Patricia Ming, 65, examines the torn-up ceiling on the third floor of her tornado-damaged home along Enright Avenue on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, in north St. Louis. The in the city yesterday, staffing debris drop-off sites that residents like Ming — still reeling from the deadly May 16 tornado — hope to rely on.
St. Louis residents are beginning to recover after an EF-3 tornado tore through central and northern parts of the city, damaging thousands of homes and killing five people.
Shirley Everett, 88, was sitting just inside the front window of her home on Red Bud Avenue in north St. Louis when the sky suddenly turned dark.
"I heard a real loud wind, a loud noise, and then the windows started shaking and rattling," she said. "I knew there was a disaster going on."
Dozens of volunteers from across the city gathered in north St. Louis — especially along Red Bud Avenue — to help clear bricks, tree limbs and shattered glass.
Jes Star, 32, from Tower Grove East, said the historic significance of north city and the devastation compelled her to help however she could.
"I woke up this morning and was like, 'That was incredibly close to where I live,'" she said, adding it was lucky her neighborhood was spared. "It is not luck that this part of the city will not receive as much support and services than other parts."
Rasheen Aldridge, alderman for the 14th Ward, echoed those concerns as he joined cleanup efforts in the neighborhood alongside other elected officials.
"It literally had looked like a bomb had just went off. Blocks and blocks of homes that are just gone," he said. "It's heartbreaking. ... The rebuild is not going to happen overnight."
For Everett, seeing neighbors and strangers come together to help her community has made the world's difference to her.
"It's so sweet that people care about each other," she said, holding back tears as she watched volunteers work. "We need to get together more because north St. Louis has been neglected so long."
Patricia Ming, 65, leans on the front gate of her home on Enright Avenue which was damaged by a tornado on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, in north St. Louis. Ming has lived in the house since she was 3 years old. “I never thought something like this would happen in this neighborhood," she said. "You hear about it in little counties and think, ‘Oh, they didn’t build those houses right.’ But we have brick houses — and look what it did to us.”
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A damaged and standing home sit next to one another on Enright Avenue a week after a tornado swept the area May 28, 2025 on Enright Avenue in St. Louis, Missouri.
Sandra Harris, 58, looks towards the back of her tornado-damaged retirement home where her two-story back porch used to be May 28, 2025 on Enright Avenue in St. Louis, Missouri.
St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer points at floor plans for the upstairs of the Peter & Paul Community Service shelter building under construction on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, in north St. Louis. The space was purchased a year ago by Peter & Paul to be used as an emergency shelter and transitional housing, according to CEO Anthony D’Agostino.
Debris and tree limbs litter the sidewalk in front of the Waterman Boulevard condo on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, where 26-year-old Kelly Wichmann lived before a tornado displaced her.
LYLEE GIBBS
Anthony Phillips of the Missouri National Guard cuts a zip tie with a knife as the guard sets up a debris collection site at the Farragut Elementary School on Thursday, May 29, 2025, in north St. Louis.
Tenelle Winmore, 33, stands outside the back of his tornado-damaged property on Lewis Place on Tuesday, May 27, 2025, in north St. Louis. He was in the process of remodeling it before a deadly EF3 tornado ripped through the city.
Annette Smith, 61, looks through the damage left by last week’s tornado in the backyard of her Fountain Park home on Tuesday. St. Louis was hit by an EF-3 tornado on May 16 that devastated the area. Several organizations came to the area to provide goods and services to those affected, including the Bullet Related Injury Clinic (BRIC), which assisted Smith after she was struck by a stray bullet in her home in 2021.
Suni April, 25, of the MOHO Justice Coalition, holds 4-year-old Chase, a Maltese, while taking a break from tornado relief efforts to enjoy a scoop of ice cream on Tuesday. Scoops of Joy was handing out free ice cream in the Fountain Park neighborhood of St. Louis after the area was hit by an EF-3 tornado last week.
William Porterfield, 38, with World Central Kitchen, grabs a case of water from a van while assisting with tornado relief efforts in the Fountain Park neighborhood of St. Louis on Tuesday.
Free clothes for tornado victims hang next to where the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. statue once stood in the Fountain Park neighborhood of St. Louis on Tuesday. A statue of the civil rights leader was knocked over after an EF-3 tornado struck the area last week.
Kim Madden, 69, hangs up free clothes for those in need in the Fountain Park neighborhood of St. Louis on Tuesday. Volunteers from several organizations are providing goods and services for those affected by the EF-3 tornado that tore through the area last week.
Steven Reason, 48, of St. Louis, poses for a portrait on his bed in a Red Cross shelter at the 12th and Park Recreation Center on Tuesday. Last week's EF-3 tornado severely damaged the building where he was living.
From left: Florence Bills, Earleana Scott, Tina Turner and Margaret White prepare to release balloons on Bayard Ave. in north St. Louis on Tuesday in honor of Rena Scott-Lyles, who was killed in the tornado last week.
Friends and family release balloons on Bayard Ave. in St. Louis on Tuesday, May 20, 2025, in honor of Rena Scott-Lyles, who was killed in last week's tornado. Scott-Lyles' three-story home, which has been in the family for more than 100 years, collapsed as she ran to her basement.
Travion McCorvey, of St. Louis’ Jeff-Vander-Lou neighborhood, left, and Dalvin Murrow, of Florissant, clear trees from Murrow's grandma’s home on Monday in north St. Louis. An EF-3 tornado ripped through the city last Friday, killing 5 and damaging thousands of buildings.
Fisher Morrow, of St. John, tosses a tree chunk into the back of a truck while cleaning fallen trees from his grandmother’s property on Monday in north St. Louis. An EF-3 tornado ripped through the city last Friday, killing 5 and damaging thousands of buildings.
Kevin Nolan speaks about the damage to his Sacramento Avenue home on Monday in north St. Louis. An EF-3 tornado ripped through the city last Friday, killing 5 and damaging thousands of buildings.
Dolly Baskin stands where her bedroom used to be at her north St. Louis home on Saturday. A storm on Friday blew the roof off and ripped off the back of her home.
Brick buildings lay crumbled on Saturday after an EF3 tornado ripped through the city on Friday afternoon, killing at least five and damaging thousands of homes in north St. Louis.
Joseph Marshall, 63, pauses while speaking about a tree limb piercing his home’s wall on Saturday in north St. Louis. An EF3 tornado ripped through the city on Friday afternoon, killing at least five and damaging thousands of homes.
St. Louis Board of Aldermen President Megan Green, left, helps pick up debris alongside Jay Nelson, Green’s chief of staff, on Saturday in north St. Louis.
Sam Mosley, of Jennings, grills hot dogs and burgers on Saturday in north St. Louis. Mosley and a group of volunteers prepared free food for area residents who suffered the impacts of a storm that ripped through the city on Friday.
Dolly Baskin assesses damage to a bedroom on Saturday in north St. Louis. Storms and a tornado swept through a large part of the city’s center the prior day, damaging thousands of homes and leaving at least five people dead.
Alex Cadigan, of Affton, left, helps Sam Campbell haul a large tree limb in north St. Louis on Saturday — the day after an EF3 tornado ripped through central and northern St. Louis.
A truck trailer is flipped on its side at the corner of Natural Bridge Avenue and North Newstead Avenue on Saturday after an EF3 tornado ripped through north St. Louis the day prior.
Isaiah Davis, 8, has his photo taken while posing on a fallen tree by his mother, Felicia Brooks-Davis, both of Benton Park, on Saturday in north St. Louis.