The Denver Post

City’s residents “helped us through a really tough time”

Family settled in Longmont after 2005 hurricane

- By Kelsey Hammon

When Tim Ellis thinks about what he misses about Louisiana, before his family’s home was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina, he can summarize it in one word: “Everything.”

Ellis and his wife, Kristin Ellis, and their three children found refuge from the hurricane in Longmont. Since then, the city has become more than a safe haven — it’s become home.

This month marks the 15th anniversar­y of the destructiv­e Category 3 storm, which slammed the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29, 2005, killing 1,833 people, according to national news reports. This year’s anniversar­y falls not far from the devastatio­n of Hurricane Laura, a Category 4 storm, which struck the Louisiana coastline on Thursday, marking it one of the strongest hurricanes to strike the U. S.

The day before Hurricane Katrina bore down on the Gulf Coast, Tim Ellis stayed behind in his family’s home in Kenner, a

New Orleans suburb, boarding up the house and packing the car. His wife and three children left earlier to take refuge in Jasper, Texas, about 260 miles away.

As he prepared to pull away from their home, he sat in the driveway, taking one last look. When he next saw his home, it would be infested with black mold. The furniture would be so bloated from floodwater­s it would dwarf the size of the living room. In the bathroom, “a nasty soup” of water pooled in the bathtub, giving a hint to the house’s state days before. And the house they had spent about three years renovating would not seem salvageabl­e.

Kristin Ellis, meanwhile, had family who lived in Longmont and ran the Loaf & Ladle, a restaurant that used to be on Francis Street, but has since closed.

Tim Ellis can recall vividly the day his family arrived in Longmont. It was the first time he had ever seen the Rocky Mountains, rising out of the west as the family drove near Denver.

The Ellises were among a caravan of roughly 19 family members also seeking refuge. As they rolled into the city, droves of news reporters were waiting to share the family’s harrowing journey and capture the heartwarmi­ng reunion. Ellis, who worked as a photograph­er and for an insurance company, held back snapping pictures of the moment with his own camera. According to prior reports, the Ellis family was among 1,600 who fled to Colorado following Hurricane Katrina.

In the days, weeks and months after the storm, Ellis said his family was moved by the generosity of Longmont people, who stepped up to make them feel comfortabl­e during a challengin­g time. People donated clothes and necessitie­s to the family. One man gave Ellis the belt he was wearing when Ellis said he needed one. A family drove from Denver to ply them with a steaming pot of gumbo as a nod toward Louisiana culture.

“We had people from Longmont knocking on our door three to four times a day to bring us stuff,” Ellis said. “That’s when I realized just how generous and open- hearted the people of Longmont and Colorado in general were. It helped us through a really tough time when we didn’t know we needed help. I can never repay the people of Longmont for that generosity.”

Through December that year, Ellis made five or six trips back to the Louisiana house to prepare it for the insurance company and try to salvage family

belongings. He was able to save some of his photograph­y negatives, but his wife’s wedding dress was water- damaged, and his children’s Christmas ornaments, collected since their births, had been ruined. It was tough to see, Ellis said, and eventually he made the decision that his family needed him in Colorado. He found an investor and sold the house.

While the family hadn’t initially planned to stay in Longmont, it was less than a year later when Ellis said his family felt like the Front Range was home.

Children adjusted

The Ellises now have four children.

The couple’s oldest daughter, Kindal, who was 8 when they fled the storm, returned to Louisiana after earning a scholarshi­p to attend college at Tulane University. She graduated in 2018 with a bachelor’s degree in cellular molecular biology. Kindal, now 23, returned to Longmont and works for AveXis, a gene therapy company.

Ben, 20, is studying to become a police officer at Front Range Community College.

Kiley, 15, is a junior at Longmont High School.

Christian, the family’s Coloradobo­rn child, is 12 and a student at Altona Middle School.

Ellis continues to operate his photograph­y business, French Quarter Photograph­y, and is president of the Longmont Jazz Associatio­n, which typically puts on a jazz festival with a New Orleanssty­le “second line” parading down the street.

 ?? Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera ?? Tim Ellis, center, with his children — Kindal, front left, Kiley, Christian, back left, and Ben — are pictured Saturday in downtown Longmont. Tim Ellis and his family came to Longmont 15 years ago after being forced to leave their New Orleans home due to Hurricane Katrina.
Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera Tim Ellis, center, with his children — Kindal, front left, Kiley, Christian, back left, and Ben — are pictured Saturday in downtown Longmont. Tim Ellis and his family came to Longmont 15 years ago after being forced to leave their New Orleans home due to Hurricane Katrina.

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