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Southern Tornadoes Rip Through Region, At Least 17 Dead

Southern Tornados

By PHILLIP RAWLS   04/16/11 02:09 PM ET   AP

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, including the Hollons. 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 home of their own up the road – he had come to this small community about 25 miles from Montgomery to be closer to his dad.

Henley Hollon lived across the street from his brother Willard and had come outside after the storm passed to make sure everyone was all right. The winds whirled, the lights went out and it all lasted less than a minute, he said. 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," Willard Hollon said.

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.

Seven people were hurt in the storm, including a firefighter injured during the emergency response, Sedinger said. 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. A woman in her 30s and two teenage boys died when the storm demolished a double-wide mobile home in the Deer Park community.

The woman's husband survived and was in the hospital, he said. Winds had thrown things 100 yards from where the home had stood.

"It was not a pretty sight," Davidson 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.

In Marengo County in west-central Alabama, four separate tornadoes hit over the span of about five to six hours, emergency management director Kevin McKinney said.

A state of emergency had been declared for the whole state, 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.

The worst damage in Oklahoma was in the small town of Tushka, where two people were killed and at least 25 hurt as the tornado plowed through the town of 350.

Back in Boone's Chapel, Tammie Silas reflected on the fate of her church. The sanctuary was gone, though a school wing and gymnasium survived the storm. The sanctuary had been too small for Sunday morning services anyway, she said.

"We'd been talking about building a new sanctuary," she said, "and God said, 'OK.'"

___

Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in Birmingham; Chuck Bartels and Jeannie Nuss in Little Rock, Ark.; Nomaan Merchant in Bald Knob, Ark.; Kristi Eaton in Tushka, Okla.; Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss.; and Jeff Martin and Jacob Jordan in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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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 tos...
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 tos...
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11:21 AM on 04/18/2011
seeing all the vitriol directed toward the south on this thread, I can now see why people in the south are so distrustful and distainful of those who are not. we get it...y'all hate us, scr8w you too.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
09:02 AM on 04/18/2011
If I can be so bold, may I offer some words of advice to anyone moving down South. After leaving Long Island, New York and moving to Georgia and now to South Carolina. People who come down here tend to always compare things to New York or Pennsylvania where they came from, Southerners HATE that, and I do not blame them. You are in the South now, you are no longer up North. Also, funny as it may seem they HATE it when men from up North wear black socks with shorts. ha ha
My hairdresser HATES it when women say "I know you cannot cut my hair as well as my man up in New York". And I do not blame her one bit.
One thing that Southerners have sooo wrong is that we are all rich from up North. It is all relative, of course we made much more money then you, but we were paying $10,000. taxes on our homes and our homes were 49% higher to purchase, it is all relative. We are not rich, we worked just as hard as you did, if not harder, in a dog eat dog enviroment. It takes a while for Northerners to learn to slow down and relax and enjoy the South, I know we have learned to. The South is beautiful and no, it is not the North.
09:47 PM on 04/18/2011
Well, thank you, Darlin'!

We're glad you are here.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
09:18 AM on 04/19/2011
Well Thank YOU right back. and Fanned. I usually get the line that I-95 goes both ways and I should get on I-95 heading North. We love the South and wish we had been raised down here, but since we weren't we have to put up with some people who are just mean spirited I guess.. I really appreciate your comment !
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
12:44 PM on 04/17/2011
when the Earth was Created, everything was placed in an EXACT location to keep Her in PERFECT balance !!!!!...as time went on, before our arrival, the continents shifted to KEEP the Earth BALANCED !!!!!...we came along, and in our greed and stupidity; we exploited the Earth and Her resources !!!!

there was a government formed, which NEVER should have happened simply because, as time has progressed, the government as well as the population have gotten greedier and ALLOWED this destruction to happen !!!!! how can we put the Earth back into balance you ask ??? we cannot, because we, ourselves are out of balance !!! we've let the situation get out of hand and are not doing anything to repair the damage that we've caused !!!!

the second Chilean earthquake has knocked the Earth off it's axis two degrees !!!!...until Earth rights herself storms and deamage will occur and there is NOTHING that can or will be done !!!!!

when the Earth regains Her position, hopefully, all will be healed !!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kinniver
01:10 PM on 04/17/2011
"When the Earth was Created, everything was placed in an EXACT location to keep Her in PERFECT balance !!!!!..."

