Upcoming Events View All
20
Vocation Day: Open Wide Your Heart

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 7:30 AM - 4:00 PM

20
Ave Maria Workshop

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM

20
Bonus Day at St. Mark Book Fair

Saturday, 04/20/2024 at 9:00 AM

28
KC Ladies Auxiliary Council 7198 BUNCO BASH

Sunday, 04/28/2024 at 1:00 PM

28
Organ concert with David Sinden

Sunday, 04/28/2024 at 3:00 PM

4
La Festa

Saturday, 05/04/2024 at 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM

5
May procession

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 1:00 PM

5
International Bereaved Mothers' Gathering

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

8
Made for More Speaker Series

Wednesday, 05/08/2024 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Bishop J. Mark Spalding of Nashville, Tenn., embraced Henry Kersten outside his home in Waverly, Tennessee, Aug. 24. Kersten’s wife, Leslie, was killed by the Aug. 21 flood. Also pictured is Joanne Dashiell, Kersten’s daughter.
Bishop J. Mark Spalding of Nashville, Tenn., embraced Henry Kersten outside his home in Waverly, Tennessee, Aug. 24. Kersten’s wife, Leslie, was killed by the Aug. 21 flood. Also pictured is Joanne Dashiell, Kersten’s daughter.
Photo Credit: Katie Peterson | Tennessee Register

After historic floods, amount of parish, community support is ‘phenomenal’

WAVERLY, Tenn. — Henry Kersten was pacing back and forth inside his family’s home in Waverly Aug. 21 when he saw the backyard shed being carried off by the flood waters. His wife, Leslie, was trapped inside.

“It was amazingly fast,” Kersten said. “She was trying to save some things (in the shed). We never knew the extent that was going to come because we were going by the last flood that we had two years ago.”

“It started to seep into the shed and then it came so fast that she didn’t feel safe coming out,” he recalled in an interview with the Tennessee Register, newspaper of the Nashville Diocese. “She called me on the phone, told me that she loved me and our children.”

Leslie Kersten, who with her family was a parishioner at St. Patrick Church in McEwen, Tennessee, was one of at least 19 confirmed deaths from the flooding that washed through Humphreys County Aug. 21, after up to 18 inches of rain fell in the area in less than 24 hours, breaking the Tennessee record for one-day rainfall.

In the darkness of tragedy, Kersten still finds the light of God’s grace.

“God sends His toughest challenges for His strongest soldiers,” Kersten told Nashville Bishop J. Mark Spalding, who visited victims of the Waverly flood Aug. 24.

As Bishop Spalding visited flood victims at relief shelters and their destroyed homes, he brought with him a message: “You’re not alone.”

“In times of profound tragedy, presence is the most important thing,” Bishop Spalding said. “No matter what crisis we face in life, just knowing another is there with you and for you, especially in our context of faith, to know that God is with us and for us as well is what people need to know.”

On Aug. 20, downpours of rain reaching more than 18 inches hit Humphrey County, about 60 miles west of Nashville. By 8:30 a.m. the next day, the rapidly rising flood waters were crashing through Waverly, wreaking havoc on homes and businesses alike.

Hundreds of homes were affected from having minor damage to being destroyed.

“It just came in as an influx,” said Grey Collier, public information officer for the Humphreys County Emergency Management Agency. “Within just 10 to 30 minutes, people went from dry floors to having to climb in their attics.”

Barbara Hooper, flood relief coordinator for the Society of St. Vincent de Paul at St. Patrick Church and conference vice president, said this was the worst flood the community has ever experienced.

“This is like a tsunami in a foreign city, and we’re in a little town in Tennessee,” Hooper said. “Now, we’re seeing what they go through all the time.”

Jackie Tate, a middle school language arts teacher at St. Patrick School, said the morning of the flood, she and her family were at home and had their bags packed and ready to go.

They were keeping an eye on the back door where they expected to see the waters rise. But after her husband, Christian, took their dog out in the front yard and saw the rising water headed their way, he rushed inside to warn them to evacuate.

The Tate family was unable to leave in their truck, so they sought shelter at their neighbor’s home on higher ground.

The St. Vincent de Paul Society at St. Patrick helped Tate and her family secure a rental property while they wait for government aid.

“They have been an absolute godsend,” Tate said. “(St. Patrick), they’re my people.”

On Aug. 24 President Joe Biden approved a major disaster declaration for Tennessee, making assistance available from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to supplement state and local recovery efforts.

Despite the devastation experienced, victims and volunteers alike said the way the community has come together with clothing and food collections in McEwen and Waverly has been overwhelming.

“The outpouring of support has been phenomenal,” Collier said.

Tate’s family has already benefited from the collections of food, clothing and supplies.

“It is really amazing to watch, but I’m not surprised,” Tate said. “(This community) will give you the shirt off their back.”

Related Articles Module

From the Archive Module

After historic floods amount of parish community support is phenomenal 6800

Must Watch Videos

Now Playing

    View More Videos