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In Kentucky, 11 people have died as a result of the weekend storm, including a mother and her 7-year-old child who were found in a submerged vehicle Saturday night in Bonnieville, Hart County ...
Storm damage near the University of Kentucky camps in Lexington, Ky, Tuesday, April 2, 2023. A strong thunderstorm hit Central Kentucky on Tuesday, April 2, leaving damage across Lexington and ...
Carter County is the only county in Kentucky reporting over 1,000 outages. Fayette County has 734. LG&E & KU’s power outage map shows 19 outages impacting 802 customers in their coverage area.
Hurricane Katrina's winds and storm surge reached the Mississippi coastline on the morning of August 29, 2005, [2] [3] beginning a two-day path of destruction through central Mississippi; by 10 a.m. CDT on August 29, 2005, the eye of Katrina began traveling up the entire state, only slowing from hurricane-force winds at Meridian near 7 p.m. and ...
During the late evening of Friday, December 10, 2021, a large and extremely violent, long-tracked, and devastating EF4 tornado, sometimes referred to as the Western Kentucky tornado, [3] Mayfield tornado, [4] or The Beast, [5] moved across Western Kentucky, United States, producing severe-to-catastrophic damage in numerous towns, including Mayfield, Princeton, Dawson Springs, and Bremen. [2]
The storm surge also devastated the coasts of Mississippi and Alabama, making Katrina one of the most destructive hurricanes, the costliest natural disaster in the history of the United States (tied with Hurricane Harvey in 2017), [43] and the deadliest hurricane since the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane. The total damage from Katrina is estimated at ...
Storm damage reported in Western Kentucky. 9 a.m. — At 7 a.m. there was a dangerous line of severe storms spotted in Western Kentucky moving eastward. There was a report of a tree that fell and ...
Milvirtha Knight Hendricks (February 27, 1920 - July 20, 2009 [1]) was an African American woman who, on September 1, 2005, was photographed by Eric Gay of the Associated Press outside the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center huddled in one of several American flag blankets given to her and to several other disaster victims, two days after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans. [2]