
Nishia Wilson stands in what is left of her damaged apartment. Pieces of her ceiling continued to fall after the tornado hit and all of the windows in her apartment are shattered. She and her son have lived in the apartments for seven years and don’t have another place to stay.

A shattered window outside of Nishia Wilson’s apartment shows the damage to the other complexes as well as the cars in the parking lot.

Residents climb up the stairs of their apartment building that was severely damaged by the E3 tornado that touched down in Seneca.

Yvonne Webb looks up at her at damaged apartment building while waiting for the American Red Cross to come with aid. Her apartment was one of the many in her complex that suffered severe structural damage including flooding and a nearly torn off roof.

Stace Staggers stands in the parking lot of his destroyed apartment building. He said since he has been here he has never seen anything like this storm before. He is one of the many residents currently displaced by the storm.

Snapped power poles and downed lines litter Oak Street in Seneca.

South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster arrives at Seneca High school by helicopter for a tour of the devastation caused by the E3 tornado.

Numerous houses around Seneca suffered major structural damage including shattered window and torn off roofs.

A totaled car waits to be towed at the devastated Exxon gas station off of South Fairplay Street.

The wall of a bedroom ripped off during the storm at Dave West’s house. Members of Utica and Westminster Baptist Church lended a helping hand to clear the debris from his property.

Nina Webb, left, and Ivy Newman, right, comfort Jessica Smith as she watches the front porch of her mother’s home get torn away due to the damage from the severe storm that hit Seneca on Monday morning.

Missy Hartman hugs her daughter Jessica Smith after watching the front porch of their home get demolished due to severe damage caused by the E3 tornado that hit Seneca early Monday morning. Hartman says she has lived at the house since 1996. Based off the damage the home suffered she says they will most likely have to demolish the entire house. “That was everything I had right there in that house,” she said.











