One year ago...

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CrazyC83
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Re: One year ago...

#21 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 9:43 am

Here was the radar around 10 am CDT April 27, 2011:

Image
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Re: One year ago...

#22 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 11:38 am

The first of the extreme PDS watches came out about now - probs were 95/90 across the board on this one (next PDS was ALL >95s, a first):

SEL2

URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
TORNADO WATCH NUMBER 232
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
1105 AM CDT WED APR 27 2011

THE NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS ISSUED A
TORNADO WATCH FOR PORTIONS OF

EXTREME SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS
NORTHEAST LOUISIANA
MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI

EFFECTIVE THIS WEDNESDAY MORNING AND EVENING FROM 1105 AM UNTIL
700 PM CDT.

...THIS IS A PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION...

DESTRUCTIVE TORNADOES...LARGE HAIL TO 4 INCHES IN DIAMETER...
THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 80 MPH...AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING ARE
POSSIBLE IN THESE AREAS.

THE TORNADO WATCH AREA IS APPROXIMATELY ALONG AND 65 STATUTE
MILES EAST AND WEST OF A LINE FROM 45 MILES EAST SOUTHEAST OF
NATCHEZ MISSISSIPPI TO 50 MILES NORTH OF TUPELO MISSISSIPPI. FOR
A COMPLETE DEPICTION OF THE WATCH SEE THE ASSOCIATED WATCH
OUTLINE UPDATE (WOUS64 KWNS WOU2).

REMEMBER...A TORNADO WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR
TORNADOES AND SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH
AREA. PERSONS IN THESE AREAS SHOULD BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR
THREATENING WEATHER CONDITIONS AND LISTEN FOR LATER STATEMENTS
AND POSSIBLE WARNINGS.

OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 229...WW 230...WW 231...

DISCUSSION...A VERY VOLATILE SETUP IS DEVELOPING FOR PORTIONS OF MS
LATER TODAY AS A MOIST AND VERY UNSTABLE AIR MASS RETURNS INTO AN
AREA WITH IMPRESSIVE LOW LEVEL AND DEEP LAYER VERTICAL SHEAR
PROFILES
. ACTIVITY IS CURRENTLY DEVELOPING OVER SOUTHEAST
AR/NORTHEAST LA. HOWEVER...IT APPEARS THE PRIMARY CONCERN WILL
START BY EARLY AFTERNOON OVER CENTRAL/NORTHERN MS WHERE DISCRETE
TORNADIC SUPERCELLS ARE LIKELY. ALL PARAMETERS SUGGEST THAT
STRONG/VIOLENT AND LONG-TRACK TORNADOES ARE POSSIBLE
. VERY LARGE
HAIL AND WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WINDS ARE ALSO A CONCERN.

AVIATION...TORNADOES AND A FEW SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WITH HAIL
SURFACE AND ALOFT TO 4 INCHES. EXTREME TURBULENCE AND SURFACE
WIND GUSTS TO 70 KNOTS. A FEW CUMULONIMBI WITH MAXIMUM TOPS TO
550. MEAN STORM MOTION VECTOR 25040.


...HART
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#23 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 1:42 pm

It was one year ago right now that a tornado caught me unaware while pulled off the highway. 2:40 pm.
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Re: One year ago...

#24 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 1:44 pm

Meanwhile, the most strongly worded Tornado Watch I have ever seen was coming out right at this time as well...absolutely chilling. Yet so true. May God be with all the victims...

SEL5

URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
TORNADO WATCH NUMBER 235
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
145 PM CDT WED APR 27 2011

THE NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS ISSUED A
TORNADO WATCH FOR PORTIONS OF

MUCH OF ALABAMA
NORTHWEST GEORGIA
SOUTHEAST MISSISSIPPI
SOUTHERN MIDDLE TENNESSEE

EFFECTIVE THIS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING FROM 145 PM UNTIL
1000 PM CDT.

...THIS IS A PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION...

DESTRUCTIVE TORNADOES...LARGE HAIL TO 4 INCHES IN DIAMETER...
THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 80 MPH...AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING ARE
POSSIBLE IN THESE AREAS.

