
Cellphone alerts helped Tennessee couple escape to basement
BAXTER, Tenn. (AP) — Billy Dyerโs cellphone blared out an emergency alert, then his wife Kathyโs phone followed, giving them just enough time to get downstairs and flip on a TV to check the news.
Then the tornado hit.
When the sun rose Tuesday morning, the Dyers emerged to find the walls around their corner bedroom gone. Their mattress was perched precariously on their bedโs headboard, with only sky all around.
โThank God we had enough time to get downstairs to the basement or we would probably not be here,โ Dyer said.
State emergency officials revised the toll to 24 fatalities on Tuesday night. In Putnam County, some 80 miles (130 kilometers) east of Nashville, at least 18 people were killed, including five pre-teen children, and 88 others were injured.
Twenty-one people remain unaccounted for, Putnam Sheriff Eddie Farris said, and about 40% of the rubble still needs to be searched, including a 25-acre field with marshy vegetation reaching 7 feet high.
People across Nashville were awakened by outdoor sirens alerting them to the tornado danger early Tuesday, and sirens also sounded in parts of Putnam County, but in the Dyersโ Double Springs community, deep in the Tennessee countryside, no such systems exist.
โIf the cellphones didnโt have the emergency call, it wouldnโt have been good,โ Dyer said.
The twisters that struck across Tennessee after midnight Tuesday ripped off brick facades, bent metal poles and shredded more than 140 buildings while burying people in piles of rubble and wrecked basements.
Dyerโs own 34-year-old daughter, Brooke, managed to take shelter in the basement of the house he grew up in next door, and then โcalled me screaming and crying.โ Moments after the tornado passed, he ventured out into the darkness and freed her from the wreckage.
โThank God my mother had a basement, a very small basement,โ the 64-year-old Dyer said. โShe was standing there between the crack of the door screaming and crying, top of the house gone.โ
The governor declared an emergency and sent the National Guard to help with search-and-rescue efforts. Police kept parts of Putnam County cordoned off, and imposed an 8 p.m.-8 a.m. curfew as the grim search continued into Wednesday.
National Weather Service survey teams indicated that the damage in Nashville and Wilson County to the east was inflicted by a tornado of at least EF-3 intensity, with wind speeds up to 165 mph (266 kmh), the agency said. One twister wrecked homes and businesses across a 10-mile (16 kilometer) stretch of Nashville that included parts of downtown.
The tornado that struck Putnam County damaged more than 100 structures along a 2-mile (3.2-kilometer) path that wiped some homes from their foundations and scattered wreckage. The garage Dyerโs father used as an auto mechanic was scraped off its concrete slab, with metal rafters crushing the front and rear of his red Mustang with an Elvis Presley license plate.
Terry Cooler, an elder at the Double Springs Church of Christ, found only a hole in his roof, which he thinks was caused by flying debris. Much worse was the fate of the mother of a deacon at his church, who lost her home in the storm and then was rushed to a hospital for angioplasty and a stent.
โIโm sure the stress didnโt help her,โ Cooler said. โSheโs 86 and lost everything.โ
Dyer and his neighbors spent Tuesday picking through shattered glass, busted walls and drenched belongings trying to salvage anything possible.
After surveying the damage on Tuesday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee marveled at peopleโs resilience.
โIn the worst of circumstances, the best of people comes out, and thatโs what weโre seeing,โ he said.
Justin Douglas, 22, was one of them. Heโs a native of Mt. Juliet outside Nashville, and recently graduated from Tennessee Tech University in Cookeville — both places hit hard by the tornadoes. He said he knew some of the victims.
โBack home, there were some family friends that they found laying in the bed with the house collapsed on top of them, and then a guy I went to church with growing up, his daughter passed and I donโt know how him and his wife are,โ Douglas said. โI heard they were in the hospital in rough shape.โ
Douglas moved his skid-steer loader to the Double Springs area Tuesday night, ready to help clean-up Wednesday.
โWell, we need to go help because these are our friends, our neighbors, our family,โ Douglas said. โWeโre going to go help.โ
___ By TERESA M. WALKER
Associated Press contributors include Kimberlee Kruesi, who traveled with the governor. (AP Photo/Teresa M. Walker)