Monster F5 Tornado Strikes Devastating Blow to Joplin Mo |
| By Kevin Murphy JOPLIN, Missouri | Mon May 23, 2011 6:39pm EDT (Reuters) – A monster tornado killed at least 116 people in Joplin, Missouri when it tore through the heart of the small city, ripping the roof off a hospital and destroying thousands of homes and businesses. Weather officials said the tornado that hit the city of 50,000 at dinner time on Sunday was the deadliest single tornado in the country since 1947 and the ninth-deadliest tornado of all time, they said.
Emergency officials said on Monday 116 people were killed and about 400 were injured. According to local officials many had massive internal injuries. “We still believe there are folks alive under the rubble and we’re trying hard to reach them,” Nixon said. “We were getting hit by rocks and I don’t even know what hit me,” said Leslie Swatosh, 22, who huddled on the floor of a liquor store with several others, holding onto each other and praying. A number of bodies were found along the city’s “restaurant row,” on the main commercial street and a local nursing home took a direct hit, said Newton County Coroner Mark Bridges. Roaring along a path nearly six miles long and about 1/2 mile to 3/4 mile wide, the tornado flattened whole neighborhoods, splintered trees and flipped over cars and trucks. Some 2,000 homes and many other businesses, schools and other buildings were destroyed. At St John’s hospital 180 patients cowered as the fierce winds blew out windows and pulled off the roof. According to AccuWeather.com Senior Meteorologist Alan Reppert, X-ray films from the hospital were found 70 miles away. 20 MINUTES NOTICE
Verizon Wireless, a unit of Verizon Communications Inc, said it was delivering three temporary cell towers for emergency service. Twisters killed more than 300 people and did more than $2 billion in damage across southern states last month, killing more than 200 in Alabama alone. “It is just utter devastation anywhere you look to the south and the east — businesses, apartment complexes, houses, cars, trees, schools, you name it, it is leveled, leveled,” she said. Jeremy Ball, 38, was able to get into his home only by crawling through a window. He recalled Sunday night’s terror, when he helped search nearby homes and found the bodies of a woman neighbor and her 15-year-old daughter. |






Weather officials said the tornado that hit the city of 50,000 at dinner time on Sunday was the deadliest single tornado in the country since 1947 and the ninth-deadliest tornado of all time, they said.
When the tornado passed, the store was destroyed but those inside were all alive. “Everyone in that store was blessed. There was nothing of that store left,” she said.
The city’s residents were given about 20 minutes’ notice when 25 warning sirens sounded in the evening, said Jasper County Emergency Management Director Keith Stammers.