THE TORNADO WATCH AREA IS APPROXIMATELY ALONG AND 80 STATUTE
MILES EAST AND WEST OF A LINE FROM 45 MILES NORTHEAST OF
HUNTSVILLE ALABAMA TO 60 MILES WEST SOUTHWEST OF EVERGREEN
ALABAMA. FOR A COMPLETE DEPICTION OF THE WATCH SEE THE
ASSOCIATED WATCH OUTLINE UPDATE (WOUS64 KWNS WOU5).

REMEMBER...A TORNADO WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR
TORNADOES AND SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH
AREA. PERSONS IN THESE AREAS SHOULD BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR
THREATENING WEATHER CONDITIONS AND LISTEN FOR LATER STATEMENTS
AND POSSIBLE WARNINGS.

OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 230...WW 231...WW
232...WW 233...WW 234...

DISCUSSION...A CLASSIC TORNADO OUTBREAK SITUATION IS DEVELOPING
ACROSS MUCH OF AL
AS DISCRETE TORNADIC SUPERCELLS FORM OVER MS AND
TRACK ACROSS THE WATCH AREA. STRONG LOW LEVEL AND DEEP LAYER
VERTICAL SHEAR...COMBINED WITH A MOIST AND MODERATELY UNSTABLE AIR
MASS...WILL POSE A DANGEROUS RISK OF STRONG/VIOLENT AND POTENTIALLY
LONG-TRACK TORNADOES.


AVIATION...TORNADOES AND A FEW SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WITH HAIL
SURFACE AND ALOFT TO 4 INCHES. EXTREME TURBULENCE AND SURFACE
WIND GUSTS TO 70 KNOTS. A FEW CUMULONIMBI WITH MAXIMUM TOPS TO
500. MEAN STORM MOTION VECTOR 25040.


...HART
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#25 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:14 pm

One other note: the death toll from the outbreak has been increased by three, as three more victims were identified one year later in DeKalb County, Alabama. The death toll is now:

* 248 from tornadoes in Alabama on April 27
* 319 from tornadoes in all states on April 27
* 325 for the entire outbreak from tornadoes (+5 on April 25, +1 on April 26)
* 349 for the entire outbreak, including other thunderstorm impacts throughout the period (including 13 from flooding, 1 from lightning and 10 from straight-line winds)
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#26 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 3:11 pm

Last year in the 3 pm CDT hour - EF4 tornado in Cullman:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rvlcuodab1U
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#27 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 3:19 pm

Also about now, the Hackleburg/Phil Campbell/Tanner etc. long-tracker was touching down...and 72 people would be lost

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW7i4CbYLEQ
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#28 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 4:44 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA7TKSHJ_wM

One year ago right now. Right before our eyes, Tuscaloosa was being decimated, live on ABC 33-40.
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Re: One year ago...

#29 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 5:26 pm

In the 5 pm hour last year, North Alabama was getting devoured, the Tuscaloosa tornado was approaching Birmingham and we had this:

MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 0634
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
0501 PM CDT WED APR 27 2011

AREAS AFFECTED...MUCH OF MS/AL TO NORTHWEST GA

CONCERNING...TORNADO WATCH 232...235...

VALID 272201Z - 272330Z

THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT FOR TORNADO WATCH 232...235...CONTINUES.

PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION /PDS/ TORNADO WATCHES 232/235
CONTINUE UNTIL 00Z/03Z RESPECTIVELY.

A TORNADO OUTBREAK WILL CONTINUE INTO THIS EVENING ACROSS MUCH OF
MS/AL INTO NORTHWEST GA. THIS IS AN EXTREMELY
DANGEROUS/LIFE-THREATENING SITUATION! CITIES AND AREAS AT GREATEST
RISK INCLUDE BIRMINGHAM...HUNTSVILLE...THE I-59 CORRIDOR OF NORTHERN
AL...AND I-65 NEAR/NORTH OF BIRMINGHAM.


A NUMBER OF SEMI-DISCRETE/LONG-LIVED TORNADIC SUPERCELLS CONTINUE TO
FORM WITHIN A PRE-DRYLINE/PRE-COLD FRONTAL WARM SECTOR FROM
SOUTH-CENTRAL MS NORTHEASTWARD INTO MUCH OF NORTHERN AL. OTHER
TORNADIC STORMS CONTINUE TO INTERACT WITH A MODIFYING EFFECTIVE WARM
FRONTAL-TYPE BOUNDARY ACROSS FAR NORTHERN AL IN THE GENERAL
VICINITIES OF DECATUR/HUNTSVILLE.

