Assistance: Two women helped clean up a home in Jackson, Tenn., hit by the tornado.
Assistance: Two women helped clean up a home in Jackson, Tenn., hit by the tornado.
Amanda Herron/the jackson sun/ap
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  • Assistance: Two women helped clean up a home in Jackson, Tenn., hit by the tornado.
  • Recovery: Courtney Wade and her father reconnected after the college dorm she was in collapsed in Jackson, Tenn.
  • On Wednesday, Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredersen (r.), surveyed the damage in Macon County, where at least 13 people perished.
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In tornadoes' wake, neighbors came through

After deadly twisters tore through the South, help came quickly for rural Macon County, Tenn. residents.

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Reporter Patrik Jonsson talks with CSMonitor.com's Pat Murphy about the tornado destruction he's witnessed in Macon County, Tennessee.

As the eerie orange glow of a massive pipeline fire lit up the storm-torn skies, James Krueger stumbled into a wasteland.

Flashlights pierced the night, people yelled for help, dogs yapped, and four-wheel-drive utility vehicles appeared on the hillside. Pierced and battered, but very much alive, Mr. Krueger was quickly picked up by a neighbor looking for survivors and taken to the hospital.

"I yelled for help and it came," he says.

The massive tornado that hit rural Macon County, Tenn., at 10:26 p.m. Tuesday night claimed at least 13 lives, injured 68, and destroyed 200 homes and four churches. But the massive twister reminded Krueger and hundreds of others how quickly help can come in the darkest hour – and sometimes in unlikely forms.

As officials wrapped up search-and-rescue missions – a family of five was found at 2 a.m. Thursday, 28 hours after the storm – stories of heroism and perseverance began percolating through the town of Lafayette (pop. 4,238), a part of which the mile-wide tornado hit on its 15-mile journey across the Cumberland plateau.

There were the men who jumped into their four-wheel-drive vehicles to carry injured adults and crying children to main roads. There were teams of men with chain saws clearing roads and clambering through debris. And there were the 300 or so emergency personnel, many of them hit by the storm themselves, who responded to the vast disaster scene, oftentimes within 20 minutes.

"They were there so fast," says Steve Gutierrez, a local builder. "A lot of these people live right here in town, and the response was immense."

Concern drove many rescued residents out of shelters in search of loved ones. Creecie Morgan set out on foot to look for her aunt in a hard-hit area of the county seven miles away. "Finally, Pastor Dan came by and said, 'Get in the car. You're not walking all that way,' " she recalls.

The tornado was the most destructive to hit Tennessee in 33 years, with most of the damage coming here in Macon County, a hilly stretch on the Kentucky border, dotted with red barns, brick homes, and trailer parks. President Bush was expected to visit on Thursday. In all, the system of storms claimed 55 lives and destroyed property across Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Alabama.

"People were running around, trying to find neighbors, cutting trees, and digging in rubble," says Freddie Fuqua, a senior Lafayette firefighter.

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