me so proud to be a tennesseean today!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFjaQoOdJvI
11:15 AM on 05/06/2010
I am from Houston Texas and I have been following this terrible tragedy since Saturday, i just want to say god bless to all the citizens of Nashville and the state of TN.
YOU ROCK!!!!!!
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
09:59 AM on 05/06/2010
So, here we are - we made the front page for a little while on Monday.

Why were we never the main and WHY is this STILL not on the front page?


WE ARE STILL FLOODED. It would be nice to see an update - more deaths and destruction, but less coverage.


FLY-OVER country.


Thanks to the Obama Administration working with our Democratic Governor, Democratic Mayor, Nashville's Democratic congress critter, Bob Cooper, THINGS ARE MOVING ALONG QUITE WELL.


No thanks to Marsha Blackburn - she had HER COUNTY - LEAST AMOUNT OF DAMAGE, thrown in yesterday as a disaster area - RATHER than the REST OF HER DISTRICT WHICH IS ACTUALLY FLOODED. Cheatham and Montgomery counties are her district, but Clarksville, TN is Ft. Campbell, KY, (101st Air Assault USArmy) and it is FLOODED as badly as Nashville andit was not declared a disaster UNTIL HER COUNTY was declared.

Marsha spends MOST of her time in the make-up chair at Faux Noise. We must get a new congress critter - Marsha is the Southern equivalent of Bachmann and/or Snowbilly Grifter.
12:27 AM on 05/06/2010
excellent slide show of our devastation. oh, how perfectly this describes the true nature of the nashville spirit!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFjaQoOdJvI
11:27 PM on 05/05/2010
someone had asked why people would be so foolish drive into flooded waters. i'd like to try and explain something i discovered in these floods. you can be driving down the roadway with only heavy rain to contend with but in a flash flood, before you can get off the road, you suddenly find yourself inundated with extreme downpour, the water on the pavement suddenly rises and starts to, literally, pull your car into the current. a sudden gush of water can knock a compact car around like crazy. then the car stalls. then you are screwed. it can happen in a matter of seconds.
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
07:02 PM on 05/05/2010
I just got home from in Nashville. It took 3 hours for me to get 30 miles each way and I live in one of the rural FEMA-disaster counties, Cheatham, which is FLOODED; we have two RVs in our yard with flooded-out neighbors and we are doing WELL compared to most of Middle Tennesee.

The GOVERNMENT IS DOING AN EXCELLENT JOB and EVERYBODY IS HAPPY with the EFFORTS put into effect by the President of the United States of America, Barack Hussein Obama.


We are the VOLUNTEER STATE and PROVING IT ONCE AGAIN. Everyone is being helpful to each other.


Sorry, haters, we will get back with or without news coverage. It is rather sad that HuffPo CHOOSE a thread on the Snowbilly Grifter rather than a major and historic American city in a disaster.
Macros27
Don't be no cloud on a sunny day
10:10 AM on 05/05/2010
So while Nashville is under water just as New Orleans was, there is barely any media coverage and POTUS hasn't even visited there - I haven't even seen any White House statement on this flooding. This lack of attention to this tragedy is really shocking. I hope HuffPost editors continue to highlight this story.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
timmmahhhh
Self-employed architect, pauper among plutocrats
11:03 AM on 05/05/2010
Both Rachel Maddow and Countdown have covered the story the past two nights. It is a tragedy but not close to the degree of New Orleans - and what is currently going on off of Nawlins' right now.

If the WH has not issued a statement I agree they should. I trust FEMA is there.
09:44 AM on 05/05/2010
This is just my opinion, but I think the reason this is not making more national news outlets is because of the way we are reacting to it here (I'm a Nashville resident).....rather than stand around and wait for the government to come to our resuce, the good people of this city and state have pulled together and helped each other out. Anyone with a boat, a truck, a backhoe, a pump, or any kind of useful equipment has not hesitated to jump in and help their neighbor. The mess on I-24, where there were almost 200 cars left stranded and debris everywhere, was cleared away in ONE DAY. There has not been any looting, rioting, or other unruly behavior of any kind. The DA has vowed to prosecute any business owners suspected of price-gouging. It's a dire tragedy for sure, but the spirit of the Tennessee Volunteer has truly become apparent and I have never been more proud to call Nashville home than I am right now. I have no doubt that with the help of the Federal aid that has strated flowing in, we will be back to normal in no time. By the way for those asking where is PResident Obama in all of this, he has been in constant contact with Mayor Karl Dean of Nashville as well as Governor Bredesen. The 4 hardest-hit counties have already been declared a distar area and are getting aid now, with more counties to come.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:55 AM on 05/05/2010
Good wishes to you and your city.
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
07:04 PM on 05/05/2010
Rachel,

