Charley’s aftermath
![Gathering aid People bring donations to help victims of Hurricane Charley to the News Center in Tampa, Sunday.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/22393e5/2147483647/strip/true/crop/289x350+0+0/resize/289x350!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.trbimg.com%2Fimg-512950c8%2Fturbine%2Fsfl-815charley.jpg)
Gathering aid
People bring donations to help victims of Hurricane Charley to the News Center in Tampa, Sunday. (AP PHOTO/TODD L. CHAPPEL)
Orlando Sentinel
Homeowners near Oviedo tack down a tarp over their exposed roof, left bare by Charley. The storm scoured shingles off the rooftops of dozens of homes near Chiles Middle School. (HILDA M. PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
David J. Migeneault sits in his devastated law office in The Professional Building in downtown Punta Gorda on Saturday. He is clearing it out after Charley ripped through town on Friday packing 145-mph winds. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Vehicles heading back to the Gulf Coast clog Interstate 4 on Saturday. One man returning to Treasure Island spent more than six hours on the road. (HILDA M. PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Diners line up Saturday at Louie’s Bar-B-Q on U.S. Highway 17-92 in Sanford. Despite having no power himself, owner Tim Carner (right) set up grills in front of the restaurant. (DENNIS WALL/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Christopher Columbus, 71, cleans up one of his two mobile homes that were destroyed by Hurricane Charley in Punta Gorda. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
A shredded palm tree stands among the rubble in Punta Gorda after hurricane Charley passed through the night before. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Jaqui Krouze (left), Shirley Rangeloff and Victor Rangeloff can’t believe their eyes upon entering their neighborhood in the Windmill Village mobile home park in Punta Gorda. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Jack McAllister is comforted by neighbors, Shirley Rangeloff (center) and Jacqui Krouze (background) in their Windmill Village neighborhood of Punta Gorda. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Dave Stokes of the Charlotte County Fire Department looks for bodies among the rubble in Windmill Village mobile home in Punta Gorda. Two people were feared dead from the community, but neighbors found them alive and well. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Marilyn Bean fights back tears and emotion upon seeing her home for the first time after Hurricane Charley swept through the Windmill Village mobile home park in Punta Gorda. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
A hair salon in the historic district of Punta Gorda had its roof blown off during Hurricane Charley. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Rose Sneider takes photos of her property in Punta Gordon. “It looks like a war zone,” she said Saturday, a day after Hurricane Charley tore through. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Christopher Smith rides his bike down Marion Avenue early Saturday morning in Punta Gorda. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Lois West salvages a toaster oven from the rubble as Lucien Jones looks through the refrigerator. They live together at Slip Knot Mobile Home Park in Punta Gorda. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
David J. Migneault sits in his law office in The Professional Building in downtown Punta Gorda. He is clearing it out after Hurricane Charley swept through a day earlier. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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An trailer flipped in this front yard in Punta Gorda when Hurricane Charley swept through a day earlier. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Audrey Desforge is filled with “dispair and disbelief”. She and her husband, Moe, came back to their mobile home in Windmill Village to get personal belongings. They have lived there since 1983. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Moe Desforge lays on a matress and digs through a dresser for some personal belongings and clothes. He and his wife, Audrey, have lived at Windmill Village since 1983. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Bob Healy, a recent resident at Windmill Village, packed his bags to leave. His home was demolished. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Residents walk through Windmill Village on Saturday after the devastation of Hurricane Charley. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Amy Harris tries to get together her office files for Windmill Village. She is the manager there. