Residents assess what's left after deadly tornado
FAIRDALE, Ill. -- Northern Illinois residents whose rural hamlet was nearly leveled by a deadly twister may get to return to their homes Saturday to assess the damage from the storm that killed two women who shared a friendship, favors and the same neighborhood.
The National Weather Service said the EF4 tornado that struck Fairdale packed 200 mph winds and was a half-mile wide. It leveled Emily Dickow's home, reporter Suzanne Le Mignot of CBS Chicago station WBBM-TV reports.
Dickow's fiance fought, using a shovel, to reach the only thing she had left - her clean underwear, inside a dryer.
They were the only clean clothes that she owns.
"Dried it right before I left for work yesterday," Dickow told Le Mignot. "It's just underwear, but when it's all you have."
What remains of her home is strewn about her basement. The barrel of her washing machine is 40 feet from where it used to be, inside her garage.
"It's just a house," she said. "We'll rebuild. It's just, you don't really expect it. Always felt really bad for people that had this happen to them, just never thought it'd happen to me, so I'm just happy that everyone's safe in our neighborhood."
Jacklyn Klosa, 69, was found Friday morning in the rubble of her home, not far from where Geraldine Schultz, 67, died Thursday night when the tornado bore down on their neighborhood in Fairdale, a community of about 150 people. The storm that came through the area 80 miles west of Chicago ripped buildings from their foundations.
Schultz, known as "Geri," hosted annual Christmas parties and made a point of driving Klosa to clinics for medical treatment. Klosa, known as "Jackie," was described by friends as a friendly and quick-witted woman who spoke her mind.
Klosa "was just one of the most friendly people in the world, a wonderful mother and a wonderful friend," said Les Bellah, mayor of neighboring Kirkland, recalling the "big ol' hug" he got from her recently but also how she'd "let you know" if she was upset with you. "You never had to wonder what she was thinking."
Fairdale has no village government, no school, no cable TV and no major businesses. Some residents kept horses in town; one family found one of its horses dead amid the debris Friday afternoon.
All Fairdale homes were evacuated, in part, because of a lack of electricity. But trees, power lines and debris lay strewn on the ground, posing a safety hazard. Roofs from buildings were missing. Metal siding from barns were wrapped around trees.
Residents gathered Friday at a roadblock a mile from town, eager to check the damage to their homes. Police said it was too dangerous, and authorities said residents would likely be able to return by Saturday.
Al Zammuto, a 60-year-old machinist, was among those trying to get back in. He recalled the evening before when he and other residents received cellphone alerts at 6:45 p.m. - the town doesn't have sirens - but he dismissed it, as previous warnings hadn't amounted to anything.
Then his windows exploded.
Joe Benedetto, 55, who lives just outside Fairdale, saw the tornado roll into the community and likened the sound to "a giant vacuum cleaner." While his house was spared major damage, powerful winds launched a single branch, like a spear, though his kitchen wall.
Zammuto, in Fairdale itself, took cover as the severe weather struck. Bricks were torn off the side of his home. Minutes later he stepped outside, and he said the town "looked like a landfill" and the sounds were haunting.
"People were screaming and yelling," he said. "People were in total shock."