Right On - I got to work in Green Hills today from Cheatham County on Highway 12. They've got those giant tents up in Ashland City for GOVERNMENT OFFICES and they are open and doing GREAT WORK.
09:42 AM on 05/05/2010
What does anyone care about how we voted here in Tennessee? We go 3 ways, democrat west, republican east, mixed bag leaning towards Democrat in the middle. Our Senators are Republican, our Reps mixed, our state and local elections trend towards Democrats. Not that how anyone votes is anyone elses business, but is seems to be the the measuring stick by which alot of ya'll are deciding whether or not you care about us, so now you know.
Most of our dead were elderly. An elderly woman with her Vietnam vet paralyzed husband tried to make it through 5 1/2 feet of water in front of our house. Our EMA crew showed up in minutes, rescued them, and a deputy drove them home. Please donate to the Red Cross, people have had their whole lives washed away. This is being called a 500 or even 1,000 year flood, how could we have prepared for it?
Also, please help our animals. So many have been displaced or lost, even those evacuated with their owners are being housed in shelters because their owners cannot take them to the motel or shelter with them. There are many local animal charities you can donate to online, especially the shelters. The DART (Disaster Animal Rescue Team) evacuated our county shelter and moved the animals to high ground for 48 hours. Kindred Companions, who you can facebook, supports Urban Search and Rescue Teams as well as DART.
Shut up and help. Please.
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
09:09 AM on 05/05/2010
Let me give ya'll some information.

Clarksville, TN is FLOODED WORSE than Nashville. It is 50 miles north of Nashville. I live in between.

The REASON Tennessee is red and my district has Marsha Blackburn is this: Marsha lives and represents the WEALTHIEST county in TN and her district is gerrymandered around Nashville into all rural areas to Memphis - Clarksville, TN is the SAME TOWN as FT. CAMPBELL, KY (101st Air Assault, USArmy) - HUGE ARMY POST. Marsha does NOT REPRESENT the vast majority of her district, she spends her time in the make-up chair at Faux Noise.

That is the REASON, not the BS.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LisaLisa1234
10:18 AM on 05/05/2010
The shape of her district is one of the most bizarre things I've seen...almost as if it were designed to keep her in office. It's incredible that you & I could live so far from each other & have the same Rep. in Congress.
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
07:05 PM on 05/05/2010
Lisa, that is EXACTLY what GERRYMANDERING is and why the Rethugs ruined so much of America when they took over in 2001, but had congress for years before Dubya.
That is WHY Tom DeLay of Texas (my hometown is Big D) is going to be Dancing Behind Bars.
09:06 AM on 05/05/2010
Glad to see this finally make HuffingtonsLeftPost. If this was New Orleans, it would have been front page news. If it was a Repub. President, it would have been front page news about the lack of action. Where is Obama? Where are the looters and thieves?
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
09:02 AM on 05/05/2010
FYI -

Nashville is NOT Teabagger territory - even Snowbilly Grifter could NOT get a crowd. The Teabaggers FAILED here in LIBERAL MIDDLE TENNESSEE.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I once had a Crysknife
It's spelled right!
08:30 AM on 05/05/2010
I survived the flood! I guess you liberals are gonna have to put up with me a little longer.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
timmmahhhh
Self-employed architect, pauper among plutocrats
11:12 AM on 05/05/2010
I feel it best to leave the politics out of it and wish your city and state the best. I'm a liberal and I love Nashville, great city, friendliest people in the world.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I once had a Crysknife
It's spelled right!
01:24 PM on 05/05/2010
Thank you for your compliment. People in the south are very friendly even if you don't agree with our politics.
10:53 PM on 05/05/2010
thank you, timmmahhhh! there's a reason we are always somewhere in the top 5 friendliest cities in the US and i'm quite proud of that. we are hurt, but we will bounce back with smiles on our faces and open arms to welcome you, anytime.

i, for one, will stand with my beautiful home state of tennessee as a proud, southern, liberal woman and a SURVIVOR!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I once had a Crysknife
It's spelled right!
08:28 AM on 05/05/2010
I surv
photo
Eykis
Odd realm of Purgatory I reside in with HPo~
08:59 AM on 05/05/2010
Crys,

I'm in Cheatham County off Hwy 12 and we SURVIVED.
08:27 AM on 05/05/2010
Of course, adding more heat (and thus moisture) to a closed system -- aka climate change -- has nothing to do with this disaster. No doubt Tennessee will continue to send to Washington representatives who will still oppose solutions and deny reality, even though reality has destroyed yet another great city.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:06 AM on 05/05/2010
G o D works in mysterious ways,....