The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MANY IN REGION FACE HEAVY STORM LOSSES

Thousands across area lost power; twister tore Chestnut Ridge homes apart.

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

Anthony Chappell was sleeping soundly Monday night when his daughter woke him up scared that someone was downstairs beating a bat hard against the outside wall.

The sound turned out not to be a Louisville Slugger, but baseball-sized hail from a tornado that was pounding the five-bedroom home in their south Fulton County’s Fairburn neighborho­od. The clamor was joined by howling wind, shutters banging fiercely and eventually the telltale sign of a tornado — the sound of a train.

“That’s when I said, ‘We need to get downstairs,’ ”

said Chappell, who took shelter in a floor bathroom with his daughter and wife Bernice. “It only lasted 20 seconds, but it was intense.”

The National Weather Service on Tuesday confifirme­d that the line of storms that wreaked havoc on metro Atlanta and parts of North Georgia in the late evening hours Monday — including more than 174 severe weather reports of large hail — included a tornado in the Chestnut Ridge subdivisio­n in Fairburn.

While some in the metro area woke up Tuesday to a loss of power or downed trees, Chesnut residents were greeted with front porches ripped from foundation­s, roofs blown into pieces and exterior walls torn asunder and scattered in backyards like kindling.

“We didn’t know the extent of the damage until we got out today and could see it inthe light of day,” said Erin Davis, who also huddled in a fifi rs t-fl floor bathroom with her husband and their two sons at the height of the tornado. “The good news is we are all safe.”

The trail of thundersto­rms, which picked up velocity and strength around 10 p.m. Monday, left a path of destructio­n throughout North Georgia. Trees fell on 25 homes in Haralson County, including five in a trailer park, according to fire officials there, while another Haralson County home caught on fifire when a family burned a candle for light.

Elsewhere, an eight-unit apartment in the 7200 block of Tara Boulevard caught on fifi re in Clayton County during the downpour while lightning caused two Gwinnett house fifires. A tree crashed into a home on Glen roy Place in Cobb County.

No one was killed in the storms, but a woman and her father were injured after a tree fell on their home in Buchanan in Haralson County. The father was in critical condition in a Haralson hospital early Tuesday.

Thousands were without power from Fulton to Henry counties.

“The electric membership cooperativ­es were hit hard as severe weather, and possible tornadoes, pounded many parts of Georgia last night, interrupti­ng power to 13,000custome­rs, primarily in thewest part of the state,” Georgia EMC spokeswoma­n Terri Statham said.

The tornado’s impact was widespread in SouthFulto­n’s Chestnut Ridge. The damages ranged from the cosmetic — shutters snapped in half, mangled gutters and missing roof tiles — to the more serious, including blownout windows, siding ripped from entire walls and hollowed-out second flfloors.

Residents walked around Tuesday comparing notes on damage, checking to make sure their neighbors had homeowner’s insurance and a place to stay if they didn’t. While dazed from the enormity of what happened and the challenge of what lies ahead, they were warm and greeted the strangers who descended on the community — insurance adjusters, constructi­on crews, emergency offifficia­ls and reporters — with kindness.

“This is the kind of neighborho­od we have,” Davis said, adding that as she and her family huddled in the bathroom after the tornado had passed she could hear the Chappells, her next door neighbors, outside her home shouting to see if they were OK.

But the events of just 12 hours earlier were still fresh on everyone’s mind.

April Norman looked at her home in astonishme­nt. She moved out of the house in 2015 after the death of her son, but held onto it as a rental property. She had called her renter late Monday and advised her and her family to take cover just moments before the tornado tore into the house, ripping out the exterior walls of two bedrooms where the renter’s children were just moments before.

“If they hadn’t moved, they would have been gone ,” Norman said, looking in disbelief at the only remnant that suggested the two rooms were there — a wall that separated them. “This is going to be a long process.”

Gary and Jennifer Hillsman sat in chairs below their open garagedoor and surveyed the activity as neighbors huddled in groups to discuss their damages. The storm ripped up their fence, tore a hole in their roof and left water leaking into their home. But after walking around the neighborho­od, they feel lucky.

“Wewere blessed because we only got some damage,” said Gary Hillsman, who added that the couple have lived in their Estonia Drive home for 14 years. “After seeing my neighbors’ homes, it could have been worse.”

Buthe still hears the sound of the storm in his mind.

“You could hear the shingles going pop, pop, pop, pop,” Gary Hillsman said. “It was an experience.”

Justin Mitchell, a fifirst- time homebuyer, had just moved into his home on Jodhpur Way on Sunday. A deputy with the Clayton County Sheriff’s Department, he was at work when the tornado hit.

“I was devastated,” he said when he learned about the tornado’s impact. “I only slept in my house one night. I was still getting things turned on, that’s how new this was. The only furniture I really have is in the bedroom, which now has a hole in the roof. The water started dripping in there through the ceiling fan.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Ontario Alvarez holds his mother, Katrina Dawson, in front of their house Tuesday in the Jumpers Trail neighborho­od in Fairburn in south Fulton County. After reports of a tornado Monday night, residents in Fairburn’s Chestnut Ridge subdivisio­n woke up...
JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM Ontario Alvarez holds his mother, Katrina Dawson, in front of their house Tuesday in the Jumpers Trail neighborho­od in Fairburn in south Fulton County. After reports of a tornado Monday night, residents in Fairburn’s Chestnut Ridge subdivisio­n woke up...
 ?? PHOTOS BY JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Jumpers Trail residents survey the damage Tuesday. Residents compared notes on damage, checking tomake sure their neighbors had homeowner’s insurance and a place to stay. While dazed, residents greeted insurance adjusters, constructi­on crews, emergency...
PHOTOS BY JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM Jumpers Trail residents survey the damage Tuesday. Residents compared notes on damage, checking tomake sure their neighbors had homeowner’s insurance and a place to stay. While dazed, residents greeted insurance adjusters, constructi­on crews, emergency...
 ??  ?? Thomas Correa picks up a chair found several houses away Tuesday in the Jumpers Trail neighborho­od. A possible tornado blew offff the side of his daughter’s bedroom. Fortunatel­y, his daughter, a student at Kennesaw StateUnive­rsity, was not home at the...
Thomas Correa picks up a chair found several houses away Tuesday in the Jumpers Trail neighborho­od. A possible tornado blew offff the side of his daughter’s bedroom. Fortunatel­y, his daughter, a student at Kennesaw StateUnive­rsity, was not home at the...

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