Tornado causes damage in Montgomery County

ByCourtney Fischer KTRK logo
Sunday, December 13, 2015
UPDATE: Montgomery Co. tornado damage
Residents cleaning up debris after tornado, Courtney Fischer reports.

WILLIS, TX (KTRK) -- Clean up continues in Montgomery County after a tornado touched down Saturday night. Several buildings were damaged, power lines downed, and trees uprooted, but perhaps the area worst hit was a mobile home and RV park off Highway 75 in Willis.

Some of the first pictures after the tornado passed through showed power lines and trees wrapped together like twine and twigs along State Highway 75.

A tornado touched down in Willis and left behind some damage
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Ted Martin inspects his RV as friends chainsaw tree limbs poking through the windows. The home is a total loss.

"If it would've went 100 yards that way it would've destroyed a lot of trailers," Martin says, pointing through his neighborhood.

Pieces of siding and tufts of insulation litter the park.

"I'm just glad nobody was hurt," says Mark Meeker, who owns the property the homes sit on.

Meeker surveys the damage after sunrise Sunday. He's not sure how much the clean-up will cost.

Martin wasn't home when the storm hit. But his wiener dog, Fido, was inside the RV.

"How he lived through it I don't know," Martin said. "There was this pregnant lady who had him in her arms she said she saw him looking out the window."

About 100 yards from Martin's RV sits the Fish Pond Restaurant, where many people in the area hunkered down to wait out the storm.

"We had no electricity, we had a lot of people still in here and all my help was in here taking care of them," said Ronnie Wonzer, the restaurant owner.

The twister was also a story of a twist of fate for Forrest Harvey. Something told him to go to dinner with some friends tonight.

Tornado damage in Willis

"We got up here to Calvary Road and we could see the tornado forming," says Harvey. As he ate dinner the storm tossed around mobile homes and RV's in his neighborhood. Harvey said, "I think the Lord was looking out for me. Otherwise I would have been in there."

A business in Montgomery County suffered damage from a possible tornado

Sheriff's deputies shut down roads in the perimeter, insulation hung from trees and metal was scattered at this roofing business.

Montgomery County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Lt. Brady Fitzgerald said, "Our biggest challenge right now there's several power lines down in the roadways, several roads closed, we have the power company out there right now working on those."

As neighbor share storm stories and some figure out where they will spend the night, there is a shared sentiment here around Shepherd Hill Road.

"Nobody injured, thankfully," Harvey added.