DAMASCUS, Ark. — Violent storms rolling across the nation’s midsection unleashed tornadoes, high winds and hail in four states and killed seven people in Arkansas yesterday, including a teenager who died when a tree fell into her bedroom as she slept.
The storms late Thursday and early yesterday ripped off roofs and toppled rail cars near Kansas City, Mo.; pelted parts of Oklahoma with hail; and knocked over tents at a popular open-air market in east Texas. Severe thunderstorms were moving into Kentucky and could linger long enough to affect today’s Kentucky Derby.
Greg Carbin, a meteorologist for the national Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., said as many as 25 tornadoes may have cut through stretches of Oklahoma, Arkansas, eastern Kansas and western Missouri.
Five of those killed were in two north-central Arkansas counties, Conway and Van Buren, that also saw fatalities from a devastating tornado Feb. 5.
This year it just seems like we’re getting pounded, Van Buren County Sheriff Scott Bradley said.
He said a man, a woman and a preschool-age child died when the storm hit their house just south of Bee Branch.
There wasn’t anything left, Mr. Bradley said. It was demolished.
Another child who lived at the home had already left for school, escaping injury.
A father and son died in Conway County when a possible tornado hit their mobile home. A twister demolished a chicken farm in Center Springs, leaving thousands of dead birds on the ground.
Near the Oklahoma line in a working-class neighborhood of Siloam Springs, a 15-year-old girl died in the early morning when apparent straight-line winds toppled a tree into her family’s mobile home. She and her 10-year-old brother were sleeping in bunk beds; the boy survived with minor injuries.
She was on (the top bunk). He was on bottom. When it fell it just crushed her and pinned her on top of him, with a mattress between them, said Chad Tilghman, who lives across the street and helped pull the boy from the storm debris.
The seventh death was reported in Pulaski County, south of Little Rock.
Around the Van Buren County town of Damascus, deputies, firefighters and volunteers were going farm-to-farm to check on everyone. Just north of town the wind knocked the roof off a new church that has yet to hold its first service.
More than a dozen injuries were reported, and about 350 homes were damaged or destroyed in several Arkansas counties.
Nearly 6,000 homes and businesses lost power in Arkansas, and about 40,000 lost power at the peak of the storms in the Kansas City area, where two small tornadoes touched down and several minor injuries were reported.
Kansas City Mayor Mark Funkhouser said 100 homes suffered significant damage in the city alone. Damage was also reported in the suburbs and in Lawrence, to the west.
In northeast Kansas City, dozens of homes had chunks of their roofs missing, and trees were knocked from their roots and lying along the roads and in ditches. Police blocked off roads around the damaged neighborhoods yesterday.
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