THE SPATIALLY WIDE WARM SECTOR IS VERY UNSTABLE AMID MIDDLE-UPPER
60S F SURFACE DEWPOINTS...WITH LOWER 70S F SURFACE DEWPOINTS ACROSS
PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN/MS. MLCAPE VALUES ARE AS HIGH AS 2000-4000 J/KG
WITHIN THE WEAKLY CAPPED WARM SECTOR.

RECENT REGIONAL WSR-88D VWP DATA IS INDICATIVE OF AN INCREASE IN LOW
LEVEL WIND SPEEDS/HODOGRAPH CURVATURE OVER THE PAST FEW HOURS...WITH
0-1 KM SRH VALUES NOW ESTIMATED TO BE IN EXCESS OF 300-400 M2/S2 AND
0-3 KM SRH IN EXCESS OF 600 M2/S2 PER BIRMINGHAM/HUNTSVILLE WSR-88D
VWPS. THIS WILL REMAIN HIGHLY FAVORABLE FOR LONG-LIVED
STRONG/POTENTIALLY VIOLENT TORNADOES WITH ANY SUSTAINED SUPERCELLS
WITHIN THE BROAD/VOLATILE WARM SECTOR INTO THIS EVENING.


WHILE STRONG TORNADOES WILL BE POSSIBLE WITH ANY SUSTAINED
SUPERCELLS WITHIN PDS TORNADO WATCH 232/235...THE RELATIVELY HIGHEST
CONCERN OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS WOULD APPEAR TO BE ACROSS
WEST-CENTRAL AL AND NORTHERN HALF OF AL INTO FAR NORTHWEST GA.

HERE...IN ADDITION TO THE AFOREMENTIONED RESIDUAL SURFACE
BOUNDARY...RELATIVELY STRONG/BACKED LOW LEVEL FLOW IS EVIDENT IN 21Z
SUBJECTIVE ANALYSIS AMID A RELATIVE MAXIMA OF 2-HR PRESSURE
FALLS...ESPECIALLY ALONG/NORTH OF I-20 IN NORTHERN AL.

..GUYER.. 04/27/2011


ATTN...WFO...FFC...BMX...HUN...MOB...MEG...JAN...

LAT...LON 32559038 34728873 34398454 31278702 31499023 32559038
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Re: One year ago...

#30 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 5:35 pm

Also out at this time last year. While the Middle TN part busted (thankfully for those in and around Nashville), it was probably under-forecast in East TN.

SEL8

URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
TORNADO WATCH NUMBER 238
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
335 PM CDT WED APR 27 2011

THE NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS ISSUED A
TORNADO WATCH FOR PORTIONS OF

MIDDLE AND EASTERN TENNESSEE

EFFECTIVE THIS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON FROM 335 PM UNTIL MIDNIGHT CDT.

...THIS IS A PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION...

DESTRUCTIVE TORNADOES...LARGE HAIL TO 3 INCHES IN DIAMETER...
THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 80 MPH...AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING ARE
POSSIBLE IN THESE AREAS.

THE TORNADO WATCH AREA IS APPROXIMATELY ALONG AND 50 STATUTE
MILES NORTH AND SOUTH OF A LINE FROM 70 MILES WEST SOUTHWEST OF
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE TO 25 MILES EAST OF KNOXVILLE TENNESSEE. FOR
A COMPLETE DEPICTION OF THE WATCH SEE THE ASSOCIATED WATCH
OUTLINE UPDATE (WOUS64 KWNS WOU8).

REMEMBER...A TORNADO WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR
TORNADOES AND SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH
AREA. PERSONS IN THESE AREAS SHOULD BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR
THREATENING WEATHER CONDITIONS AND LISTEN FOR LATER STATEMENTS
AND POSSIBLE WARNINGS.

OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 232...WW 233...WW
234...WW 235...WW 236...

DISCUSSION...A VERY UNSTABLE AIRMASS IS EXPECTED TO GRADUALLY
DEVELOP NORTHWARD INTO TN THIS EVENING IN THE WAKE OF A MORNING MCS.
WITHIN AN INCREASINGLY SHEARED ENVIRONMENT...ACCENTUATED BY
LONG/CURVING LOW LEVEL HODOGRAPHS...SUPERCELLS CAPABLE OF TORNADOES
/SOME STRONG/
WILL BE AN INCREASING/MORE WIDESPREAD CONCERN INTO
THIS EVENING.

