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Photos


Amanda Garner and Larken Morris, rest on what remains of the Garner's home off of Highway 86 in Newton County following the tornado that struck Southwest Missouri on Saturday, May 10, 2008.
Roger Nomer / The Joplin Globe


Steve Horton searches through the wreckage of his place in Newtonia on Sunday morning. Horton used the house for storage, and was not in it at the time the tornado hit.
Roger Nomer / The Joplin Globe


Annie Ingram and Brian Breeman salvage belongings in Breeman's home in Newtonia, Missouri, after a tornado sheared off the side of his house on Saturday, May 10, 2008.
Roger Nomer / The Joplin Globe

Published May 12, 2008 06:56 pm - A tornado struck Northwest Oklahoma and Southwest Missouri killing twenty-one people and injuring about 180 on Saturday afternoon, May 10, 2008.

Area Surveys Damage
Authorities release names of tornado victims

By Wally Kennedy
THE JOPLIN GLOBE (JOPLIN, Mo.)

JOPLIN, Mo.

Twenty-one people were killed and about 180 were injured Saturday when tornadoes tore across parts of Northeast Oklahoma and Southwest Missouri, authorities said.

The death toll includes six people at Picher, Okla., where nearly 300 structures, including churches, businesses and homes, were destroyed.

After a brief touchdown at Quapaw, Okla., that tornado crossed the state line into Newton County, where 13 people were killed near Missouri Highway 43 and Iris and Bethel roads. The tornado continued on to the communities of Granby and Newtonia, and to Purdy in Barry County, where one person was killed.

One person was killed near Carthage when an isolated tornado knocked trees into a mobile home. The name of that victim was unavailable Sunday night.

Mark Bridges, coroner of Newton County, said the victims in that county were Rockie Peterson, of Neosho; Linda Hasty, of Seneca; Richard, Kathy and Clayton Rountree, all of Joplin; Ruby Bilke, of Joplin; Paul Gallemore, who lived north of Racine; Daniel, Barbara, Jeff and Terrance “Joe” Monroe, who lived near the state line in rural Newton County; Christine Petree, of Morrisville; and Teri Cook, who lived north of Racine.

Bridges said the Rountree family and Bilke were traveling near Highway 43 and Iris Road when their car was blown off the road. Petree was traveling on Highway 43 to a casino when her car was swept away by high winds. The Monroe family reportedly was in a mobile home that was struck by the tornado.

A spokesman for Parker Mortuary in Joplin said it has received the bodies of four people who were relatives, as well as the bodies of Peterson and Petree. A spokesman for Mason-Woodard Mortuary in Joplin said it has received the bodies of four people who were related, and the body of Hasty.

The bodies of the six who were killed at Picher have been taken to the Tulsa (Okla.) Medical Examiner’s Office. Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry said Sunday afternoon that all of the missing at Picher had been accounted for by local authorities.

Firefighter injured

Susie Stonner, head of the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency, said several people were being treated Sunday night in local hospitals for critical injuries. One of them was Tyler Casey, a Seneca fireman who left his vehicle to warn a family of the approaching tornado, said Bridges. When he got to his vehicle, the tornado struck.

Hospital spokesmen in Joplin on Sunday said about 70 people were treated at St. John’s Regional Medical Center, and 48 were treated at Freeman Hospital West. Freeman Neosho Hospital treated about 20 people from Granby and Newtonia. About 40 to 50 people were treated at Integris Baptist Regional Health Center in Miami, Okla. Three people were taken to St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa.

Steve Amburn, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service station at Tulsa, said Picher was hit by an EF3 tornado that first touched the ground south of Chetopa, Kan. An EF3 has wind speeds of 136 to 165 mph.

Picher was toured early Sunday by U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., and later in the day by Henry, the governor. Inhofe said he was overwhelmed by the devastation, noting it was similar to the destruction caused by a tornado that struck Moore, Okla., several years ago.

Walking through the rubble, Inhofe picked up a child’s toy and said: “When you see a little kid’s toy, it really hits home.”

Inhofe was shown where a woman rode out the storm by seeking shelter in a bathroom tub. After the tornado passed, all that remained of her home were two bathroom walls and the tub.



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