CA, US & World
Confirmed Tornado Leaves Path of Destruction Across Kent, Indiana; Residents Rally to Recover Sentimental Memories
KENT, Indiana — Residents along West State Road 256 are beginning the arduous task of clearing debris and assessing structural damage after a confirmed tornado ripped through this corner of Jefferson County, Indiana. The powerful storm left a visible scar across the community, leaving house after house damaged, power lines severely twisted and sagging, and mature trees that stood for decades snapped cleanly in half or completely uprooted.
The path of destruction took a direct hit on the property of local resident Donna Duke. Three massive trees were toppled on her lot during the height of the storm, with one crashing squarely into her home. Duke, who chose to keep her face off-camera as she grieved the catastrophic damage to her property, had been working tirelessly alongside nearby family members to salvage what remained of the structure. Despite the devastating loss, Duke expressed a profound sense of gratitude that the physical danger was contained.
"I'd rather it hit me than my children, for sure," Duke reflected.
Moments before the tornado struck, Duke managed to seek shelter in her basement, emerging minutes later to find the upper level of her home heavily compromised. Fallen branches and structural debris completely blocked the entrance to several upstairs rooms. Crucially, those isolated rooms safeguarded the irreplaceable personal belongings of two family members whom Duke lost in 2021.
Recognizing the clock was ticking against potential exposure to the elements, Duke's daughter, Debbie Hardy, rushed directly from her workplace to the scene. Hardy scaled the fallen tree limbs to breach the upper floor windows, successfully entering the damaged rooms to retrieve the family's sentimental treasures.
"I got up there, we were able to rescue the guitars that were my stepdad's and some of my sister's banners from sports, and we had a photo album of the two of them that we were able to get as well," Hardy said. "Houses can be rebuilt. Some of the memories that I have in that house can't be. New memories can be made because we're here to make them."
While the recovery process for Jefferson County is expected to stretch across coming days and weeks, Duke remains resolute. Leaning heavily on her tight-knit family support system, she expressed hope that her neighbors up and down West State Road 256 can find similar strength as the community collectively begins to rebuild.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 20, 2026


