Randall Hill - Photojournalist

SOUTH CAROLINA FLOODS

  • Lewis Johnson makes his way to help a neighbor remove valuables from a flooded home on Frank Williams Road in Georgetown, South Carolina October 8, 2015. South Carolina's governor warned on Thursday that several coastal areas were about to be hit by a second round of major flooding, while residents inland hauled soaked furniture and appliances from homes left in ruins by unprecedented rainfall.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Twenty-three extended members of the Linen Family evacuate via a SC National Guard cargo vehicle in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Arthur Linden uses a johnboat to survey the flooded areas of his brother's property along Dunbar Road in Georgetown, South Carolina October 8, 2015. Flooding from historic rainfall in South Carolina claimed two more lives on Wednesday, and the threat of further inundation from swollen rivers and vulnerable dams put already ravaged communities on edge.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • A car that was stranded is submerged in flood waters along Lee's Landing Circle in Conway, South Carolina October 7, 2015. Rescuers searched early Wednesday for two people missing in floodwaters in South Carolina, while authorities urged residents in hundreds of homes to seek higher ground. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Chris Stubo watches the flood waters that surround his home on Apllewood Court in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina October 5, 2015. Torrential rainfall that South Carolina's governor called a once-in-a-millennium downpour triggered flooding in the southeastern U.S. state on Sunday, causing at least eight deaths in the Carolinas. The storm had dumped more than 20 inches (50 cm) of rain in parts of central South Carolina since Friday, the National Weather Service said. The state climatologist forecast another 2 to 6 inches (5 to 15 cm) through Monday as the rain began to slacken. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Deborah Hanna of Kingstree rescues old photographs from her mother's flooded home on Singleton Avenue in Kingstree, South Carolina October 8, 2015. The family was able to return to the home after evacuating on Sunday. Flooding from historic rainfall in South Carolina claimed two more lives on Wednesday, and the threat of further inundation from swollen rivers and vulnerable dams put already ravaged communities on edge.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Mallard Ducks find a high spot along the flooded area along Waccamaw Lake Drive in Conway, South Carolina October 6, 2015. Floodwaters from unprecedented rainfall in South Carolina have killed 11 people, closed some 550 roads and bridges and prompted hundreds of rescues of people trapped in homes and cars, officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Victor Sanchez (L) and Jose Quino remove flood water from the kitchen area at El Cerro Grande Mexican restaurant in Georgetown, South Carolina October 5, 2015. According to Fernando Morales, the owner of the restaurant, water rose to a level of 4 feet in most areas of the business. Torrential rainfall that South Carolina's governor called a once-in-a-millennium downpour triggered flooding in the southeastern U.S. state on Sunday, causing at least eight deaths in the Carolinas. The storm had dumped more than 20 inches (50 cm) of rain in parts of central South Carolina since Friday, the National Weather Service said. The state climatologist forecast another 2 to 6 inches (5 to 15 cm) through Monday as the rain began to slacken. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Horry County police officer Jeff Helfinstine patrols the edge of flood waters along Lee's Landing Circle in Conway, South Carolina October 7, 2015. Rescuers searched early Wednesday for two people missing in floodwaters in South Carolina, while authorities urged residents in hundreds of homes to seek higher ground. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • A firetruck speeds through flooded area along Dunbar Road in Georgetown, South Carolina October 8, 2015. Flooding from historic rainfall in South Carolina claimed two more lives on Wednesday, and the threat of further inundation from swollen rivers and vulnerable dams put already ravaged communities on edge.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • David Carroll (R) of Waccamaw Lake Drive, carries via boat, neighbors Rick Woodward, Miki Woodward and Matt Desjardins in Conway, South Carolina October 6, 2015. The Woodward family came to the landing from their flooded neighborhood to meet daughter Kelly who had been separated from them for a few days because of the floods. Floodwaters from unprecedented rainfall in South Carolina have killed 11 people, closed some 550 roads and bridges and prompted hundreds of rescues of people trapped in homes and cars, officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Ammie McKnight watches the level of flood waters in the front yard her Orange Street home in Georgetown, South Carolina October 4, 2015. Most major roads through the historical South Carolina city have closed due to flooding. Vast swaths of U.S. Southeast and mid-Atlantic states were grappling with heavy rains and flooding from a separate weather system which has already caused at least five deaths, washed out roads and prompted evacuations and flash flood warnings. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Carol Hayward (C) is helped into the back of a SC National Guard cargo vehicle while evacuating in Georgetown, South Carolina October 8, 2015. South Carolina's governor warned on Thursday that several coastal areas were about to be hit by a second round of major flooding, while residents inland hauled soaked furniture and appliances from homes left in ruins by unprecedented rainfall.