• A tornado watch was in effect for portions of Alabama and the panhandle of Florida, along with most of southern Georgia.
  • Over 55,000 homes and businesses were without power from eastern Texas to southern Mississippi.
  • It’s been a deadly start to the severe weather season in the South.

Another round of deadly severe storms battered the South on Tuesday, with hail the size of a golf ball and howling winds wreaking havoc, as the National Weather Service issued several tornado warnings at the beginning of what was forecast to be two days of violent weather across the region.

In eastern Texas, W. M. Soloman, 71, died when storm winds toppled a tree onto his home in Whitehouse, about 100 miles southeast of Dallas, Whitehouse Mayor James Wansley said.

In central Alabama, emergency officials were assessing the impact Tuesday of several damaging storms that included at least one confirmed tornado.

Radar and the National Weather Service indicated a tornado on the ground south of Wetumpka, Alabama, at about 11 a.m. Trees and power lines were down throughout the county, but no injuries had been reported.

There were also several reports of tornadoes in Mississippi and South Carolina on Tuesday, the Storm Prediction Center said. The Storm Prediction Center said the threat of damaging winds and tornadoes to the coastal Carolinas would continue until late evening.

The most damage was seen in Allendale County in South Carolina where buildings and roofs were damaged, according to AccuWeather.

The area most at risk includes more than 8 million people across the Alabama cities of Mobile and Montgomery; Tallahassee, Florida; and Columbus and Savannah in Georgia.

A tornado watch was in effect for portions of Alabama and the panhandle of Florida, along with most of southern Georgia and South Carolina, the Weather Service said.

More than 43,000 homes and businesses were without power from eastern Texas to Georgia, according to the utility tracker poweroutage.us.

Flood watches were in effect in northern Florida and parts of Georgia and South Carolina, the Weather Service said. Downpours may linger for a time in the wake of the line of storms on Tuesday, which can increase the risk of urban and small stream flooding, according to AccuWeather

The threat of damaging weather will move further north Wednesday, forecasters said, with severe storms possible across an area stretching from western Alabama to the western tip of the Carolinas.

More than 10 million people in metro areas including Atlanta; Birmingham; and Chattanooga, Tennessee, will be at risk, the Storm Prediction Center said.

It has been a deadly start to the severe weather season in the South: About two weeks ago, an EF3 tornado pummeled parts of the New Orleans area and left at least one person dead and several injured, AccuWeather said. Storms also killed at least two people in the Florida Panhandle last week.

Contributing: The Associated Press; The Montgomery Advertiser