- NC's cost for Hurricane Helene damage is nearly $60 billion, state says
- State to develop drone program to better respond to disasters like Helene, Florence
- South Carolina residents face deadline to get storm debris out to the curb after Hurricane Helene
- SCDOT to pick up Hurricane Helene debris for a final day in South Carolina
- Hurricane Helene destroyed this county's only hospital. Now, an urgent care facility is caring for the community.
Thunderstorms storms bring tornadoes, hail to parts of Texas
FORT BEND, Texas — The storms left widespread damage in other parts of Texas Saturday.
In Alto, north of Lufkin, at least 25 people were injured at Caddo Mounds, where a group was holding a picnic. The patients were taken to the hospital via a school bus.
But homes and neighborhoods suffered significant damage.
“I mean, it demolished this house, the next house, the next house. There’s about four houses down there, and everyone of them demolished, I mean, massacred,” one Alto neighbor said.
But the storms weren’t just destructive, they were also deadly.
In Angelina County, two kids — ages 3 and 8 — were killed after a tree fell on their car.
And in Louisiana, the storm system dumped heavy rain, causing flash flooding that left cars and trucks struggling to drive through submerged roads and highways.
Back here in Houston, the storms didn’t bring tornadoes or flooding, but poured down large amounts of hail.
It hit all parts of Houston.
Near Mission Bend, neighbors said the temperature dropped 20 degrees when the storm came, and then the hail. It started small, but got much bigger.
“It went from probably a dime size and then got bigger to a quarter size, and then almost a golf size,” Ron Fahrner said.
RELATED COVERAGE:
‘It looks like a bomb’ | EF-3 tornado hits Franklin, Texas, causes widespread damage
Woman safe after house blown off its foundation in Alto
Two children killed in east Texas storms Saturday
► Make it easy to keep up-to-date. Download the KHOU News app now.
Have a news tip? Email us or message us on our Facebook page or Twitter feed.