Stories of survival emerge from East Coast rainstorm


              Waves batter the shoreline in Buxton on North Carolina's Hatteras Island during high tide on Sunday, Oct. 4, 2015. The Eastern Seaboard appeared to dodge the full fury of Hurricane Joaquin, which is veering out to sea. (Steve Earley/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
Waves batter the shoreline in Buxton on North Carolina's Hatteras Island during high tide on Sunday, Oct. 4, 2015. The Eastern Seaboard appeared to dodge the full fury of Hurricane Joaquin, which is veering out to sea. (Steve Earley/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Relentless rains and floodwaters brought much of South Carolina to a standstill. Thousands warily watched rising creeks, others had to be rescued after water spilled into their homes. Still others helped save neighbors. The following are vignettes from people in the storm:

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Wilson McElveen lives on a hill in a place called Forest Acres, but just down the hill, neighbors were flooded out of their townhomes by water surging over a nearby dam.

He said the rushing waters burst through the doors of one home, and emergency responders had to use an ax to break down the door of another townhome to rescue a woman.

"We've seen people lose everything," said his wife, Sharon McElveen, noting they lost only a small boat. "It just floated away. But I could care less about that stupid boat."

They have taken in friends who need a place to stay.

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Brenda Van De Grift said her husband got trapped in his car while driving to work Sunday morning at the Van De Grift Animal Clinic. She said he was driving an SUV and thought he could make it, but didn't realize how deep the water had gotten.

"He was running late," she said. He doesn't even know who pulled him out.

Others said high ground kept them safe.

"We're counting ourselves very lucky that we're uphill enough," said Griffin Schultz, a resident of an apartment complex near one flooded area.

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Vladimir Gorrin said he led his 57-year-old aunt through floodwaters surrounding her apartment near Gills Creek - one of the hardest-hit areas in Columbia.

Gorrin said his aunt, Wanda Laboy, waited several hours after calling 911, but authorities did not come. So family came to help.

"She's very distressed right now," said Gorrin, 38. "She lost everything."

More than 18 inches of rain, nearly all of it in 24 hours, fell in the area. It was so bad that hundreds of businesses, homes and apartments flooded.

Gorrin's aunt is heading with him to his house, where it has not flooded, but the drive home was tricky.

"I'm trying to find my way back home, and every road that we've taken is blocked or flooded," he said in a phone interview inside the car with his aunt.

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In Florence, about 80 miles east of Columbia, Mary Gainey said she was told Sunday afternoon that she'd have to evacuate her home because of rising floodwaters from a nearby creek.

"I've been rushing around, making sure I have everything I need," said the 65-year-old Gainey.

She's going to stay at her daughter's house until the water recedes.

"This is the first time we've had to be evacuated," she said. "It's strange leaving everything behind."

She said she's worried, but thankful that she had some warning.

"I know God that will take care of us," she said.

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Rawlings LaMotte, 38, a residential real estate broker, said an area in front of his gated subdivision in eastern Columbia was filled with up with 5 feet of water.

"It looks like a raging river," LaMotte said. "I've lived in Columbia my entire life, and we always laughed about the 100-year flood plain, but I guess this is what it is."

Earlier Sunday, LaMotte said he and a friend got into a small motorboat and ended up ferrying several people to safety, including a man who had been out of town and found roads to his home blocked.

"I told one of my friends earlier today, this put everything we've seen with Katrina into perspective," LaMotte said. "Until you've experienced something like this, you have no idea how bad it really is."

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Charleston, South Carolina, Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. said he'd never seen flooding and rain as in the past few days, not even in his city after Hurricane Hugo years back. And he's been mayor for 40 years.

"The good news is that the torrential rain is over," Riley told The Associated Press after his historic city near the coast escaped the worst of the flooding that pummeled the state capital, Columbia.

Now he said he expects city offices in Charleston would be back open Monday morning: "You know the amount of rainfall that we have experienced is unprecedented. I feel very fortunate that we were able to get through this as well as we have."

He's now hoping his city, at least, can quickly put the ordeal behind.

"I think the community will soon be back to normal. One of these days, perhaps not today and perhaps not tomorrow, we'll have a nice sunny day."

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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Bruce Smith in Charleston, South Carolina; Mitch Weiss in Greenville, South Carolina; Jonathan Drew in Durham, North Carolina; Jeffrey Collins, Seanna Adcox and Susanne Schafer in Columbia.

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