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Baby Sucked Up Into Tornado Found Safely in a Tree
A 4-month-old baby has miraculously survived after being swept up by a tornado and blown into a tree.
Sydney Moore, from Clarksville, Tennessee, was inside her mobile home with her partner and two young children when a tornado hit the area on Saturday, December 9.
Images from the aftermath show a bassinet that had been blown into a tree, wrapped around the trunk. When the twister hit their home, their 4-month-old, named Lord, was inside the pen and was blown into the air. He was later discovered in a fallen tree by his parents.

GOFUNDME/CAITLYN MOORE
Moore said that her partner attempted to keep Lord from being swept up by the tornado. “He went to try to grab Lord off the bassinet and the roof had already came off. The bassinet was the first thing to go up, but Lord stayed in the bassinet, in the air, like he seen him in the bassinet in the air,” Moore added, according to Nashville’s News Channel 5. “They did two twirls, he said, then they got thrown.”
“He was just holding on to the bassinet the whole time, and they went into circles. I was pretty sure he was dead, and we weren’t going to find him,” Moore said. “But he’s here, and that’s by the grace of God.
“I swear to God he looked like he was placed in a tree with a gash on the side of his face, right here. It was a deep gash, but they glued it shut,” she added.
The family came perilously close to tragedy, with Moore adding she shielded her other child, 1-year-old Princeton, with her own body. “I ran to the back bedroom, jumped on top of Princeton,” Moore said. “By the time I jumped on Princeton, the walls collapsed, and then that’s when the siren went off.”
One of the family pets is still missing, a grey cat, while their other feline has been recovered.
In a fundraiser posted on GoFundMe, the children’s aunt Caitlyn Moore said Lord needed his ear glued due to a cut. “Luckily everyone came out with minor cuts and bruises,” she wrote, adding that Moore’s fiancé suffered a “broken arm/shoulder”.
“We are told that he looked like he was placed on the tree gently,” Caitlyn Moore wrote about the 4-month-old. “Like an angel guided him safely to that spot.”
Six people were killed by the tornado as it tore through northern Nashville, Clarksville and the surrounding areas last Saturday evening. Dozens more were injured in the freak-weather incident, with homes and businesses extensively damaged throughout the area.
City of Clarksville Mayor Joe Pitts offered his sympathies over the tragedy. “This is devastating news and our hearts are broken for the families of those who lost loved ones. The City stands ready to help them in their time of grief,” he said in statement seen by ABC News. Newsweek has contacted City of Clarksville Mayor’s Office for comment via email.
President Joe Biden was briefed on the situation by officials, according to a statement seen by Newsweek. “He and Jill are praying for the families of those who lost their lives, and wishing a swift recovery to the dozens of people who suffered injuries,” White House spokesperson Jeremy Edwards said.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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