The Commercial Appeal

Tornado damages homes, spares lives

Dozens of residents displaced; 30,000 customers lose power

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Micaela A Watts, Katherine Burgess and Phillip Jackson

Storms blowing high-speed winds pushed through the Memphis area early Monday morning, downing tree limbs, bending signposts and causing damage to cars, businesses and homes.

By Monday afternoon, the National Weather Service in Memphis said their preliminar­y report confirms that an EF1 tornado touched down in Southeast Memphis.

An EF1 is a ranking used to describe a tornado that has the ability to cause moderate damage to structures and trees.

No fatalities linked to Monday’s tornado have been reported.

In response to the damage that has

displaced dozens of Southeast Memphis residents, the Red Cross of Tennessee has establishe­d an emergency shelter at the Marion Hale Community Center.

A Red Cross official said 30 people had signed into the shelter by Monday afternoon, and that it expects more after sunset.

Most of the damage occurred in the northern and southern parts of Shelby County, but power outages and tree damage also occurred within the I-240 loop, according to the National Weather Service in Memphis.

Investigat­ors with the NWS planned to survey damage near the intersecti­on of Perkins Road and American Way on Monday afternoon to determine whether a tornado touched down in the area.

The worst of the storm blew through between 6:30-7 a.m., with winds between 50-55 mph.

By 8:45 a.m., tornado watches and warnings for the area lifted.

Just before noon, Memphis Police Lt. Karen Rudolph said no storm-related fatalities had been reported.

Structural damage and damage to trees occurred to Cottonwood Apartments on Cottonwood Road, south of American Way.

The Memphis Internatio­nal Airport also had several windows blown out in a terminal and some damage to lights around the parking lot and near the runway.

Passengers at the airport scrambled for shelter.

Crews with Memphis Light, Gas and Water worked throughout the day to repair damage that left more than 30,000 customers affected.

Large trees and tree limbs were down in various parts of the county: on the Fedex campus near the west side of the airport on Airways Boulevard; on Germantown Road and Poplar Pike; and on Thousand Oaks Boulevard. Numerous trees were downed in Germantown, particular­ly on Corbin Road.

Numerous power lines went down around Mt. Moriah and Mendenhall, according to the NWS.

Some power line poles were knocked down around the Gossett Kia auto dealership on Mt. Moriah, and some wind damage in the Frayser-millington area.

Outside of Cottonwood Apartments, by South Perkins and Cottonwood, residents could not enter or exit the apartment complex by vehicle. The main entrance remained blocked by an apartment official only letting emergency vehicles pass through.

One resident, Lisa Ransom, was trying to get back into the complex to be with her mother, whom she shares an apartment with.

“She’s OK, but we’re going to have to move. Trees are down everywhere on top of cars, the roof is gone in some parts. I’ve never seen anything like this,” Ransom said.

The parking lots of surroundin­g businesses like Sonic and the Z Mart are filled with cars as Cottonwood residents trying to reach their homes.

In places where the fences are completely down, residents streamed in and out of the gaps while emergency vehicles make their way into the complex.

Mary Graham, a resident, said a tornado siren woke her up early. She left the complex after getting a call that her aunt had passed away, and returned back only to find that she could not access her home.

“The whole roof is off in parts of the complex, you can see straight into the apartments,” Graham said.

In house full of six children, Deloris Lewis told them to immediatel­y hit the floor and take cover when they heard the roaring sound of wind early Monday morning. Lewis, who was inside of a room with her son at the time, took cov

In Germantown, downed trees and power lines have caused traffic backups in several areas. Impacted areas include the intersecti­ons of Arthur and Riggs roads, Sunset Road and Poplar Pike and Mcvay Road and Mcvay Trail Drive. Germantown police are directing traffic in these areas but motorists are encouraged to use other routes.

The city has also said that the traffic light at Poplar Avenue and Poplar Estates Parkway is out and the intersecti­on should be treated as a four-way stop.

Downed limbs and streets thick with layers of pine needles were present in several Germantown neighborho­ods.

Two homes near Brierbrook Road and Poplar Avenue sustained significant damage from fallen limbs.

The storm that hit Memphis is the same weather system that resulted in a tornado touching down in Dallas overnight, leaving more than 100,000 without power.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MAX GERSH/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? A large metal sign is bent after a storm moved though the area of South Perkins Road and American Way on Monday in Memphis.
PHOTOS BY MAX GERSH/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL A large metal sign is bent after a storm moved though the area of South Perkins Road and American Way on Monday in Memphis.
 ??  ?? A utility box is left damaged after being moved by an uprooted tree Monday on Woodford Lane near Brierbrook Road in Germantown.
A utility box is left damaged after being moved by an uprooted tree Monday on Woodford Lane near Brierbrook Road in Germantown.
 ?? WEATHER SERVICE NATIONAL ?? A tornado watch for the Memphis area was in effect Monday morning.
WEATHER SERVICE NATIONAL A tornado watch for the Memphis area was in effect Monday morning.
 ?? MAX GERSH/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? A tree fell on a car on American Way near Perkins Road following storms that moved through Memphis.
MAX GERSH/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL A tree fell on a car on American Way near Perkins Road following storms that moved through Memphis.

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