Austin American-Statesman

Tennessee floods, likely tornado in Alabama follow Harvey

- By Adrian Sainz

Harvey spread its misery into the Deep South as flooded creeks drove people from their homes in Tennessee and an apparent tornado damaged homes and toppled trees in a rural area of northwest Alabama.

More than 50 people were evacuated from a Nashville neighborho­od due to flooding from Harvey, but no deaths or injuries have been reported, according to a statement Friday morning from the Nashville Office of Emergency Management.

The agency said remnants from Harvey dumped nearly 9 inches of rain in some areas over a 24-hour period and crews responded to dozens of calls overnight requesting aid. About 40 people took refuge in a Red Cross shelter set up at a church.

Richard Williams said he and his wife were rescued from their home south of Nashville overnight. He told WTVF-TV that his wife had to be rescued from her hospice bed by raft.

By Friday morning, most watersheds in the Nashville area were returning to normal levels, emergency officials said.

Near Monteagle, northeast of Chattanoog­a in south-central Tennessee, Interstate 24 was shut down in both directions Friday after high winds knocked down powerlines across the highway.

Traffic was backed up for miles.

The rains also caused flooding in low-lying streets in Memphis, as the western Tennessee city reported power outages land rivers in the area swelled.

About 4 inches of rain fell in Memphis during a 12-hour period ending at 7:15 p.m. Thursday, the National Weather Service said.

Though still a tropical depression, Harvey began to shed its tropical characteri­stics as its rain bands extended farther across Tennessee and Kentucky on its forecast path toward the Ohio Valley, where forecaster­s said the storm likely would dissipate Saturday evening.

Meanwhile, flood warnings remained in effect near rivers in western and middle Tennessee.

Flash flood warnings also were in place for parts of Kentucky.

Those came as the storm slogged deeper into the nation’s interior after its catastroph­ic drenching of parts of Texas and Louisiana, where severe flooding was continuing.

In northwest Alabama, high winds damaged several homes near the city of Reform and minor injuries were reported, news outlets said.

Jason Holmes, a meteorolog­ist with The National Weather Service in Birmingham, said Thursday that a tornado was the likely cause of the damage.

Photograph­s published online by the Tuscaloosa News in Alabama showed huge trees splintered and toppled, houses with their shingles torn away and one mobile home so shattered it was barely recognizab­le.

Authoritie­s said Harvey’s remnants contribute­d to the death of a motorist in a head-on crash with a tractor-trailer Thursday on Interstate 40 in Memphis.

The motorist’s name was not immediatel­y released.

 ?? GARY COSBY JR. / TUSCALOOSA NEWS ?? Sarah Sharpe helps the cleanup at Jimmy Doughty’s home in Pickens County, Ala., after a likely tornado struck Thursday. High winds damaged several homes in northwest Alabama. Minor injuries were reported.
GARY COSBY JR. / TUSCALOOSA NEWS Sarah Sharpe helps the cleanup at Jimmy Doughty’s home in Pickens County, Ala., after a likely tornado struck Thursday. High winds damaged several homes in northwest Alabama. Minor injuries were reported.

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