Joyce Morrissey sorts through the debris of her nephew Stephen Tirpak's house in Taylorville, Ill., Sunday, Dec. 2, 2018. The National Weather Service says multiple tornadoes touched down in central Illinois, damaging dozens of structures and injuring multiple people. (Ted Schurter/The State Journal-Register via AP) Ted SchurterMBO

Posted: Dec. 3, 2018 10:35 am

PITTSFIELD, Ill. -- Residents and emergency officials across Central Illinois are still assessing damage from a series of weekend storms, including several tornadoes that touched down Saturday in Pike County.

David Greenwood, Pike County's former emergency management coordinator who was sworn in Monday morning as the county's new sheriff, said the sheriff's department received several reports of funnel clouds Saturday.

He said most of the tornado activity was spotted north of Pleasant Hill and and in a northeasterly direction between Pittsfield and Detroit.

Initial reports indicated several structures about a mile north of Valley City, including some residences, were damaged or destroyed -- as was a structure just south of Griggsville along Ill. 107.

Since then, Greenwood said, he has heard of some additional damage south of Detroit, including a large swimming pool that was knocked over.

"I don't know if any other damage has been reported other than that," he said.

Greenwood said the sheriff's deparment and the Pike County Emergency Management Agency had to postpone plans on Sunday to conduct an aerial observation of the storm's path.

"The weather didn't permit us to do that, so we're just waiting for the weather to clear up. Then we're going to do that," he said.

The National Weather Service also was slated to be in the area Sunday to assess the damage and determine the size of the tornado.

The rare December tornadoes caused damage in other parts of Central Illinois as well, including areas near Taylorville and Springfield. The storm ripped roofs off homes, downed power lines and injured at least 20 people.

The severe weather in Illinois was part of a line of thunderstorms that raked areas of the central U.S. late Friday and into Saturday, killing one person in Missouri. The National Weather Service confirmed tornadoes in Illinois, Missouri and Oklahoma.

At least three tornadoes were confirmed in northwest and southwest Arkansas, which largely caused property and structural damage. No injuries or fatalities were reported.

Peak months for tornadoes in much of the Midwest are April and June, according to the weather service. But at least 12 tornadoes were reported in Illinois on Saturday, including one in Taylorville which has been confirmed. If the majority are confirmed, that would be the most tornadoes in Illinois in a December storm since Dec. 18-19, 1957, when there were 21.

The weather service sent crews Sunday to survey the hardest-hit areas in Illinois, which included Taylorville, 25 miles southeast of Springfield.

Photographs and video from Taylorville showed several houses flattened, with residents wading into debris to salvage what they could. Some homes remained standing but with gaping holes in the roofs or with no roofs at all.

The tornado was on the ground for around 10 miles before it thundered through Taylorville, and the weather service was able to warn residents of its arrival 41 minutes before it actually struck, Chris Miller, a meteorologist at the service's Lincoln office, said in a phone interview Sunday. That advance warning gave people critical time to take cover and may have saved lives.

Assistant Fire Chief Andy Goodall, speaking to reporters Saturday night shortly after the storm pounded the city of 11,000, said at least 100 homes had major damage, including his own, Springfield's State Journal-Register reported.

A Taylorville Memorial Hospital spokesman said 21 people, from age 9 to 97, arrived for treatment Saturday. Most were released within hours. Three people remained hospitalized as of Sunday afternoon.

Miller said preliminary estimates are that the Taylorville tornado may have been an EF2, which indicates wind speeds as high as 135 mph. It could take several more days to know for sure.

The weather service said Sunday that a strong tornado that developed from severe thunderstorms Friday night touched down in Van Buren, Ark. It was rated an EF2. About 10 minutes later, a second weaker tornado was confirmed less than 10 miles away near the town of Rudy, Ark.

Damage surveys for the two tornadoes are ongoing but officials said dozens of homes were damaged.

Early Saturday morning a third tornado with estimated peak winds of 107 mph traveled about 8.5 miles through Spring Hill in southwest Arkansas. Its path was intermittent and mostly caused damage to trees and to some structures.

The Associated Press? contributed to this story.