Franklin County, News, Phil Campbell, PICTURE FLIPPER
 By  Kellie Singleton Published 
10:45 am Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Residents still re-building

Johnny Allen, Timothy Welsh, Kenny Patrick, B.B. Burroughs, Mitchell Tyler, David Johnson, Giles Edge, Edward Allen, Michael Shelley and Randy Haney from Jamestown Baptist Church in Conway, S.C.; Buckshot Saint from Franklin County; and Bobby Parker from East Franklin posed for a picture outside the home the men are rebuilding for Parker and his family.

When East Franklin resident Bobby Parker emerged from what was left of his home on April 27 after the deadly EF5 tornado tore it to pieces, he had no idea that nearly four months later he would be standing in the same spot watching complete strangers rebuild his home piece by piece.

Parker was at home the afternoon of April 27 with his wife, Carolyn, and his two grandchildren, when they heard on the news that a tornado had been spotted in Hackleburg.

“We were thinking that even if there was a tornado in Hackleburg, it surely wasn’t going to come our way,” Parker said. “We were getting ready to go to a church supper and my wife was baking a cake. But about that time it got really dark and the TV station went black.

“Me and my grandson went outside and the tornado was funneling towards us from the west. We got everybody together and got in the bathroom, all four of us. We could hear everything crashing and when it was all over, the only thing left standing was that bathroom and one bedroom. Everything else was gone.”

Parker said he was thankful he and his family had survived the 200 mph winds that smashed his home and threw his thousand-pound farm equipment across the road.

“I made my living raising cattle and baling hay in the summer and when the tornado came through, it killed most of my cattle and destroyed every bit of my farm equipment,” Parker said. “We didn’t know what we were going to do or where we were going to live.”

In stepped Johnny Allen, a carpenter from Conway, S.C., whose heart was broken when he found out about the destruction in Alabama.

“My baby brother is a Baptist minister and his church goes to

Lynch, Ky., every year on a mission trip. Oak Grove Missionary Baptist Church, which is the church Bobby [Parker] goes to, also goes there every year and when they didn’t show up this year, my brother learned about the destruction to their communities and their members homes.”

Allen’s brother got in touch with Billy Pierce, a deacon at Oak Grove, who gave him Parker’s name. Allen said he got in touch with the Parkers, who had already talked to Franklin County carpenter Buckshot Saint, and worked out the details of when and how they would rebuild the Parkers’ home.

Allen corresponded with Parker and Saint for several weeks before he and a group of nine other men from Jamestown Baptist Church in Conway, S.C., showed up this past Thursday with a trailer of supplies ready to provide free labor under Saint’s supervision to get the Parker’s house rebuilt.

In three days, Saint and the group of men had raised walls on the home and garage and had as much work as they could fit in planned before they left out this week.

“I’m glad to do this for Bobby and his family and I know the other men are too,” Allen said. “This is what you do for brothers in Christ.”

Parker said he was absolutely overwhelmed by how much work the men had done in just three short days.

“This is such a blessing,” Parker said. “All of these men are a God-send because we took all the money we had from insurance and from selling the rest of my cattle but we still didn’t know how we’d build a house.

“We never would have been able to do this without these men and I appreciate every one of them.”

Also on Franklin County Times
Dog owner goes to trial for manslaughter
Main, News, Russellville
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — The trial of a Red Bay woman who was charged with two counts of manslaughter after her dogs allegedly attacked and killed two people in...
Police chief’s brother retires
Main, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Brothers Chris and Joe Hargett worked side by side in law enforcement for more than two decades. Now, as Captain Joe Hargett retires fr...
City leaders sworn in for a new term
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — City leaders and community members gathered Sunday at city hall for the swearing-in ceremony for the new city council members, whose te...
Safeplace walk renews focus on domestic violence awareness
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — SafePlace brought its Domestic Violence Awareness Walk back to Franklin County for the first time in nearly two decades. SafePlace Exec...
RHS showcases its pumpkin creativity
News, Records, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Russellville High School’s second annual Pumpkin Palooza filled the old main building hallway with themed pumpkin displays created by e...
GFWC holds North District fall meeting
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
November 5, 2025
DOUBLE SPRINGS — Fellowship, service and community spirit filled the air as members of GFWC Alabama’s North District met for its fall gathering at Loo...
Our moral documents are failing hungry families
Columnists, Opinion
November 5, 2025
Our country is about to do something unthinkable: let millions of people go hungry while spending billions elsewhere without hesitation. As of Nov. 1,...
BTCPA kicks off new season with ‘You Can’t Beat the House’
News, Red Bay
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RED BAY — The Bay Tree Council for the Performing Arts opened its 2025-26 season this week with “You Can’t Beat the House,” a comedy by Pat Cook co-di...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *