Tornado damage early Wednesday morning in Harveyville, Kansas, after an apparent tornado passed through the town Tuesday night. |
The storm left another 13 people at the park injured and knocked out power to all of Buffalo, Eagan said. Buffalo is about 35 miles north of Springfield. An apparent tornado left at least a dozen more people injured further south in Branson, trapping some people in their homes, National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Griffin said.
Searchers were going from house to house early Wednesday, Taney County Sheriff Jimmie Russell said. The National Weather Service typically sends teams in the hours and days following a storm of this size to determine if a tornado struck. Griffin said the storm left a trail of destruction in downtown Branson, scattering the area with debris and uprooted road signs, and heavily damaging buildings in the city's famous theater district.
Branson is one of the Midwest's major tourist attractions, drawing millions each year to its theaters and amusement parks. Entertainers such as Andy Williams, comedian Yakov Smirnoff and Jim Stafford have settled in the city. In neighboring Kansas, Gov. Sam Brownback declared a state of emergency late Tuesday after an apparent tornado struck Harveyville.
The declaration covered Wabaunsee County, southwest of Topeka. A news release from the governor's office said one person was critically injured, several homes and a church were damaged, and trees and power lines were down. Earlier, the National Weather Service reported brief tornado touchdowns southwest of Hutchinson, Kan.
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