8 Dead, Dozens Injured As Severe Weather Outbreak, Tornadoes Wreck Towns In Midwest, Plains

8 Dead, Dozens Injured As Severe Weather Outbreak, Tornadoes Wreck Towns In Midwest, Plains

To read our minute-by-minute coverage as the severe storms spawned damaging tornadoes last night,click here.

The Weather Channel

Towns across the Midwest and Plains are picking up the pieces after a severe weather outbreak spawned numerous damaging tornadoes that killed at least eight people and injured dozens more.

Deaths have been reported in these towns:

-Union City, Michigan: Three dead, 12 injured

-Edwardsburg, Michigan: One dead, several injured

-Okmulgee County, Oklahoma: Two deaths

-Major County, Oklahoma: Two deaths (Thursday night's severe weather)

The storms are ongoing, and are expected to bring damaging winds, large hail and a few tornadoes today to parts of the South and Midwest.Read more hereabout the ongoing threat.

(MORE:Traveling This Weekend? Check These Maps First)

Some of the most severe damage from this outbreak occurred Friday evening in the town of Union City, Michigan, located just west of Interstate 69 in the southern part of the state. Homes along the St. Joseph River were destroyed in the town of about 1,700, left unrecognizable by the killer tornado.

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Lisa Piper stood on her back deck and videoed a terrifying scene that played out on the other side of frozen Union Lake as a funnel cloud formed and then dropped toward the ground. Trees were torn from their roots and debris flew into the air.

"It's lifting houses!" she said. As the devastation continued, she exclaimed: "Oh my heart is pounding. Oh, I hope they're OK."

Part of the First Congregational United Church of Christ in Union City was damaged, although its nearly 150-year-old grand piano was spared, it said in a post on Facebook.

(MORE:Track The Ongoing Severe Weather Threat With These Maps)

Michigan gets an average of 15 tornadoes a year, which is much less than the 155 for Texas and 96 for Kansas, according to David Roth, a meteorologist at the weather service's Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer activated the state's Emergency Operations Center Friday "to coordinate an all-hands-on-deck response to severe weather," she said in a statement.

In Oklahoma, a tornado cut around a 4-mile path of damage in Okmulgee County, some 30 miles south of Tulsa, although more details wouldn't be clear until daybreak, said Jeff Moore, the county's emergency manager.

Some people were injured, although Moore couldn't provide an exact number or their conditions, and large trees were toppled. Power was out for more than 1,600 people, according topoweroutage.us.

"We're just getting everywhere as fast as we can, clearing roads as fast we can," Moore said.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

 

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