The men lived 4 miles apart and were six years apart in age.
The day of the tornado, Floyd Whitfield and Robert MacIntyre were helping neighbors -- something the longtime north Minneapolis residents did often. Whitfield, 59, a deacon and usher at New Resurrection Missionary Baptist Church for the past three years, was driving a boy he mentored home from church. MacIntyre, 53, was helping neighbors at their damaged houses, even though part of his roof was blown off.
Whitfield died when a tree was blown through his windshield, somehow sparing the life of his passenger. MacIntyre was hauling trees from neighbors' yards with a tractor when he had an apparent heart attack.
City Council Member Don Samuels called MacIntyre a friend, a solid neighbor and a leader in the community.
"He was a '60s guy and had a lot of the best that era still in him," he said. "He died a hero's death."
Feeling the loss
Hours before he died, MacIntyre called John "JD" David, one of his best friends. Nearly a dozen pine trees were strewn across MacIntyre's yard, but he cut a path through his driveway and asked David to buy and haul over 20 sheets of plywood, for boarding up other people's houses.
"He didn't care about his house," David said. "He went door to door, making sure everybody was OK."