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Joplin Tornado: Some Died While Saving Others

Joplin Tornado

ALAN SCHER ZAGIER   06/ 4/11 02:03 PM ET   AP

JOPLIN, Mo. -- They were regular churchgoers, devoted parents, seniors in their retirement years and children with untold promise.

Some gave their lives to save strangers, thrust by circumstance and human instinct into the role of hero. Others faced a parent's worst fear, losing their lives while also failing to protect their children from death.

Few outside the town of about 50,000 will recognize the names of the dead. But Joplin's close-knit community lost a staggering array of human capital in the May 22 tornado, including seniors who were the town's history and young people who were its future. Some lived their lives ordinarily, only to be defined in their final moments by breathtaking courage.

"I don't know how you put it in context," said Ron Sampson, executive director of Joplin Workshop Inc., where three employees – lifelong friends with Down syndrome – died when their Iowa Street home was destroyed. "Between the physical destruction and the loss of life, it's so overwhelming. Everybody is still in a fog."

Thirteen children died, including several students at Joplin High School, which was flattened. Two pairs of siblings were killed, and five children perished alongside a parent who also died.

Familiar faces at the cell phone store and 15th Street Walmart, three Elks Lodge members who attended weekly Bingo games, and three Harmony Heights Baptist Church worshippers didn't survive the Sunday afternoon twister, the nation's deadliest single tornado in six decades.

Some were praised by name by Barack Obama in a presidential visit one week later, while others died anonymously. Still more continue on in the virtual world, their memories perpetuated in YouTube and Facebook tributes.

Among them was 18-year-old Will Norton, whose story became widely known after it was learned the tornado, carrying 200 mph winds, pulled him out through his SUV's sunroof as he drove home from graduation. His funeral, scheduled for Sunday, figures to dwell not on the way he died but on the unusual way he lived: traveling the world, unlike other Joplin teens.

His family's travel agency allowed Norton to take to the skies. He ultimately would visit 15 countries in Europe and Africa. He became a private pilot like his father and uncle. He was headed to Southern California with plans to study film production at Chapman University and dreams of making movies in Hollywood. He honed his chops on YouTube, gaining thousands of followers as "willdabeast8888," a nod to both his first name and the African antelope he saw abroad.

Story continues below

His father, who was in the passenger seat as the tornado bore down, remains hospitalized with broken ribs, a compressed spine, a rod in his left leg, a compound fracture of his arm and other serious injuries – but plans to attend his son's funeral.

Will "really believed in doing good. He's kind of the face of hope," said his aunt, Tracey Presslor. "But it's not about Will. It's about all the survivors, and all the people who lost their homes or their loved ones."

The storm was especially deadly for the aged. More than a third of those who died were 65 or older, including at least 10 in the Greenbriar nursing home. Neighbors told of hearing screams when the funnel smashed the building and sent bodies airborne.

Some victims have become known for their final moments. Christopher Don Lucas, 27, worked on a Navy submarine until a back injury at sea forced him into civilian life two years ago. A father of two with a pregnant fiancee, the Pizza Hut manager rushed the other employees and at least a dozen customers into the restaurant's walk-in freezer as the half-mile-wide tornado approached.

As the winds whipped through the store, Lucas grabbed a bungee cord to keep the freezer door shut. "He just started pulling with all his might," said his father, Terry Lucas.

Co-worker Daniel Fluharty grabbed Lucas by the waist. Waitress Kayleigh Savannah Teal, 16, held on to her manager's leg. The winds flung open the freezer, throwing the three workers 20 to 30 feet. Fluharty survived; Lucas and Teal did not. "He went out facing the tornado head-on," Terry Lucas said. "He didn't flinch."

Miles "Dean" Wells was also ex-military, a master electrician who worked at Home Depot and cared for a homebound wife with a severe muscular disease. Wells, 59, died while guiding an estimated 40 to 50 customers and employees to the back of the store for safety; a prefab concrete wall collapsed on him. Like Lucas, Wells was singled out by President Obama at a Joplin memorial service one week later.

"In the face of winds that showed no mercy, no regard for human life, that did not discriminate by race or faith or background, it was ordinary people, swiftly tested, who said, `I'm willing to die right now so that someone else might live,'" the president said.

Wells sang in the choir at First Christian Church in Webb City. In recent years, he mastered the art of whistling, recording two CDs with a third loaded on his computer, awaiting his final touches.

"His whistling sounded like a flute," his daughter DeAnna Mancini said. "He's singing in heaven now."

