A Florida woman visiting her grandchildren. A father who died protecting his young son. A 10-year-old boy in mother nature's direct path.
They are among the dead after the National Weather Service confirmed a string of tornadoes tore through Middle Tennesse Saturday, flattening homes and businesses, killing six people and injuring dozens over an 8-hour period.
Three people died in Nashville, and about 50 miles northwest, three others lost their lives in Clarksville, local officials said. More than 80 injured patients were also rushed to hospitals on Saturday after multiple tornadoes touched down in the Midstate - many in critical condition.
Here are who officials say died.
Joseph Dalton, 37, was inside his Madison mobile home when the storm rolled it on top of his neighbor's home, according to the Metro Nashville Police Department.
Dalton’s 10-year-old son was inside his homes at the time and was transported to a local children's hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
His partner and the mother of his child, Cassandra Diket, told the Tennessean she was at work but rushed home when Dalton did not respond to her text, warning him about the severe weather.
Their 10-year-old son, she said, "remembers his dad holding his hands and telling him it will be OK. Then he said he remembers everything spinning."
Dalton was lying on top of his son and his mother while they all huddled in the bathtub, the safest place inside the mobile home, Diket said. He was using his body to protect them.
Powerful winds swept the mobile home off its foundation and into the air. It landed on top of their neighbor's home.
"He's my hero," Diket's son told her.
"He was my best friend and the love of my life," Diket said. "I know he was being brave. I lost him, but I feel like my son wouldn't be alive without him.
How you can help too:Taylor Swift donates $1 million to Tennessee tornado relief fund
Floridema Gabriel Perez, 31, and her children lived next door to Dalton, Nashville police said.
Her 2-year-old son, Anthony Elmer Mendez, was also in the home and died, the agency reported. Perez’s 7-year-old son, also home, was taken to a hospital after suffering injuries.
Perez's husband, Felipe Mendez, survived after the tornado twister blew through the family's home, according to an online fundraiser created by the Hispanic Family Foundation to help him.
Originally from Guatemala, Mendez "made the decision to leave everything he knew and loved behind to provide a better life for himself and his family," the fundraiser reads. "His family only arrived in the United States just five months ago."
As of Tuesday, the fundraiser had raised nearly $14,000 of a $50,000 goal to assist Mendez with funeral expenses.
Tornado wind speeds peaked at 150 mph:The Tennessee tornadoes left 6 dead, dozens injured
Stephen Kwaah Hayes, 34, of Clarksville lost his life as well.
Clarksville police identified Hayes as one of the three victims who died when a tornado with peak winds of 150 mph blew threw the city razing homes and injuring more than 60 people.
Donna Allen, 59, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, was visiting Tennessee, to see her son and her grandchildren when the tornado tore through Clarksville, the Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported.
In addition to her death, her son's family lost their home.
According to her son, Eric Davis Allen, both he and his mother were in the house when the storm came through. His four children were not.
“She was my world,” Davis told Clarksville Now. “She was a woman that was so resilient, a great mother to her kids, someone who went through so much in life. She was a joy … She was the life of the party and one of the things I appreciated the most about her was her innate spirit.”
"Life is so valuable, and it can be gone in a blink of an eye," Allen's son told the outlet. "Obviously, I know there are so many families that were devastated by this catastrophe, but losing my mom and everything with four kids, you have to rebuild.”
Arlan Coty, 10, died in the tornado that tore through Clarksville.
The boy, a 4th grade student at West Creek Elementary School in his hometown, was passionate about basketball and the Los Angeles Lakers, his favorite professional team, according to The Tennessean.
"Arlan had the most infectious and special energy about him," his family said in a statement, released Monday. "There is not one person who has met Arlan that has not been brought to tears from his passing."
Arlan loved talking about history, music and sports, and was "intelligent beyond his years," the statement from Katherine and Kyle Burnham said.
The boy's mother said in a Facebook post that the family's home was in the direct path of the tornado, and Arlan did not make it out. Her daughter, Ella, was taken to a local hospital, treated and released with minor injuries, the post said.
Contributing: The Tennessean and The Palm Beach Post.
Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on X @nataliealund.
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