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'If we had been in that house, we wouldn't be here': Homemade shelter saves Chilton County family during EF-3 tornado

'If we had been in that house, we wouldn't be here': Homemade shelter saves Chilton County family during EF-3 tornado
13. THIS NOW DESTROYED MOBILE HOME IS WHERE THE MAN鈥橲 FAMILY TELLS ME THEY WERE LAST NIGHT. AS THE STORMS WERE PASSING THROUGH. BUT WHEN THEY LEARNED THAT THE STORM WAS RIGHT OVER THEM, THEY SAY THIS HOME MADE UNDERGROUND STORM SHELTER IS THE ONLY REASON THEY BELIEVE THEY鈥橰E ALIVE. DEBRIS AND CLEANUP CREWS LINING CHILTON COUNTY ROAD 340. SEVERAL MOBILE HOMES HERE NOW TORN TO SHREDS. THIS ONE PICKED UP FROM ITS FOUNDATION BY THE POWERFUL WINDS AND DROPPED FEET AWAY, BELONGS TO RALPH AND REBECCA MIMS. EVERYTHING YOU WORK FOR IS GONE. AND AT ONE TIME, WHO SPENT ALL DAY SUNDAY TRYING TO SALVAGE 15 YEARS OF MEMORIES, NOW NEARLY ENTIRELY RUINED. WE鈥橵E GOT PICTURES. WE鈥橵E GOT A FEW CLOTHES. WE鈥橵E STILL GOT TO GO THROUGH A LOT, HE SEE IT HITTING A LOT OF PEOPLE. YOU JUST DON鈥橳 EXPECT TO HIT YOU. YEAH, BUT IT DID. AND THEY HEARD IT BECAUSE THEY WERE JUST STEPS AWAY FROM THEIR HOME WHEN THE STORM HIT. I SAID, GET YOUR SHOES. LET鈥橲 GO. WE GRABBED THE KIDS AND EVERYBODY CAME OUT HERE. HERE IN THIS STORM SHELTER, DEEP IN THE GROUND. THEY BUILT IT TWO YEARS AGO. AND SATURDAY IT WAS THE SHELTER. ALL 15 MEMBERS OF THEIR FAMILY NEEDED. IF WE鈥橠 HAVE BEEN IN THAT HOUSE, WE WOULDN鈥橳 BE HERE TODAY. WE COULD HEAR THE WIND AND IT WAS JUST PICKING UP. AND IT WAS GETTING REALLY, REALLY STRONG. AND LIGHTNING AND FLOODING, AND IT WAS JUST REALLY STRONG. AND THEY CLOSED THE DOORS AND WE COULD JUST HEAR STUFF HITTING OUTSIDE AND BANGING AROUND. THIS IS WHAT THEY AND MANY OTHERS IN MAPLESVILLE CAME OUT TO THEIR MOBILE HOMES, COMPLETELY DESTROYED. MORE THAN TWO DOZEN CHILTON COUNTY SHERIFF鈥橲 DEPUTIES PATROLLING THE AREA SUNDAY, HELPING IN ANY WAY THEY CAN. A LOT OF THEM SIT FAR OFF THE ROAD, SO WE HAD ONE RESIDENCE THAT WAS PROBABLY A HALF A MILE OFF THE ROAD, SO WE HAD TO CUT TREES ALL THE WAY TO THE HOUSE TO TO BE ABLE TO ASSIST THEM. SO THAT TOOK TIME AND EFFORT TO GET GET TO THEM. MAJOR KEN HARMON WITH THE SHERIFF鈥橲 OFFICE TELLS ME THEY TRIED TO TRACK THE STORM THAT PASSED THROUGH THEIR COUNTY. AS OF THEIR ESTIMATES, IT LEFT THE TRACK OF MORE THAN 50 MILES OF DAMAGE, WITH PEOPLE IN NEED. THE CLEARWATER COWBOY CHURCH OPENED THEIR DOORS TO HELP. EMA WANTED TO COME IN AND SET UP THE COMMAND CENTER HERE, SO THEREFORE WE OPENED UP SOME PEOPLE TO BRING FOOD SUPPLIES IN AS NEEDED. DENNY NICHOLS HAS HELPED CARRY OUT THREE CARLOADS OF FOOD SUNDAY ALONE, AND PLANS ON DOING MORE IN THE COMING DAYS. JUST IT鈥橲 A LITTLE SOMETHING TO HELP THEM GET BY WITH ONLY ONE STORM RELATED INJURY IN THIS COUNTY. MANY, LIKE RALPH AND REBECCA MIMS, ARE COUNTING THEIR BLESSINGS, WHICH INCLUDE THEIR FAMILY AND NEW FRIENDS LIKE DANNY NICHOLS. IT鈥橲 BEEN AMAZING. WE CAN鈥橳 DO IT WITHOUT THEM. I DON鈥橳 KNOW WHERE WE WOULD HAVE EVEN STARTED TODAY WITHOUT ALL THESE PEOPLE. PEOPLE HOLDING EACH OTHER UP WITH HELPING HANDS, HELPING THEIR NEIGHBORS. REPORTING IN CHILT
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'If we had been in that house, we wouldn't be here': Homemade shelter saves Chilton County family during EF-3 tornado
LATEST FORECAST | CONFIRMED DEATHS | CONFIRMED TORNADOES | INTENSE PHOTOS AND VIDEOS | CLOSURES | 米兰体育 13 LIVE DOPPLER RADAR | UPLOAD YOUR WEATHER PHOTOS | TURN ON WEATHER NOTIFICATIONSDebris and clean-up crews lined Chilton County Road 340 Sunday after several homes were torn to shreds during storms the night before. Ralph and Rebecca Mims spent all of Sunday trying to salvage 15 years of memories from their mobile home that was picked up from its foundation and dropped feet away during Saturday's storms. "Everything you work for is gone at one time," Ralph said with tears in his eyes."We've got pictures, we've got a few clothes, we've got a lot to go through," Rebecca said. "You see it hitting a lot of people. You don't expect it to hit you, but it did."The Mims family heard the storm because they were steps away from their mobile home when it hit 鈥� hunkering down in a homemade storm shelter deep in the ground just feet away from their home. They built it two years ago, and on Saturday, it was the shelter all 15 members of their family needed."I said, 'Grab your shoes, let's go," Rebecca said. "I grabbed the kids, and everybody came out here. We could hear the wind, and it was just picking up and it was getting really, really strong and lightening and it was just really strong. They closed the doors and we could just hear stuff hitting outside and banging around.""If we had been in that house, we wouldn't be here today," Ralph said. The scene of their mobile home destroyed is what the Mims family and many others in Maplesville saw when the storms passed. More than two dozen Chilton County deputies patrolled the area Sunday, helping in any way they can. "A lot of them sit far off the road, so we had one residence that was about a half of a mile off the road," Chilton County Sheriff's Office Maj. Ken Harmon said. "We had to cut trees all the way to the house to be able to assist them, so it took time and effort to get to them."Harmon said county officials tried to track the storm that passed through, and as of their estimates, it left a track of more than 15 miles of damage. With people in need, the Clear Water Cowboy Church stepped in to help. "EMA wanted to come in and send the command center here so we opened up so people can bring food, supplies in as needed," Danie Nichols said. Nichols helped carry out three car loads of food from the church Sunday alone, and planned on doing more in the days to come. "Just a little something to help them get by," Nichols said. With only one storm-related injury in the county, many, like Ralph and Rebecca Mims, are counting their blessings, which include their family and new friends like Nicholas."It's been amazing," Rebecca said. "We can't do it without them. I don't know where we've even started today without all these people."

