Hurricane Matthew kills at least 4 in Florida as it barrels north
A weakening but still deadly Hurricane Matthew continued its slow march north along the East Coast Saturday, finally making landfall south of Myrtle Beach, S.C.
The devastating storm was downgraded to a Category 1 hurricane as it hovered around 30 miles southeast of Charleston, having already killed at least four people in Florida and left more than 1 million homes and businesses without electricity.
The winds dropped to 75 mph, down from a recorded 145 mph at the height of the storm’s severity, when it ripped across Haiti, killing nearly 900.
Matthew whipped the coastlines of Georgia and South Carolina with torrential rain and stiff winds as its storm center blew ashore, making landfall north of Charleston, near the town of McClellanville.
NYC workers can donate to Hurricane Matthew relief from paycheck
Prior to Saturday morning, the hurricane’s eye mercifully remained just far enough out at sea that coastal communities didn’t feel the full force of Matthew’s winds.
As the storm passed one city after another, the reaction was relief that things were nowhere near as bad as many feared.
“We are all blessed that Matthew stayed off our coast,” Florida Gov. Rick Scott said. “We are blessed that we didn’t have a direct hit.”
The powerful hurricane killed at least four people in Florida and left more than 1 million homes and businesses without electricity.
(PHELAN EBENHACK/REUTERS)
The Florida fatalities included an elderly couple in St. Lucie and two women who were killed in separate incidents after trees crushed their homes.
Death tolls rises to over 800 in Haiti from Hurricane Matthew
“Now is the time for prayer,” South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said as the storm approached.
More than a million people were under evacuation orders in north Florida and Georgia’s coastal regions as roughly 300,000 people fled their homes in South Carolina.
Matthew was approaching Charleston early Saturday, where a curfew was in place between midnight and 6 a.m.
(JONATHAN DRAKE/REUTERS)
“We have been very fortunate that Matthews’s strongest winds have remained a short distance offshore of the Florida and Georgia coasts thus far, but this should not be a reason to let down our guard,” the Hurricane Center said in a forecast statement.
Well south of the storm, things began returning to normal Saturday, with all three of Orlando’s main theme parks — Walt Disney World, Universal Studios and SeaWorld — reopening in the morning.
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And the power began coming back on for the 1 million people in Florida who were in the dark for roughly 24 hours.
A disabled woman and her family were some of the many Savannah residents evacuated to Augusta before the deadly storm struck.
(NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)
Not everyone was spared.
The ravaging storm — the worst to threaten the Atlantic Seaboard in more than 10 years — killed at least 877 people in Haiti and left tens of thousands homeless.
Many of the island nation’’s impoverished areas reported that cholera outbreaks were already claiming lives as the storm made its way north.
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Matthew killed at least 877 people and leveled entire villages in Haiti.
(NICOLAS GARCIA/AFP/Getty Images)
Northern Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas were still dealing with flood waters in many areas.
St. Augustine, Fla., the nation’s oldest European settlement, was experiencing severe flooding that authorities said could exceed 8 feet Saturday. A 17th century Spanish fortress and other historic structures were in the water’s path.
“It’s a really serious devastating situation,” Mayor Nancy Shaver said. “The flooding is just going to get higher and higher and higher.”
The massive storm was expected to severely flood several historic cities across the East Coast of the U.S.
(JONATHAN DRAKE/REUTERS)
Steve Todd, who defied the mayor’s evacuation orders and stayed at his home in Tybee Island — one of the Georgia’s most eastern points — described seeing bushes fly by the windows of his third-story condo, where he hunkered down with friends.
“I’m not regretting staying,” he said over the phone. “But I’m not going to lie: There’s a little bit of nervous tension right now.”
Stacks of sandbags clogged the streets of Charleston, another historic town lined with colonial homes. Stores and shops in the downtown area had boarded up their windows with plywood and the usually bustling area was eerily quiet as the city announced a midnight to 6 a.m. curfew.
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Hurricane Matthew kills at least 4 in Florida as it barrels north
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