Arkansas couple died trying to shield daughter from twister

Ronnie Bevill sifts through the wreckage Monday looking for anything salvageable from his aunt's home. A section of the D&J Mobile Home Park in Nashville, Arkansas was destroyed after a EF2 tornado touched down late Sunday night.
Ronnie Bevill sifts through the wreckage Monday looking for anything salvageable from his aunt's home. A section of the D&J Mobile Home Park in Nashville, Arkansas was destroyed after a EF2 tornado touched down late Sunday night.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Melissa and Michael Mooneyhan met as teenagers who attended different high schools. The two quickly fell in love and were married in 2004, even before they graduated.

More than a decade later, the pair died shielding their young daughter from a tornado as the twister chewed up the family's mobile home in Nashville, Arkansas.

The trailer "was just picked up and flipped over," said Howard County Coroner John Gray, who said the home looked "like it had exploded." He said it was "a miracle that little girl survived."

"That poor little girl is never going to know them," he added. "But she's young enough that she'll never remember what happened."

The Mooneyhans were among five people killed Sunday after a line of powerful tornadoes battered several small communities in Texas and Arkansas. Three people died in Texas. Scores of others were hurt, some critically.

The girl, about 18 months old, was taken to the hospital and later released to relatives.

When search-and-rescue crews lifted a piece of trailer debris, they found the child squatting between her parents' bodies, awake and teary.

"I don't think she had nearly a scratch on her," said Howard County Emergency Management Coordinator Sonny Raulerson. "There wasn't enough room for her to even stand up. But she didn't try to crawl out. I don't think she wanted to leave her mama."

Polly McCammack, who also lives in Nashville, is Melissa's third cousin. A week ago, she said, the close-knit family lost their grandmother who "practically raised" Melissa and her siblings.

"The family has been hit hard. They're strong, but it's almost like to the point you're afraid to breathe," McCammack said.

Michael Mooneyhan worked in the deli department of the local Walmart. Melissa was a stay-at-home mom doting on their daughter.

"That baby was definitely their life. They considered her their greatest blessing. You couldn't find two parents who loved a child more," McCammack said. "She's going to grow up knowing family and knowing love."

Family members went to the site of the destroyed home the next day looking for mementos, toys and anything else they could salvage for the child, McCammack said.

The National Weather Service confirmed a tornado with a preliminary EF2 rating and winds estimated at 125 mph touched down in Nashville, a city of 4,500 people about 125 miles southwest of Little Rock.

During Sunday's first tornado warning, the county's tornado sirens sounded for so long that the battery was drained, Raulerson said. When a second warning was issued for about 16 miles south of Nashville, the sirens could not be activated.

In neighboring Texas, a tornado pummeled the small city of Van on Sunday night, damaging or destroying 50 to 100 homes and killing two people, according to Chuck Allen, fire marshal and emergency management coordinator for Van Zandt County.

For much of the next day, eight people were unaccounted for in Van, population 2,600, about 70 miles southeast of Dallas.

By late Monday, everyone on the missing list had been accounted for, said Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Jean Dark. But cadaver dogs were checking the area just to be sure.

Officials confirmed the tornado was an EF3, with winds from 135 mph to 140 mph, Allen said.

Rescuers went door to door amid the widespread damage, which included trees uprooted and numerous homes and buildings flattened or ripped apart.

At least 42 people were injured, according to two East Texas hospitals. Four patients were in critical condition.

In some cases, the fronts of homes were sheared off, revealing living room furniture tossed in a jumble. Houses were spray painted with an X to indicate they had been searched by emergency workers.

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