AVIATION...TORNADOES AND A FEW SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WITH HAIL
SURFACE AND ALOFT TO 3 INCHES. EXTREME TURBULENCE AND SURFACE
WIND GUSTS TO 70 KNOTS. A FEW CUMULONIMBI WITH MAXIMUM TOPS TO
550. MEAN STORM MOTION VECTOR 24040.


...GUYER/HART
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#31 Postby yzerfan » Fri Apr 27, 2012 6:56 pm

My parents were driving down from Michigan to the Florida Panhandle a year ago today, satellite radio cranked up and blissfully unaware of what they were headed toward. Thankfully, they pulled over at the Alabama Welcome Center just past the Tennessee state line for a bathroom break, and the employees there told them that I-65 was closed to non-emergency vehicles ahead, the tornadoes were touching down everywhere, and at that point, they'd be safest hunkering down in the sturdiest part of the welcome center until they got an all clear report.
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Re:

#32 Postby Stephanie » Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:10 pm

yzerfan wrote:My parents were driving down from Michigan to the Florida Panhandle a year ago today, satellite radio cranked up and blissfully unaware of what they were headed toward. Thankfully, they pulled over at the Alabama Welcome Center just past the Tennessee state line for a bathroom break, and the employees there told them that I-65 was closed to non-emergency vehicles ahead, the tornadoes were touching down everywhere, and at that point, they'd be safest hunkering down in the sturdiest part of the welcome center until they got an all clear report.


They were very fortunate.
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Re:

#33 Postby Stephanie » Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:28 pm

CrazyC83 wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA7TKSHJ_wM

One year ago right now. Right before our eyes, Tuscaloosa was being decimated, live on ABC 33-40.


After watching this video, I stumbled on this one again and I remember watching and yelling at them "Get the hell out of there!" :eek:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ohIVzIZLuQ&feature=related[/youtube]
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Re:

#34 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:34 pm

yzerfan wrote:My parents were driving down from Michigan to the Florida Panhandle a year ago today, satellite radio cranked up and blissfully unaware of what they were headed toward. Thankfully, they pulled over at the Alabama Welcome Center just past the Tennessee state line for a bathroom break, and the employees there told them that I-65 was closed to non-emergency vehicles ahead, the tornadoes were touching down everywhere, and at that point, they'd be safest hunkering down in the sturdiest part of the welcome center until they got an all clear report.


Wow glad they were okay in the end! Similar situation happened with me, except I actually ended up in a tornado...
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#35 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:35 pm

As darkness settled one year ago, tornadoes continued to litter the landscape...now East Tennessee and Northwest Georgia were being destroyed in many areas, including a high-end EF4 in Ringgold, GA and Apison, TN (which I saw the damage firsthand two days later).
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Re: One year ago...

#36 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:40 pm

You think that's crazy? Check out this Tuscaloosa video!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_B7GSpgktI[/youtube]
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Re: One year ago...

#37 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Apr 27, 2012 8:09 pm

The 4 EF5s:

Philadelphia, MS tornado (3 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev2bZRV8eOo[/youtube]

Hackleburg, AL tornado (72 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4nHLSN4J0E[/youtube]

Smithville, MS tornado (23 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ku9NRDNOfc[/youtube]

Rainsville, AL tornado (25 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Npsa2gkEro[/youtube]
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Re: One year ago...

#38 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Apr 27, 2012 8:31 pm

The other 3 tornadoes that killed 20 or more:

EF4 Tuscaloosa, AL tornado (64 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRGkCZmjVXI[/youtube]

EF4 Shoal Creek, AL tornado (22 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SxGnBoWr30[/youtube]

EF4 Ringgold, GA tornado (20 dead)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOkKAG_obNs[/youtube]
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#39 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 9:46 pm

Even late in the evening, tornadoes continued to slash across Tennessee, Georgia and into the Carolinas and Virginia. Not to mention the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast had their own outbreak...
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Re: One year ago...

#40 Postby CrazyC83 » Fri Apr 27, 2012 10:21 pm

IN MEMORIAM

Those who lost their lives in the 2011 Super Outbreak

List currently being compiled state by state. It includes indirect deaths and deaths not caused by tornadoes. It is unsure if I will find all 349+ deaths.

