One person died in Georgia as Hurricane Idalia weakened into a tropical storm after smashing into Florida on Wednesday.
Idalia clocked maximum sustained winds nearing 125mph as it made landfall near Keaton Beach in Florida at 7.45am, crossing into Georgia with top winds of 90mph before weakening to a tropical storm with speeds of 60mph overnight.
High winds shredded signs, blew off roofs, sent sheet metal flying and snapped tall trees.
Two others, including a sheriff’s deputy, were injured when the tree fell.
No hurricane-related deaths were officially confirmed in Florida, but Florida Highway Patrol reported two people dying in separate weather-related crashes hours before Idalia made landfall.
The storm brought strong winds to Savannah, Georgia, as it made its way toward the Carolinas and was forecast to move along the coast before heading out into the Atlantic Ocean.
The National Weather Service said Idalia spawned a tornado that briefly touched down in Charleston, South Carolina, where two people suffered minor injured as the winds sent a car flying according to authorities and eyewitness video. Two people received minor injuries.
In Charleston, storm surge from Idalia topped the seawall that protects the downtown, sending ankle-deep ocean water into the streets and neighbourhoods where horse-drawn carriages pass million-dollar homes and the famous open-air market.
Preliminary data showed the Wednesday evening high tide reached just over 2.8 metres, around 90 centimetres above normal and the fifth-highest reading in Charleston Harbour since records were first kept in 1899.
Florida had feared the worst while still recovering from last year’s Hurricane Ian, which hit the heavily populated Fort Myers area, leaving 149 dead in the state.
Unlike that storm, Idalia blew into a very lightly inhabited area known as Florida’s “nature coast,” one of the state’s most rural regions that lies far from crowded metropolises or busy tourist areas and features millions of acres of undeveloped land.
Because of the remoteness of the Big Bend area, search teams may need more time to complete their work compared with past hurricanes in more urban areas, said Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Department of Emergency Management.
The National Weather Service in Tallahassee called Idalia “an unprecedented event” since no major hurricanes on record have ever passed through the bay abutting the Big Bend.
The White House confirmed President Joe Biden had called the governors of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina on Wednesday and told them their states had his administration’s full support.
Officials in Bermuda warned that Idalia could hit the island early next week as a tropical storm.
Bermuda was being lashed by the outer bands of Hurricane Franklin on Wednesday, a Category 2 storm that was on track to pass near the island in the north Atlantic Ocean.