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The Rev. Michael Curry, right, is consoled Thursday by deacon Dean Charles Allen at the ruins of Hickory Grove Missionary Baptist Church in Sparta, Ga. Johnny Frank Baker — a member of the congregation who lived across from the church, which was founded in 1865 — was killed when his mobile home was leveled.
The Rev. Michael Curry, right, is consoled Thursday by deacon Dean Charles Allen at the ruins of Hickory Grove Missionary Baptist Church in Sparta, Ga. Johnny Frank Baker — a member of the congregation who lived across from the church, which was founded in 1865 — was killed when his mobile home was leveled.
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ATLANTA — One person was killed and at least 16 were injured when fierce thunderstorms swept through Georgia and Alabama, bringing tornadoes, hail and lightning, and downing trees and power lines, authorities said Thursday.

At least three tornadoes touched down in central Georgia when the storms swept through overnight, according to the National Weather Service.

The storms gutted homes and destroyed a nightclub and damaged schools.

“It looks like a B-52 bomber went over,” Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills said. “The buildings are completely disintegrated.”

In Sparta, Ga., Johnny Frank Baker was killed when his home was destroyed by the storm, county coroner Alexander Ingram said.

Most of the 143-year-old Hickory Grove Missionary Baptist Church, which is across the street from Baker’s home, was leveled, and nearby graves were uprooted by toppled trees.

Kent McMullen, a meteorologist with the weather service in Peachtree City, said one confirmed tornado cut a 7-mile swath through rural Jasper County with winds of up to 100 mph. At least 10 people were injured and as many as 100 structures were damaged, emergency managers said.

Two other twisters touched down south of Macon, Ga.

The storms also damaged at least two schools in Fayette County south of Atlanta.

Across Georgia, roughly 13,400 homes and businesses lost power during the height of the storm. Much of it was restored by Thursday morning.

In Alabama, an apparent tornado uprooted trees in Geneva near the Florida line. No injuries were reported.

The storms might just be a preview of the spring tornado season.

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