Alabama

Bibb County

Brent
Ricky Paul Smith, 55

Calhoun County

Ohatchee
Ruby Douthitt, 61
Tina Forrest, 49
Michael Forrest, 54
Francis Arvella Jones, 72
James Romaine, 65

Piedmont
Angel Stillwell, 13

Webster's Chapel
Vernon Spencer Motes, 33

Wellington
Linda Sue Lipscomb, 63
William Lipscomb, 67

Cullman County

Cullman
Lloyd Winford Harris, 68

Johnson Crossing
Keenan Jonathan Sullivan, 20

DeKalb County

Chelsie Black, 20
Charlotte Bludsworth, 36
Belinda Boatner, 67
Gene Bullock, 65
Marcella Bullock, 64
Jewell Ewing, 73
Emma Ferguson, 6
Jeremy Ferguson, 34
Tawnya Ferguson, 32
Hannah Goins, 3
Kenneth Graham, 56
Linda Graham, 61
Ruth Hairston, 90
Harold Harcrow, 74
Patricia Harcrow, 75
Jody Huizenga, 28
Lethel Izell, 86
Jimmy Michael Kilgore, 48
Courtney McGaha, 15
William Michaels, 70
Martha Michaels, 72
Eulah Miller
Ida Ott, 87
Timothy Ott, 53
Ester Rosson, 81
Peggy Sparks, 55
Terry Tinker, 50
Daniel Vermillion, 42
Jidal Vermillion, 44
Herbert Wooten, 70
Juanita Wooten, 70

Ider
Judith White, 63
Wayne White, 68

Rainsville
Eddie Joe Bobbitt, 71
Carol Lisa Fox, 50

Elmore County

Eclectic
Candice Hope Abernathy, 23
Kammie Abernathy, 5
Melissa Ann "Missy" Myers Gantt, 43
Alice Herren Lee, 74
Martha Ann Gray Myers, 67
Rebecca Herren Woodall, 70

Fayette County

Berry
Jeffery Kemp, 60
Reba Kemp, 60
Leon Spruell, 76
Sylvia Spruell, 69

Franklin County

East Franklin
Donald Ray Heaps, 48
Kelli Thorn Morgan, 24 (bio)
Michael Morgan, 32

Phil Campbell
Nila Black, 68
Zan Reese Black, 45
Jeffrey Dewight Cotham, 35
Jack Cox, 78
Charlene Crochet, 41
Donnie Gentry, 63
Patricia Ann Gentry, 50
Lester William Hood, 81
James Robert Keller Jr., 67
Linda Faye Knight, 57
Rickey Ethan Knox, 10
Amy LeClere, 33
Jay W. LeClere, 45
Dagmar Leyden, 56
Edna Lucille Bradley Nix, 89
Martha Lou Pace, 64
Claudia I. Mojica, 38
Edgar Mojica, 9
Georgia Schribner, 83
Jack E. Tenhaeff, 67
Sonya Black Trapp, 47
Carroll Dean "C.D." Waller, 76
Gerri Waller, 64

Double Springs
Donna Renee Berry, 52

Hale County

Greensboro
Cora L. Brown, 68
Gerald C. Brown, 70

Sawyerville
Jerry Lee Hodge, 64
Henry Lewis, 26
Frankie Lunsford, 55
Elizabeth C. White, 25

Jackson County

Pisgah
Kathy Gray Haney, 46
Herbert Satterfield, 90
Ann Satterfield, 81

Higdon
Janie Shannon, 80

Flat Rock
Shelby Jean Shannon, 58
Elease Whited, 75
John Whited, 77

Bridgeport
Branen Warren, 13

Jefferson County

Pleasant Grove
Iva Mae Cantrell, 73
James Jerry Clements, 66
Cheryl Denise Cooper, 47
Canatha Hyde Earley, 71
Reba Jones, 75
Carrie Grier Lowe, 26
Ramona Sanders-Walker, 47
Louella Bell Thompson, 81
Tracy A. Traweek, 39
Nancy L. Wilson, 56

Concord
Janet Dickinson Hall, 55
Jennifer Leonard Jones, 26
Haley Alexis Kreider, 8
Michael David Kreider, 10
Michelle Pearson Kreider, 30
Ernest C. "Ernie" Mundi Jr., 53