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Tom Giles, along with 23 members of his extended family from the Dunbar community, ride on a cargo vehicle during evacuations conducted by the SC National Guard in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Harry Lockwood of River Road carries a rifle for snakes as he and his wife Kaye (Not Pictured) walk along flooded Lee's Landing Circle in Conway, South Carolina October 7, 2015. Rescuers searched early Wednesday for two people missing in floodwaters in South Carolina, while authorities urged residents in hundreds of homes to seek higher ground. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Scott Everett (L) helps his grandchildren enroute to school off a johnboat along Lee's Landing Circle in Conway, South Carolina October 7, 2015. The family has been living in their home surrounded by flood waters since Sunday evening. Scott Everett (L) helps his grandchildren enroute to school off a johnboat along Lee's Landing Circle in Conway, South Carolina October 7, 2015. The family has been living in their home surrounded by flood waters since Sunday evening. Rescuers searched early Wednesday for two people missing in floodwaters in South Carolina, while authorities urged residents in hundreds of homes to seek higher ground. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Clare Reigard of Georgetown, South Carolina, abandons her car after it stalled on Duke Street due to heavy rains in Georgetown, South Carolina October 4, 2015. Most major roads through the historical South Carolina city have closed due to flooding. Vast swaths of U.S. Southeast and mid-Atlantic states were grappling with heavy rains and flooding from a separate weather system which has already caused at least five deaths, washed out roads and prompted evacuations and flash flood warnings. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Miki Woodward holds family dog Butch while sitting on a johnboat along Waccamaw Drive in Conway, South Carolina October 6, 2015. The Woodward family came to the landing from their flooded neighborhood to meet daughter Kelly who had been separated from them for a few days because of the floods. Floodwaters from unprecedented rainfall in South Carolina have killed 11 people, closed some 550 roads and bridges and prompted hundreds of rescues of people trapped in homes and cars, officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Bertha Linen is lowered from the back of a SC National Guard cargo vehicle while being evacuated in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • People crowd to make space on the back of a SC National Guard cargo vehicle during evacuations in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • A motorcyclist navigates through flood waters in Garden City Beach, South Carolina, October 2, 2015. Category 4 Hurricane Joaquin is now moving northward and has started bringing swells to parts of the southeastern coast of the United States, the National Hurricane Center said on Friday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Sgt. William Roland (L) of the SC National Guard and Mason Caudle of the Georgetown Fire Department, rescue a lost dog in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Michael Carroll checks on his dog Bailey on flood covered property in Conway, South Carolina October 6, 2015. The Carroll family has been living with several feet of water on their land since Saturday. Floodwaters from unprecedented rainfall in South Carolina have killed 11 people, closed some 550 roads and bridges and prompted hundreds of rescues of people trapped in homes and cars, officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • A community store in the Dunbar Community is surrounded by water in Georgetown, South Carolina October 9, 2015. Concerns about additional inundation in four coastal counties and more rain had officials on guard Friday, nine days after a state of emergency was declared because of historic rains that washed out roads, swamped hundreds of homes and killed 17 people in the state. Emergency management officials in several areas were encouraging residents to leave their homes as a precaution as floodwaters flow south into already-swollen rivers and tributaries toward the Atlantic Ocean.  REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Norman Beauregard, (From Left) Kevin Attender and Chris Rogers, all with the Georgetown Fire Department, wade through flooded Front Street in Georgetown, South Carolina October 4, 2015. Most major roads through the historical South Carolina city have closed due to flooding. Vast swaths of U.S. Southeast and mid-Atlantic states were grappling with heavy rains and flooding from a separate weather system which has already caused at least five deaths, washed out roads and prompted evacuations and flash flood warnings. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • Greg Rodermond (R) and Mandy Barnhill, use a canoe to evacuate Mandy's home on Long Avenue in Conway, South Carolina October 5, 2015. Torrential rainfall that South Carolina's governor called a once-in-a-millennium downpour triggered flooding in the southeastern U.S. state on Sunday, causing at least eight deaths in the Carolinas. The storm had dumped more than 20 inches (50 cm) of rain in parts of central South Carolina since Friday, the National Weather Service said. The state climatologist forecast another 2 to 6 inches (5 to 15 cm) through Monday as the rain began to slacken. REUTERS/Randall Hill
  • David Carroll of Waccamaw Lake Drive, walks down his flood covered road to meet family in Conway, South Carolina October 6, 2015. Carroll has been living with several feet of water around his home since Saturday. Floodwaters from unprecedented rainfall in South Carolina have killed 11 people, closed some 550 roads and bridges and prompted hundreds of rescues of people trapped in homes and cars, officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Randall Hill
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