When the earth was created it was a molten ball of slag and took millions of years to even cool down, the atmosphere was toxic (to humans) it took millions of more years for the oceans to form and millions of more for the oxygen to be produced. Millions more for life to crawl out of the oceans.

The planet has been heated up and almost completely frozen (snowball earth) time and time again before Humans even existed.

There have been extinction level events on this planet due to asteroids and super volcanos and the planet has bounced back every time. Don't be so arrogant as to think we can destroy the earth in a million years after we are gone there will be no visible sign we ever existed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
05:27 PM on 04/17/2011
Your mixture of theology and science is interesting.
It is hard to think that forming governments had anything to do with it. As for the insane and stupid things Man is doing to the Earth and his own kind, we seem to be going through some kind of evolution and transition is always difficult. (Yes evolution exists even today.)
As for the Earth being off kilter, there may be some scientific truth to that.
The difference between superstition and faith is superstition looks at natural events and declares them beyond our understanding. Faith looks at them and says "I wonder why? Maybe if I look for the answer God will tell me."
09:02 AM on 04/17/2011
The strongest tornadoes occur in La Nina years; the worst year recently was 1972 and this year is stacking up to have similar conditions ripe for killer storms.

It seems possible that everyone with a cell phone could be notified that a tornado was approaching their cell area and get an automated warning? This is the 21st century isn't it? WHERE'S MY TORNADO APP?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric in Ayden
"Every waking moment I'm alive"
08:28 AM on 04/17/2011
I had only had a few hours of sleep over Thursday and Friday. When I came home from work Saturday I went straight to bed and slept until the evening. When I woke up all hell had broken loose around me and I had slept right through it. Several homes and businesses in my area were destroyed but my family came through just fine. Man made buildings are no match for the strength of Mother Nature.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
09:27 AM on 04/17/2011
So glad you are okay. We had some scary moments here in S.C. yesterday. A church about 20 miles away is totally gone, 6 people inside got out by some miracle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
05:17 PM on 04/17/2011
In a disaster one thing you learn is that God's mercy appears to have little to do with what faith you are or how strongly you believe.
The major thing anyone can do in a situation like this is pray. Even if you don't believe at all you might just find yourself doing it anyway.
Apparently He wanted the people in the church around for at least a little while longer.
Tea for me
Lipton only:>) Proud Lib/Prog Dem
12:27 PM on 04/17/2011
Wow. You must sleep like my husband:>) Glad you and yours are fine. You, too, Camelias.

We had a beautiful camelia tree when I was a child - happy memory waiting for the blooms. Don't see too many of them in Washington State, at least where I lived. Wonder if a transplanted southerner planted it?

Take care - all of you in tornado alley.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
06:56 PM on 04/17/2011
Actually they said on the news tonight that this was a VERY rare occurence for our area, as we are not considered a tornado alley, thank goodness. I can take a hurricane, but I absolutely am petrified of tornadoes. We could see the black sky very near to us, but we just got grazed and at least all the leaves and tree branches just blew off into the woods. Usually when you are on the coast tornadoes die out, not yesterday though. I love my camelias and gardenias.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DCmykl
A long seemingly endless edge
08:18 AM on 04/17/2011
The devestation in the south is a real tragedy. It's sad that as we've all come to be so graphically shown lately the federal government is broke and won't be able to provide the recovery assistence that's usually forthcoming. I hope the states will be able to help their citizens recove without having to borrow money and/or raise taxes.
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NWmom
03:05 AM on 04/17/2011
How tragic. I am not familiar with regular weather patterns in the southern US, but it seems like there has been a lot of information in the news recently about tornadoes. Is it normal to have so many tornadoes in the south this time of year?
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ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
03:23 AM on 04/17/2011
Not in the least is it normal.
The weather has gotten strange across this part of the US.
It snowed not once but twice this year...in Baton Rouge! First time in many, many years.
Everyone here say it is going to be a real doozy of a hurricane season. Chances are they are right.
09:49 AM on 04/17/2011
I disagree...It's very normal from February to May for the south to have tornado's and for there to be clusters of tornado's within certain cold fronts. Happens this time every year.
07:12 AM on 04/17/2011
Absolutely! This is the time of year in which colliding weather fronts are very prevalent over this part of the country. Warm air from the subtropics and cold air streaming down from the northwest meet, causing for very unstable atmospheric conditions, including atmospheric rotation.

