A
dispatcher at the Humphreys County Sheriff's Office confirmed
the number of those killed and missing and said authorities were
working to conduct house-to-house searches of the area.
Record rainfall of up to 17 inches (43 cm) in some areas sparked
massive flooding on Saturday afternoon and evening. Especially
hard hit was the town of Waverly, about 55 miles (88 km) west of
Nashville. Hundreds of homes were left uninhabitable.
Waverly Mayor Wallace Frazier told the Tennessean newspaper that
those killed in flooding ranged in age from babies to the
elderly. The Washington Post, citing family members, reported
that 7-month-old twins died after they were swept away from
their parents' arms.
The flooding uprooted massive trees, tore through homes and
tossed cars and pickup trucks into ditches and atop sheds and
other structures.
Cindy Dunn, 48, told the Tennessean that she and her husband had
been stranded in their attic for several hours after floodwaters
rose to 6 feet (1.8 m) high in their home. The pair were saved
by a rescue crew that raised the bucket of a bulldozer up to a
window they could get through.
"Hell. That's what we had to go through," Dunn told the
newspaper.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; Editing by Peter
Cooney)
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