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JOPLIN, Mo. -- They were regular churchgoers, devoted parents, seniors in their retirement years and children with untold promise. Some gave their lives to save strangers, thrust by circumstance and ...
JOPLIN, Mo. -- They were regular churchgoers, devoted parents, seniors in their retirement years and children with untold promise. Some gave their lives to save strangers, thrust by circumstance and ...
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03:12 PM on 6/06/2011
There were heroes in New Orleans, that is true and they got shot at for having the nerve to help them. When they had finished stealing what they wanted and ran out of cocaine,th­en they started crying like babies. They had just as much warning as us in Ms. yet they listened to the mayor and stayed to create a chocolate city. A chocolate city anywhere will never survive without govt. help.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doctorj2u
9 hours ago (9:39 AM)
My mother lived in Pass Christian, MS (one block from the beach) for Katrina and I am a New Orleanian. The story was the same in both places - misery. Those with resources used them. Those without did what they could. Looting happened in both locations. Stop trying to change the story to reflect you own prejudices­. It is ugly.
8 hours ago (10:46 AM)
The story was not the same, There was a total double standard in every media outlet. I live about 40 miles inland from the coast. We were without power or water for three weeks. It took 3 days of cutting trees from the roads to get to the nearest store,whic­h was closed because they had no roof. Meanwhile choppers were traveling night & day back and forth to New Orleans taking supplies and evacuating people who should have already been evacuated. prior to the storm but they would not go. Any body with a half a brain can see what happened here. God bless these people as they try to rebuild.
08:51 AM on 6/06/2011
A powerfully written piece both compelling and heart-brea­king. The author captured the very essence of these non-contem­plative gestures of heroic consequenc­e. This article defines the very notion of the Judeo-Chri­stian traditions of sacrifice to save the life of another. Can there be a higher calling? Such actions have no doubt troubled the hearts of the surviving family members, whose grief must be assuaged by their loved one's enormously unselfish contributi­on to mankind. As is written, No greater love has any man then to lay down his life for a friend." followed closely by the equally wise Talmudic response, "who saves one life, saves the world entire."
06:52 PM on 6/05/2011
Lot different then New Orleans, wonder why.
06:02 PM on 6/05/2011
no help from congress, unless it is funded. sorry about that!
05:58 PM on 6/05/2011
Anybody seen Eric Cantor lately? Is in Joplin helping out?
05:52 PM on 6/05/2011
Heroes come in all shapes, sizes, and color. They are not the Hollywood characters we see on the big screen but the guy or woman we take for granted in our families or among our friends. They do not seek attention and yet when everyone else is running away they are stepping up to make sure others survive because it is the right thing to do even if they die in the effort. We call them heroes but they would never call themselves that. They just wanted to be good neighbors, family members, and helpers.
06:53 PM on 6/05/2011
there were heroes in New Orleans as well, especially the Coast Guard, but that had to be ignored in the lust of the media to hang Bush. He was in NO before BO was in Joplin.
05:47 PM on 6/05/2011
Well HuffPo has become exactly what was predicted.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garylinn
Christian, Family man, VET
06:17 PM on 6/05/2011
What was predicted? What are you talking about?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garylinn
Christian, Family man, VET
05:41 PM on 6/05/2011
God must be really pleased with the actions of these people in the last few minutes of their life. One never knows when a hero will step forward. It sounds like this town has a lot of them. God bless them and God bless America!
03:21 AM on 6/06/2011
So you are saying God created a tornado... let people die... then was pleased that some of them showed some courage before he killed them? You have a pretty awesome God.

The Deist God doesn't cheer for those who do what is expected of them, he doesn't create tornadoes, he just created everything and let it happen as it does. That makes more sense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garylinn
Christian, Family man, VET
01:16 PM on 6/06/2011
I "DO" have a pretty awesome God! God bless you!
05:36 PM on 6/05/2011
I believe that people who put their own lives in real danger to save another human being that they don't even know, are truly HEROES in my eyes !!
05:23 PM on 6/05/2011
Just a question..­..Since life is so fragile and can end at any moment from many , many circunstan­ces it brings up my question..­.....What are people for?
12:28 PM on 6/06/2011
Our purpose in this place of learning we call universe [universit­y],is to bring glory to God our creator That is exactly what occours in the midst of tragedy. Those of us who have been through similar events can understand and see this clearly. A person is never closer to God than in a natural disaster. A little light shines brightest in a dark place! God bess us all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
innerpuppie
The truth is an absolute defense...
05:03 PM on 6/05/2011
Joplin lost some of their 'best of the best' on that day. How terribly sad.
05:59 PM on 6/05/2011
Mr, C**t*R sends his condolence­s.
03:25 PM on 6/05/2011
God be with them.
02:31 PM on 6/05/2011
Be still and know - Our President will not allow the Republican­s in Congress to abandon you in your time of need
03:01 PM on 6/05/2011
Be still and know - Our President would rather be playing golf. It took him a full WEEK to visit Joplin.
04:32 PM on 6/05/2011
Be still and know -- our President sent his FEMA leaders out in force and promised endless resources to put Joplin back together. Be still and know our President DID NOT 'fly over' the stricken community with admonishme­nts of "Heck of a job, Brownie!" Be still and know the Republican­s in Congress floated the idea of withholdin­g care for your community unless other social programs were cut, holding hostage the care you need so desperatel­y....
04:49 PM on 6/05/2011
WHen his entourage left no one could find a TV
02:28 PM on 6/05/2011
"They were regular churchgoer­s, devoted parents, seniors in their retirement years and children with untold promise."

This is the makeup of the voters in the November election.
Good-Bye "Barry"
04:34 PM on 6/05/2011
Not sure where you get your facts, or where you're voting, but children are not allowed to vote, no matter their promise. Kind of makes the remainder of your comment a bit questionab­le...
06:23 AM on 6/06/2011
Nor are the incarcerat­ed or interred allowed to vote, yet they seem to make up a good portion of the progressiv­e base.
02:05 PM on 6/05/2011
Rebuild with confidence­: Reinforced concrete, cmu and structural steel, say no to shaky fakewood houses.
04:54 PM on 6/05/2011
Did you see the hospital? The only safe place in a F5 tornado us undergroun­d. That is not always possible.