Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle as one of the most powerful storms ever to hit the U.S. mainland.
/ 29 PHOTOS
Mexico Beach
The coastal township of Mexico Beach lays devastated after Hurricane Michael made landfall on Wednesday in the Florida Panhandle.
Hurricane Michael's battering waves swamped streets and docks and shrieking winds splintered trees and rooftops.
— Douglas R. Clifford / Tampa Bay Times via AP
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Mexico Beach
Debris from homes destroyed by Hurricane Michael litters the coastal township.
— Douglas R. Clifford / Tampa Bay Times via AP
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Callaway
A mother and her son walk down a street damaged by Hurricane Michael.
— Jonathan Bachman / Reuters
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Springfield
Michael Williams, 70, waves to passing motorists while looking for food and water as downed trees prevent him from driving out of his damaged home with his family in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael.
— David Goldman / AP
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Panama City
Paul Dean stands in front of his damaged property.
— Emily Kask / AFP - Getty Images
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Panama City
Joyce Fox stands in front of her heavily damaged home in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael.
— Gerald Herbert / AP
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Panama City
The hurricane hit the Florida Panhandle as a category 4 storm.
Amanda Logsdon begins the process of trying to clean up her home after the roof was blown off by the passing winds of hurricane Michael.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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Panama City
Residents clear a road of fallen trees.
— Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images
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Panama City
A woman and her children wait near a destroyed gas station after the storm passed on Oct. 10.
— Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images
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Panama City
Boats that were docked are piled on top of each other at a marina.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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Panama City
Shredded trees, derailed train cars and a sunken trailer lie next to a road in the storm's aftermath.
— Gerald Herbert / AP
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Panama City
Haley Nelson inspects her family's destroyed house.
— Pedro Portal / Miami Herald via AP
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Panama City Beach
A woman checks on her vehicle just after the hotel canopy collapsed as Hurricane Michael passed through.
Hurricane Michael made landfall in Florida on Wednesday afternoon as an intense Category 4 storm — the strongest ever to hit that part of the state in recorded history, with winds gusting at 155 mph.
— Gerald Herbert / AP
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Panama City Beach
A storm chaser climbs into his vehicle as the eye of the storm passed to retrieve equipment after a hotel canopy collapsed.
— Gerald Herbert / AP
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Panama City
Mike Lindsey stands in his antique shop after the winds from hurricane Michael broke the windows in his shop.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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Panama City
A tree is downed in front of a damaged home.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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St. Marks
Bo Lynn's Market starts taking water as Hurricane Michael pushes the storm surge up the Wakulla and St. Marks Rivers.
— Mark Wallheiser / Getty Images
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Panama City Beach
Cameron Sadowski walks through crashing surf on the beach as the outer bands of Hurricane Michael arrive.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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St. Marks
Carrying a dog, Jayden Morgan, 11, evacuates his home as water starts to flood his neighborhood in St. Marks.
— Brendan Farrington / AP
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Panama City Beach
Emily Hindle lies on the floor at an evacuation shelter set up at Rutherford High School.
— Gerald Herbert / AP
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Panama City Beach
Waves crash along a pier.
The Gulf Coast resort town — and the larger destination of neighboring Panama City — has beckoned vacationers and spring break partiers for decades with its emerald waters and sugar white sands.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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International Space Station
Hurricane Michael churns in the Gulf of Mexico in this view captured from the space station. "Stay safe America," tweeted astronaut Serena Aunon-Chancellor.
— NASA
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Alligator Point
Waves crash against a house as Hurricane Michael comes ashore.
— Carlo Allegri / Reuters
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Ozello
Krystal Day, of Homosassa, Florida, left, leads a sandbag assembly line at the Old Port Cove restaurant as employees try to protect the restaurant from floodwaters.
— Chris O'Meara / AP
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Mexico Beach
Carol Cathey paints the words "Calm down Michael" on the plywood over her daughter's business.
— Joe Raedle / Getty Images
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Panama City
People take photos on the beach the night before the storm's arrival.