AP

Kentucky remembers tornado victims as rebuilding continues

Dec 10, 2022, 12:29 PM

The hearse carrying the casket of corrections officer Robert Daniel drives through Mayfield towards...

The hearse carrying the casket of corrections officer Robert Daniel drives through Mayfield towards Maplewood Cemetery on December 18, 2021 in Mayfield, Kentucky. Officer Daniel was killed on December 10 while directing workers and inmates, under his care, to safety during last week's tornado devastation at the candle factory in Mayfield, Kentucky. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

(Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Chris Bullock has a lot to be grateful for as she decorates her new home for Christmas, after spending much of the past year in a camper with her family.

One year ago Saturday, a massive tornado obliterated wide swaths of her Kentucky hometown of Dawson Springs, leaving her homeless after a terrifying night of death and destruction.

Things look much different now.

In August, Bullock and her family moved into their new home, built free of charge by the disaster relief group God’s Pit Crew. It sits on the same site where their home of 26 years was wiped out.

“God’s sent blessings to us,” Bullock said in a phone interview Friday. “Sometimes we feel there’s a little guilt, if you will. Why were we spared?”

The holiday season tragedy killed 81 people across Kentucky and turned buildings into mounds of rubble as damage reached into hundreds of millions of dollars. Elsewhere in the state, Mayfield took a direct hit from the swarm of December tornadoes, which left a wide trail of destroyed buildings and shredded trees. In Bowling Green, a tornado wiped out an entire subdivision.

 

aerial view of a neighborhood wiped out by the tornado

In this aerial view, homes and surrounding area are heavily damaged after they were hit by a tornado three days prior, on December 13, 2021 near Calvert City, Kentucky. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

It was part of a massive tornado outbreak across the Midwest and the South.

In Dawson Springs and other Kentucky towns in the path of the storms, homes and businesses have been springing up steadily in recent months. Government assistance, private donations and claims payouts by insurers have poured into the stricken western Kentucky region.

“It’s more than encouraging,” said Jenny Beshear Sewell, the mayor-elect of Dawson Springs and a cousin of Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear. “In a storybook, it is like the turn to the next chapter. That’s how it feels. That’s what it looks like.”

On Saturday, the governor will lead commemorative events recalling the horrifying opening chapters of the tragedy. The gatherings in Dawson Springs, Mayfield and Marshall County will remember those who died and pay tribute to the rescue workers who pulled people from the wreckage — as well as the volunteers who have pitched in for the massive rebuild.

“Nothing I’ve ever seen had prepared me for what I saw in first light that day,” Beshear said leading up to the anniversary. “As we continue to mourn those we lost, my faith tells me that while we may struggle with the whys — why does it hit us, why do human beings suffer — we see God’s presence in the response.”

Beshear’s family has deep connections to Dawson Springs. The Democratic governor’s father, former two-term Gov. Steve Beshear, grew up in the tightknit western Kentucky community.

The devastation sparked an outpouring of love and help that started almost as soon as daylight revealed the scope of the damage. Beshear, who led the state’s response, said the effort should restore “everyone’s faith in humanity.”

A full year later, the help keeps coming.

But plenty of storm victims continue to struggle, including some of Bullock’s neighbors who lost homes and loved ones. Others are not nearly as far along in rebuilding. Still, progress is steady, and Bullock said it “warms your heart” to see her neighborhood coming back together.

“For the most part, the same people are in the same spot where they belong, in our opinion,” she said. “We are where we belong.”

Bullock remembers in detail the harrowing chain of events a year ago.

She rushed to the basement with her husband Barry, 17-year-old son Stevie and miniature poodle Dewey moments before the storm hit.

“They say it was 33 seconds,” she said. “It felt like 33 minutes.”

Bullock was trapped under a crumbled brick wall in the basement with her son and dog. Her husband pulled them from the rubble with minor injuries. Amid the chaos and destruction, it took relatives about 10 hours to find them. They moved into a camper near the site of their home for six months, waiting for their new house to go up and spending the rest of the time with relatives.

Bullock said she wasn’t sure if she would attend the commemorative event in town.

“I feel like I’ve coped with everything very well, but the closer it gets to tomorrow (Saturday), when it crosses my mind, it kind of takes my breath away a little,” she said.

Bullock admitted Christmas brings a mix of feelings amid so much ongoing struggle — “Why are we getting to be in our house for Christmas?” while others aren’t — but said she and her husband have always gone all out for the holidays. She said leaning in to do some of the things they enjoy feels a little like taking a stand.

So her husband went “overboard” stringing Christmas lights on their new home, she said, and she bought plenty of new decorations. But it will take time before the display is completely revived.

“I can’t make it look like that yet,” she said. “It’s going to have to wait another year.”

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Kentucky remembers tornado victims as rebuilding continues