LATEST FORECAST | CONFIRMED DEATHS | CONFIRMED TORNADOES | INTENSE PHOTOS AND VIDEOS | CLOSURES | 米兰体育 13 LIVE DOPPLER RADAR | UPLOAD YOUR WEATHER PHOTOS | TURN ON WEATHER NOTIFICATIONS

Debris and clean-up crews lined Chilton County Road 340 Sunday after several homes were torn to shreds during storms the night before.

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Ralph and Rebecca Mims spent all of Sunday trying to salvage 15 years of memories from their mobile home that was picked up from its foundation and dropped feet away during Saturday's storms.

"Everything you work for is gone at one time," Ralph said with tears in his eyes.

"We've got pictures, we've got a few clothes, we've got a lot to go through," Rebecca said. "You see it hitting a lot of people. You don't expect it to hit you, but it did."

The Mims family heard the storm because they were steps away from their mobile home when it hit 鈥� hunkering down in a homemade storm shelter deep in the ground just feet away from their home.

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They built it two years ago, and on Saturday, it was the shelter all 15 members of their family needed.

"I said, 'Grab your shoes, let's go," Rebecca said. "I grabbed the kids, and everybody came out here. We could hear the wind, and it was just picking up and it was getting really, really strong and lightening and it was just really strong. They closed the doors and we could just hear stuff hitting outside and banging around."

"If we had been in that house, we wouldn't be here today," Ralph said.

The scene of their mobile home destroyed is what the Mims family and many others in Maplesville saw when the storms passed.

More than two dozen Chilton County deputies patrolled the area Sunday, helping in any way they can.

"A lot of them [mobile homes] sit far off the road, so we had one residence that was about a half of a mile off the road," Chilton County Sheriff's Office Maj. Ken Harmon said. "We had to cut trees all the way to the house to be able to assist them, so it took time and effort to get to them."

Harmon said county officials tried to track the storm that passed through, and as of their estimates, it left a track of more than 15 miles of damage.

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With people in need, the Clear Water Cowboy Church stepped in to help.

"EMA wanted to come in and send the command center here so we opened up so people can bring food, supplies in as needed," Danie Nichols said.

Nichols helped carry out three car loads of food from the church Sunday alone, and planned on doing more in the days to come.

"Just a little something to help them get by," Nichols said.

With only one storm-related injury in the county, many, like Ralph and Rebecca Mims, are counting their blessings, which include their family and new friends like Nicholas.

"It's been amazing," Rebecca said. "We can't do it without them. I don't know where we've even started today without all these people."