The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Body found of man who disappeare­d amid flooding

- By David McFadden The Associated Press

ELLICOTT CITY, MD. » Searchers scouring a river Tuesday that runs alongside a historic Maryland town ripped apart by flash flooding found the body of a man last seen being swept away by brown waters racing downhill, gutting shops and pushing parked cars into bursting tributarie­s.

Volunteers and crews with trained dogs had been methodical­ly hunting for 39-year-old Eddison Hermond who disappeare­d Sunday afternoon, following torrential rains that prompted destructiv­e flash flooding in historic Ellicott City for the second time in less than two years.

On Tuesday afternoon, his body was located in the Patapsco River. He was the only person reported missing in Ellicott City — establishe­d in 1772 as a mill town surrounded by hills — where many now can’t get the roar of rushing floodwater­s out of their heads.

“To have died helping somebody else is incredible. And I can’t even imagine the loss his family is suffering,” said Nicholas Johnson, owner of a store near the spot where Hermond vanished while trying to help a woman who had escaped through a window with her cat.

Hermond, of Severn, Maryland, was a veteran of the U.S. Air Force and a sergeant in the Maryland Army National Guard. He was described by those who knew him as an affable, generous man.

With waters receded, residents of the flood-prone Maryland town are facing another daunting comeback less than two years since another terrible flood deluged their beloved downtown, smashing inventory and ripping up floors and pavement.

Some people in Ellicott City’s historic downtown say they are determined to rebuild after Sunday’s devastatio­n.

Their hope: to pull together as a community once again and live up the nickname “Ellicott City Strong,” which many locals are now repeating as a sort of mantra.

Simon Cortes, owner of La Palapa Grill & Cantina, said it’s “a horrible time,” and his business took on about a foot of water. But he notes the quaint old town has been through it all before, and he’ll do his part to spur another revival.

“I feel like it’s our duty to make sure that we rebuild and open back up,” said Cortes, whose restaurant Hermond was visiting before being swept away by Sunday’s raging floodwater­s.

Others are stretched to the breaking point by the floods, which tore up streets and swept away dozens of cars in the quaint downtown of historic 18th and 19th century buildings, which sit in a ravine some 13 miles west of Baltimore.

Another massive cleanup, serious economic losses and a daunting comeback couldn’t come at a worse time. Sunday’s torrential rains came just as the commercial district seemed to come back stronger than ever from a dreadful July 2016 flash flood that killed two people.

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