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Hurricane Charley devastated Windmill Village in Punta Gorda. (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Anne M. Loehnert (left) sits on what was her home with her friend, Jane McCallum (right) at Windmill Village in Punta Gorda. She is looking for her cat and says “I just got the clothes on my back.” (JULIE FLETCHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Fallen trees block the roads on George Avenue and North Maitland Avenue in Maitland in the aftermath of Hurricane Charley on Saturday. Damaged trees may be in the thousands, an Orlando parks employee said. (RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA /ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Joshua Portes, 13, (left) and Pedro Medrano remove a tree limb from a home in Altamonte Springs in the aftermath of Hurricane Charley on Saturday. (RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Pearl Johnson (right) gets a hug from neighbor Esther Dutt in front of her home of in southeast Orlando on Saturday. Esther’s husband, Kenneth Dutt, stands at left. During Hurricane Charley, a giant oak split with half of the tree landing on the house and the other half landing on the street. (BOBBY COKER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Pearl Johnson looks at a limb from a giant oak Saturday that came through her garage ceiling in her southeast Orlando home durint Hurricane Charley. (BOBBY COKER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Orlando Police officer Dave Vernon steps out of an East Colonial Drive business that had its front window blown out by Hurricane Charley. (BOBBY COKER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Herbert Neilson surveys the damage to a pick-up truck as he goes car shopping at a used car lot on Colonial Drive. (RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Pat Turner, 76, of Daytona Beach lost everything in her apartment off State Road A1A during Hurricane Charley. She takes a look at the damage on Saturday. (EILEEN MARIE SIMONEAU/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Rick Constantino of Daytona Beach checks out Charley damage at the Bell Air Condominium in Daytona Beach. (EILEEN MARIE SIMONEAU/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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The Ranger Aviation hanger at Kissimee Gateway Airport in Osceola County was shredded by Hurricane Charley. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Many trees toppled over roofs in Central Florida homes from Hurricane Charley such as this one in east Orange County. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
The roof at the gym of Poinciana High School in Osceola County had major damage from Hurricane Charley. Other schools around Central Florida had losses from Friday night’s storm. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
A homeowner at the Whispering Pines Mobile Home Park in Osceola County takes belongings outside after Hurricane Charley. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Hurricane Charley downed trees on a golf course in Kissimmee in Osceola County. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Orlando Executive Airport suffered considerable damage in the hangars and to the planes after Hurricane Charley. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Cleanup from Hurricane Charley continued Saturday at damaged businesses like this furniture store along State Road 50 in Orlando. (HILDA M PEREZ/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
As a result of Hurricane Charley, Janet Parker (right) lost the brick wall of her Oak Park subdivision behind her home east of Casselberry as well as her pool screen. Surveying the damage with her are her sister Jeana Houghton (left) and Patrick Houghton. (DENNIS WALL/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
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Power poles blown over by Hurricane Charley lie across Lake Margaret Dr. in southeast Orlando Saturday, August 14, 2004. (Bobby Coker/ Orlando Sentinel)
“What do we do now?” asked John Morrison, wondering aloud how he and his wife of 57 years, Jewel Morrison, are going to pick up the pieces of their Punta Gorda mobile home left behind by Hurricane Charley. “I don’t even know where to begin, but it’s just stuff, right? We have each other and that’s the most important thing.” (Melissa Lyttle/South Florida Sun-Sentinel)
Hurricane Charley ripped through Punta Gorda Regional Airport, causing extensive damage. (Mike Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel)
With the roads closed off to most vehicles, Marion Lindley, 87, of Punta Gorda uses her tricycle to maneuver through the devastation of what used to be the Parkhill Mobile Home Park where she retired about 12 years ago. “I just can’t believe my eyes,” said Lindley, who stops to take a picture of the damage caused to a neighbor’s home by Hurricane Charley. (Melissa Lyttle/South Florida Sun-Sentinel)
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This 1993 Ford Festiva was smashed by trees downed during Hurrican Charley at the home of Chuck Ellis and Tracy Hickson on Sandspur Road in Maitland. (Miriam Lorenzi/Orlando Sentinel)
Lia Piantini sits in Livingston Street in the Colonialtown area of Orlando and makes a telephone call as a huge fallen tree blocks the road Saturday. (BOBBY COKER/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Safe inside on Saturday morning, Tracy Hickson calls family while surveying the massive Oak tree that narrowly missed her home on Sandspur Road in Maitland. (MIRIAM LORENZI/ORLANDO SENTINEL)
A TG Lee Dairy semi trailer tipped over by Hurricane Charley on east Livingston St in Orlando on Saturday, August 14, 2004. (Bobby Coker/ Orlando Sentinel)
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Richard Gazda emerges from flood water after trying to clean out the drains near his home in Naples Fla. after Hurricane Charley moved through the area, Friday, Aug. 13, 2004. (AP PHOTO/NAPLES DAILY NEWS, JUSTIN L. FOWLER)
Randy Riker (left) and Stu Middleton survey damage from Hurricane Charley at Whidden’s Marina on the southern tip of Boca Grande on Friday. Parts of Southwest Florida were devastated. (GARY W. GREEN/ORLANDO SENTINEL)