Updated at 9:17 a.m. ET

Tornadoes swept through parts of Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana early Wednesday evening, leaving at least six people dead and injuring more than two dozen others in their paths of destruction. The tornadoes were among a series severe storms that bulldozed a route west to east across the South on Wednesday.

The havoc turned deadly around 5 p.m. local time in the town of Madill, in southern Oklahoma, where extreme storms loosed a tornado that tossed vehicles and damaged dozens of buildings throughout the area. Robert Chaney, director of Marshall County's emergency management, also told reporters that two people died in the town.

The Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management said that, as of 7 p.m. local time, more than 7,100 customers across the state had been left without electricity.

Just about an hour after the tornado in Madill touched down, the same storm system also deposited a deadly tornado near the town of Onalaska, in southeast Texas roughly 75 miles north of Houston.

Polk County Emergency Management officials said overnight that the tornado cut a swath through more than a dozen neighborhoods in and around Onalaska on Wednesday evening, leaving at least three people dead and up to 30 injured.

"Our hearts are with our fellow Texans tonight," the state's governor, Greg Abbott, said in a statement released Wednesday night, "and the state will continue to do everything it can to support those affected by this severe weather."

Central Louisiana also felt the deadly effects of Wednesday's storms. The Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office told local news station KALB that at least one woman died in the severe weather over the town of Woodworth, about 80 miles north of Lafayette.

Louisiana State University of Alexandria, which neighbors Woodworth, also suffered suffered some structural damage and power loss in the storms — though the school announced overnight that all student residents appeared to be safe.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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