Cahaba Heights
Milton Edward Baker Sr., 68

Pratt City
Bessie Brewster, 72

Forestdale
Kenneth Ray Nation, 64

McDonald Chapel
Deniece Presley, 57

Lawrence County

Chaleybeate
Aurelia Guzman, 12
Donald "Duck" Ray, 73
Edward Vuknic, 66 (bio)

Hillsboro
Zora Lee Jones Hale, 80

Langtown
Lyndon Lee "Doby" Mayes, 74
Mary Mayes, 76

Mt. Moriah
Allen Oneal Terry, 49
Herman Oneal Terry, 80

Moulton
Mike Daworld Dunn, 58

Mount Hope
Matthew Chase Adams, 21
Earl Lewis Crosby Sr., 63
J.W. Parker, 78
Horace Grady Smith, 83
Helen Smith, 84

Limestone County

Tanner
Carol Jan McElyea, 67
Janice Dorothy Peden Riddle, 54
Roger Glen Riddle, 55

East Limestone
Shannon Gail Sampson, 39

Madison County

Harvest
Katie Cornwell, 15
Harold Fitzgerald, 65
Milinia Nicole "Nikki" Hammonds, 32
Ronnie McGaha, 40
Bobby Joe Moore, 61
Frederick Post
Rachel Renee Tabor, 37

Toney
Gregory John Braden, 58, Welcome Home Village Drive
Philomena Muotoe, 79, Old Eli Road

Marion County

Hackleburg
Bridget Barnwell Brisbois, 34
Robbie Cox, 68
Tina Donais, 37
Chris Dunn, 32
Charles Tommy Garner, 75
Mae Garner, 79
Ed Hall, 53
Teresa Gay Hall, 50
Kaarlo Jokela, 76
Donna Lee "Leah" Jokela, 77
Freddie Lollie, 81
Vickey Lollie, 55
John Lynch
Cledis Inez McCarley, 69
Vicki Lynn McKee, 47
Faye O'Kelley, 70
Rodney Gene Ables, 51
Ken Vaughn, 24

Hamilton
Michelle Brown, 43
Tammy Johnson, 52
Jacob Ralph Ray, 5
Virginia Revis, 53
Jeanette Cochran Wideman, 52

Marshall County

Ruth
Ann Hallmark, 54
Phillip Hallmark, 56
Shane Hallmark, 37
Jennifer Hallmark, 31
Jayden Hallmark, 17 months

St. Clair County

Oberia Layton Ashley, 86
Ronnie Isbell, 56
Tammy Isbell, 31
Leah Isbell, 7
Bertha S. Kage, 91
Thomas Carl Lee, 64
Stella "Mae" Lovell, 97
Sandra Pledger, 68
Albert Sanders, 44
Angie Sanders, 43
Charlie Andrew Wolfe, 68
Nettie Ruth Wolfe, 68

Pell City
Precious Necale Fegans-Hartley, 27

Moody
Sandra Gayle McCrory, 56

Tallapoosa County

Dadeville
Katherine Massa, 70

Tuscaloosa County

Tuscaloosa
Minnie Acklin, 73
Jerry Artis, 51
Scott Atterton, 23
Jennifer V. Bayode, 35
Michael Bowers, 3
Loryn Brown, 21
Mary Bryant, 43
Graham Davie, 55
Ta' Christianna Dixon, 11 months
Danielle Downs, 24
Arielle Edwards, 22
Makayla Edwards, 5
Melgium Farley, 58
Cedria Harris, 8
Keshun Harris, 5
Ashley Harrison, 22
Shena Hutchins, 26
Carolyn Ann Jackson, 50
Jacqueline Jefferson, 45
Thelma Krallman, 89
Davis Lynn Latham, 57
Tennie Mozelle Lancaster, 95
Velma T. Leroy, 64
Dorothy Lewis, 61
Thomas D. Lewis, 66
Yvonne Mayes, 61
Christian A. McNeil, 15 months
William Robert McPherson, 85
Zy'Queria McShan, 2
Melanie Nicole Mixon, 26
Perry Blake Peek, 24
Lola Pitts, 85
Terrilyn Plump, 37
Kevin Rice, 36
Annie Lois Humphries Sayer, 88
Judy Sherrill, 62
Morgan Marlene Sigler, 23
William Chance Stevens, 22
Justin Leeric Thomas, 15
Patricia Turner, 55,
Willie Lee Turner III, 21

Walker County

Argo
Wesley Starr, 45
Lucille Waters, 89

Cordova
Jonathan Doss, 12
Justin Doss, 10
Annette Singleton, 45
Jackson Van Horn, 24

