

In Georgia, crews were out as soon as the skies cleared Monday evening and worked to restore power, after uprooted trees and powerful winds, hail and rain downed power lines, according to utility company Georgia Power.Īnd parts of the country that were hammered with severe weather Monday may still not be out of the woods, as new threats could develop Tuesday.Ī slight risk of severe thunderstorms – a Level 2 of 5 – exists Tuesday afternoon for parts of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida, as well as parts of Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas, the Storm Prediction Center says. In neighboring Loudon County, the school district announced one high school would be closed Tuesday due to storm damage it sustained.Īnd as the sun went down, hundreds of thousands of Americans were without power, with the majority of outages recorded Monday night in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Maryland, according to. By Monday night, more than 400 reports of strong winds had been made across the region.įootage from CNN affiliate WVLT showed homes in Knoxville, Tennessee, with their roofs torn to shreds and debris strewn about on neighborhood lawns.

The storm system brought heavy rain, thunder and violent winds of up to 70 mph throughout parts of the coast from New York to Mississippi – and caused major travel disruptions in the skies. The teen had just arrived at his grandparents’ home and got out of his car when the tree fell, the office said. In Anderson County, South Carolina, Evan Christopher Kinley, 15, was killed when a falling tree struck him during a severe storm, according to the county coroner’s office. In the northwestern Alabama city of Florence, a 28-year-old man died after lightning struck him in a parking lot Monday, police said – a rarity in the US as only about 20 people on average are killed by lightning strikes annually, according to the National Weather Service. A massive storm system unleashed vicious winds and thunderstorms across the East Coast on Monday, killing at least two people and knocking out power to more than 1 million utility customers from Pennsylvania down to Georgia.