This is just business as usual for March and April.
Tea for me
Lipton only:>) Proud Lib/Prog Dem
02:20 AM on 04/17/2011
I posted earlier today and would like to comment again. To any/all who suffered loss of family, friends, property, I am so sorry and hope all will get better for you. Anyone at the constant mercy of tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, grass fires, etc., has my sincere sympathy. Here in Washington State we get floods, winds, fear of earthquakes, but I cannot imagine going through the horrors you do year after year. Politics, ideology have no place in time of nature events leading to human tragedy.

I will willingly discuss my progressive Democratic beliefs in other venues. Not here. Here we should all be family - maybe a dysfunctional family at times - but family all the same.

Love and best wishes to you all.
PS My grandchildren lived in Georgia for 3 years and came home two years ago. They still have bad dreams of tornado warning times. But, the 14 year old gave me a call their first week in Georgia. "Grandma, do you know what the plural of y'all is here?" I said y'all could be singular or plural depending on how many you were talking to. "No, Grans, all y'all, is plural." Got to love it!!
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ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
03:08 AM on 04/17/2011
Fanned and faved.
I don't know what other issues I might agree or disagree with you on but you are dead right on this and obviously a good and thoughtful person
Thank you.
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sydneymoon
Dismiss what insults your own soul
06:53 AM on 04/17/2011
Great post.
01:54 AM on 04/17/2011
Lest you all forget, these are fellow Americans. When a crisis happens does it really matter who they voted for?
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
07:22 AM on 04/17/2011
Put it back in the deck, for that card only gets played when they want something from us that only we can provide.  Once they get the assistance, they'll be back to calling us Commie terrorist sympathizers who hate America.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dimplasm
More chocolate, please.
01:42 AM on 04/17/2011
And I'm posting it again. This is the governor of Arkansas, Mike Beebe.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Beebe

How does yours compare, then tell me he has rejected federal funds, and promoted ig norance, etc. Most of you can only wish you had a governor like ours.
Our Lt governor? Embarassing. Our legislature? *cringing*, but our governor? I'll put him up against any, any day.
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Turtlenewz
02:26 AM on 04/17/2011
You are very lucky to have a sane governor .I understand your sensitivity since you are from a southern state
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ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
03:18 AM on 04/17/2011
You're lucky. When he reaches his term limit in your state, can you send him to Louisiana?
Our governor keeps running off.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dimplasm
More chocolate, please.
12:54 AM on 04/17/2011
What I haven't understood all day, on this thread, is why are some so sensitive and compassionate to children and people in disasters all over the world, but let it occur in the Southern United States and suddenly, it's not a tragedy, it's political.
When Wisconsin was going through the problems with their governor, who was elected by the people of Wisconsin, we were supportive. I even sent money for the recall efforts. However, something happens in the South, that no one here voted for, and we are treated to vitriol and unkindness.
How large is the tparty? It must be huge if everyone in the South is in it.
I have been posting here a while and the only bigo try that is acceptable is towards people from the South. We really get it. A lot of you hold us in utter contempt. It's okay if our children di e, because after all, some of our neighbors or acquaintances may have voted Republican.
Don't worry, I know now exactly how some of you regard me. As less intelligent than you, though I am very well educated, and less deserving of any compassion or sympathy. All because of where I am from.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
01:05 AM on 04/17/2011
Fanned and faved!
Is this thread really indicative of what the HuffPost is becoming?
Most of the people I know in the South (I live here) are nice and as educated as pretty much anyone else. Some more.
But one thing they almost all have is a darn site better grasp of manners and decorum than is on exhibit here today. Maybe these attitudes is where we got the phrase "D__nm Yankees". from.
Are they really too consarned dumb to understand tragedy in their own backyard?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxPowerXP
01:54 AM on 04/17/2011
Short answer: yes. The average HP commenter seems to regard the south the way a right-wing nut would regard a muslim.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Captain Ron
Sí, se puede!
01:19 AM on 04/17/2011
Well said.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gus DiZerega
writer
12:44 AM on 04/17/2011
During Katrina a number of prominent "Christians" suggested the destruction of New Orleans was because of the gays and the city's sinful ways'

You guys - what's your take on this?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
12:53 AM on 04/17/2011
I am sure some people feel that way . There is much hate still in America
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
01:30 AM on 04/17/2011
That the Christian Right wing will say the same about this disaster is certain. The "Love of Jesus" can only extend as far as people's wallets for those guys. Even charity organizations these days seem remarkably uncharitable.
Those really are people who would allow someone to drown in their own blood rather than help them if they refuse to accept their beliefs. Strange that they refuse to accept the teachings of the prophet they profess to follow. It is almost as if there was a really nasty, violet Jesus that only they are familiar with who pretended to be nice when it suited him.
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IolantheLA
Growing old ferociously
09:24 AM on 04/17/2011
The Christian Right only says that about disasters that hit California.