Oakman
Kathleen Brown, 64

Sipsey
Pam Jett, 43
Harold "Junior" Jett, 47

Arkansas

Benton County

Bentonville
2 deaths

Faulkner County

Vilonia
Craig D. Garvin, 63
Charles Austin Mitchell, 55
Virgil Steed, 48
David Talley, 45
Katherine Talley, 45

Garland County

Hot Springs Village
Alexander Ellington, 8 months

Madison County

2 deaths

Perry County

Larry Mitchell

Sharp County

Cave City
Joanne Bradley, 48

Washington County

West Fork
Consuelo Santillano, 38

Georgia

Catoosa County

Ringgold
Christopher Black, 47
Cody Black, 21
Kelsea Black, 16
Pamela Black, 46
Jack Estep, 61
Robert Jones, 47
Ray McClannahan, 86
Holly Readus, 26

Dade County

Trenton
Donald Lee “Donnie” Walston, 47

Lamar County

Barnesville
Ellen Gunter, 63
Paul Gunter, 73

Rabun County

Lake Burton
Elbert Earl Patton, Jr., 83

Spalding County

Charlie Green, 55
Jamie White, 22

Mississippi

Chickasaw County

3 deaths

Choctaw County

Jeff Busby Park
Wade Sharp, 40

Clarke County

New Bethel
Dewayne Baldwin, 46
Billy Joe Haney, 32
Robert Jenkins, 58
Pat Robinson, 64

Jasper County

Louin
Beverly Maily, 57
Michael Maily, 59

Kemper County

Florrie Green, 76
Johnnie Green, 83
Maxine McDonald, 78

Marshall County

Byhalia
Charles Foster, 69

Holly Springs
Artwell Craft, 66

Monroe County

Thomas Lynn Davis, 55

Smithville
Jessie Cox, 84
Courtney Easter, 21
Mildred Elam, 79
Nellie Ruth Estis, 61
Roy Estis, 63
Celia Fay Jackson, 92
Carla Jones, 37
Mavis "Jean" Manley, 70
Alan Scott Morris, 41
Betty Newkirk, 78
Hazel Noe, 80
Jessica Pace, 18
Lucille Parker, 86
Elvin Patterson, 80
Mary Lavern Patterson, 77

Pike County

McComb
Jabriel M. Branch, 3

Smith County

Warren Hill
Anthony Turner, 53

Webster County

Ticky Bend
Mike Rogers

Yazoo County

Yazoo City
Charles H. "Harold' Coker, 48

Tennessee

Bledsoe County

Graysville
Deborah "Debbie" Gibbs Fox, 43
Harold "Sonny-Boy" Hudson Fox, 39
Patricia "Pat" Lynette Thompson, 64
Loretta Winters Bellos

Bradley County

Cleveland
Rhonda Casteel, 33
Eva Catlett, 67
Tommy Evans, 56
Chase Glasgow, 3 months
Tammi Glasgow, 42
Evelyn Johnson, 56
Lisa Pack, 42
Kandice Satterfield, 40

McDonald
Robert King, 77

Greene County

Camp Creek
Gene Harrison, 63
Jeffrey McGill, 47
Marty Myers, 58
Brenda Myers, 56
Bessie Lynne Rice, 47
Jess Lester Richesin, 70

Horse Creek
Shirley McKinney, 63

Hamilton County

Apison
Adam Carroll, 17
Donald Lee Christian, 70
Dorothy Lee Christian, 62
JoAnn Darnell, 77
Brenda Kaye Prescott, 56
Bobby Ray Raper, 63
Mary Raper, 60

Chattanooga
Mia Crumley, 41
Josh Allen Poe, 31

Johnson County

Butler
Linda Zanotti, 53

Doe Valley
Dorothy Herdman Isaacs, 54

Sequatchie County

Cartwright
Ronnie Doyle Davis, 56

Washington County

Chuckey
Douglas Lee Penley, 47

Williamson County

Franklin
Agnes Fort More, 76

Virginia

Halifax County

Nathalie
Shirleen Howard, 55

Washington County

Glade Spring
Robert Blevins, 59
Barbara Keesee, 67
Ronnie Offield, 71
Joyce Mary Wentz, 60
Last edited by CrazyC83 on Fri Apr 27, 2012 11:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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