“Pretty much everyone was telling the same story,” said Father Warren Tanghe, pastor of St. Paul, a historic church located at the top of the hill on St. Paul Street, which saw a deluge but not to the extent of the parallel and also steeply-inclined Main Street, where most of the damage and mayhem – including two deaths – in Ellicott City occurred.
The stories, as related by Father Tanghe, were of a nice night out in a nice town, and a nice meal in a restaurant, with a view of rain falling at an increasingly remarkable clip.

Father Tanghe received a phone call from a concerned parishioner between 8 and 8:30 p.m.
The woman was worried for the attendees of a night meeting at the church, and was especially adamant that they not attempt to leave via Main Street.
“She was clearly upset and traumatized, as anyone would be if you started seeing cars floating by with people in them,” Father Tanghe recalled.
When he hung up the phone, he started to notice people walking up St. Paul Street toward the church.
“Of course, they were (soaked),” he said, “because it was coming down like nobody’s business.”
Eventually, people were taking refuge in Dohony Hall, at the east end of the church campus, and in its Center for the New Evangelization, a newer building at the west end of campus.
“Father (Tanghe) came in and very pastorally said, ‘The weather is bad, and you guys can stay here as long as you need, including overnight,” said John Papania, business manager for St. Paul Parish. “He did everything he could from a pastoral point of view.”
According to Father Tanghe, the bulk of those who sheltered at St. Paul came from the Main Street food establishments on the south side of the street. Those on the other side of Main Street would have run up a different hill, he said.
An effort is underway to assess fully the damages to downtown Ellicott City, which were catastrophic.
The dead were identified as Joseph Blevins, 38, of Windsor Mill, and Jessica Watsula, 35, of Lebanon, Pa.
Audio of Father Tanghe follows; Story continues below
“The community is obviously in shock,” he said. “We’ve been hit and we’ve been hit hard.”
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