To add on to my previous quip...
Hackleburg-Phil Campbell deserves its EF5 rating both contextually and structurally, even if only a few buildings genuinely met the EF5 criteria - namely a well anchored duplex in Phil Campbell, the Oak Grove mansion, and the restaurant in Mount Hope. The restaurant IMO is perhaps the most interesting; not only was it an extremely sturdy CMU-framed structure (which is already rare in the US outside of hurricane-prone regions) but a portion of the
slab itself was buckled and sucked up. That takes an incredible amount of force and pushes it above "just your typical EF5". In addition, the homes near Tanner were well-built and anchored and could have probably qualified for EF5 imo.
I'm not sure about Flat Rock (admittedly don't know much about it) but a user on this forum managed to dig up proof that the slab home in Cherokee Valley, GA was indeed properly anchored, which should have put Ringgold squarely into the EF5 category.
Rainsville deserves its EF5 rating contextually, especially based on the fact that it pulled up sidewalk slabs and threw an anchored safe a considerable distance, ripping the door off in the process. A few slab homes were swept away as well, particularly on Blue Pond Blvd near Rainsville and another one in the Henagar area so it MIGHT meet the structural criteria for EF5 as well, but I'm not sure.
Regarding Philadelphia, I'm just gonna quote
@buckeye05 here:
And yes, New Wren and Tuscaloosa were very likely EF5 as well, especially given the destruction of the railroad bridge over Hurricane Creek (Tuscaloosa) and the well-anchored homes, truck being carried over a mile, and other damage from New Wren.
So yeah... the claim that "Smithville was the only 2011 Super Outbreak tornado that deserved EF5" is an absolute truckload of stinky, nasty, fermenting piles of garbage.