Disasters that hit *their* states are just Weather, or one of God's mysterious ways.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
12:26 AM on 04/17/2011
People really now...
This is about a disaster and it's attendant tragedies. there are people who are injured and dead and homeless and many have lost all they had along with loved ones.
Is it too much to appeal for a little sensitivity in light of what has just happened and is still going on?
Sure there will be Federal Assistance. There always is for any disaster.
And when it come time for the cleanup we can debate the cost and who pays until cats speak English. But Federal Aid isn't doing anything right now.
Alot of people need all the help they can get at the moment and nobody is going to worry about affiliations or ideology. Republicans and Democrats both bleed red and we could show you some examples while you help us bandage the wounds. Just don't stop wrapping to preach politics.
This isn't political or religious. Mansions and shacks, Churches and Mosques, rich and poor have all been hit by this and we are all suffering and working together to help our fellow human beings.
The Huffington Post has some very nice caring people who follow it.
There is nothing remotely funny or in true need of petty political feuds here.
Try to exercise some maturity in your comments at the very least.
Remember what it is you are commenting on. It's tragic.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
12:56 AM on 04/17/2011
funds for FEMA were just cut in the budget
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
01:13 AM on 04/17/2011
Oh good, at least no Blackwater guards will show up.
We'll muddle through with or without Federal help. Because that is what human beings of any political stripe do. Some even have feelings beyond politics for their fellow humans and creatures injured or in need.
If you have to ask what party the man bleeding on the ground is before you dress his wounds and you're the only one around to help, go home and check to see if your soul is still there. Odds are good there is an empty hole where it once was.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
02:54 AM on 04/17/2011
Don't be oversensitive. I actually was referring to some of the more vicious commenter's here (and to our Congress) and not you.
No offence mean't. You were just stating a now painful fact.
It is rather heartless of our leaders to cut disaster aid at the source but if that is the case then what can we do now except look for the bright spots?
Hey, a day without vicious mercenaries roaming the streets is day we can go on about cleaning up, right?
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
07:32 AM on 04/17/2011
For starters, cats already speak English: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LBKVXyrHcw
 
Second, we are merely holding that part of the nation--which, incidentally, wants to be its own nation--to its own beliefs and ideals of bootstrapping oneself out of tragedy without welfare handouts from Big Guv'Mint.  Since their kind only understand vituperation, we have to format it as vituperation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
08:24 AM on 04/17/2011
Interesting. Mine don't quite do that.
Anyway this part of the nation is represented by people we can't get rid of. It's like trying to kill Freddy Kruger. We want different "leaders" but get stuck with them no matter how we vote. (Thanks Diebold!).
Second, when people spend twenty hours neighbors with disaster and tend to their needs, it wears on the nerves. So people who are in good shape and hurl rhetorical stones for cheap political points tend to get on our nerves fast.
Third, I don't know what part of the nation you are in, but please tell me if you are all insensitive jac offs there so we can remember to ask what political party you belong to before bothering to move a tree off of you if it is needed.
We're not so worried about Federal Aid right now. They can keep it for all most care at this time. Our major worry is having enough bandages, food and medicines and enough gas and power to keep the rescue equipment going.
If you've never experienced a natural disaster you should try it sometime. It's no fun for victims or rescuers. (Try being trapped in a car 15' in a tree and complain about how much taxpayer dollars it will cost to get you out. I promise you won't care and you better hope the people pulling your sorry keister out won't either)
And it ain't got squat to do with politics. They call it being "human".
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OMG1
The Myth Slayer
12:21 AM on 04/17/2011
Hey Governmentsmurf, you do realize Yahweh was the God of War before he became the God of the Jews and then finally Christians.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
01:18 AM on 04/17/2011
And this is relevant...why?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OMG1
The Myth Slayer
02:28 AM on 04/17/2011
he was bashing allah earlier
12:12 AM on 04/17/2011
The earth is very mad at us. My heart goes out to those who have been affected by this.