COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – Ten years after the 1000-year floods wreaked havoc across South Carolina, one Midlands business owner is taking us back to that time.
Michael Marshay, the owner of local business Forest Lake Fabrics, remembers the day he nearly saw his life’s work washed away.
“Sunrise, I started moving, and I drove down and saw what we were up against,” Marshay said. “As far as I could get was over at Trenton Plaza, looking over here, and I could see that I was catching about six feet of water in the store.”
He recalled the severe amount of damage that the store incurred.
“All of the windows were blown out. The back of the building was blown out. All the inventory was destroyed. Everything in the building was destroyed up to six-and-a-half feet,” he said.
Forest Lake Fabrics lost over a million dollars in fabrics following the floods.
But, Marshay says what he remembers most about the floods is not the damage, but the people.
“I came down here and he had 80 people out in my parking lot, feeding them bacon, egg and cheese biscuits. We started about 9:30 and by 1 p.m., we were completely cleaned out. It was God-loving people,” he said.
A decade later and the store has been completely rebuilt and has extra fortifications to help withstand future storms.
“God is good. This community came to the rescue like I’ve never seen before. It was a godly scene,” Marshay said.
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