By Associated Press - Monday, September 5, 2011

ATLANTA — The slow-moving remnants of Tropical Storm Lee dumped rain across the South and whipped up twisters that damaged dozens of Georgia homes as the system pushed farther inland on Monday. One death was reported, and at least one person was injured.

In Mississippi, a man was swept away by floodwaters after trying to cross a swollen creek, the first death caused by flooding or winds from Lee. The system was sweeping through Alabama and pushing into Tennessee and Georgia by the afternoon.

Suspected twisters ripped off siding and shingles and sent trees crashing through roofs in Cherokee County, about 30 miles north of Atlanta. The Georgia Emergency Management Agency said about 100 homes were damaged there. One man was taken to the hospital with superficial injuries after he was hit by flying debris.

Mickey Swims and his wife hid in the basement of their house in Woodstock as an apparent tornado passed.

“I heard it and saw the trees go around and around,” he said. “I knew when I heard it that if it touched down, it was going to be bad.”

Mr. Swims owns the Dixie Speedway, where he estimated the storm caused $500,000 worth of damage. That includes about 2,000 feet of chain-link fence uprooted from its concrete base, walls blown out of a bathroom and concession stands and tractor-trailer trucks turned into mangled messes.

In other parts of the state, six families were evacuated from a Catoosa County apartment building because of flooding, while slick roads caused an 18-car pileup in Monroe County, said agency spokeswoman Lisa Janak. No one was injured in those cases.

“Tropical Storm Lee really made a mess in Georgia,” she said.

In areas of Louisiana and Mississippi that took the brunt of the storm over the weekend, at least 16,000 people were without power as of Monday afternoon. Lee’s center came ashore Sunday in Louisiana, dumping up to a foot of rain in parts of New Orleans and other areas. Despite some street flooding, officials said New Orleans’ 24-pump flood-control system was doing its job.

Heavy rain continued to fall in Mississippi on Monday, and a swollen creek near an apartment complex in Jackson prompted officials to move 45 families into a storm shelter. In Louisiana’s Livingston Parish, about 200 families were evacuated because of flooding.

The man who died in Mississippi, John Howard Anderson Jr., 57, had been in a car with two other people trying to cross a rain-swollen creek on Sunday night. Tishomingo County Coroner Mack Wilemon said Mr. Anderson was outside of the car and couldn’t hold onto a rope thrown by a would-be rescuer.

Elsewhere, the heavy rain made for a dud of a Labor Day holiday as Gulf Coast beaches mostly cleared of tourists. On Monday morning, the main road on Alabama’s Dauphin Island was flooded and covered with sand, jellyfish and foam washed in by Lee.

The storm was expected to move up the Tennessee River Valley on Tuesday, and forecasters have warned people to be on the lookout for tornadoes. Several already had been reported, including one that damaged five homes in Harrison County.

Rain already had started falling in Tennessee, though no campers had been evacuated from Great Smoky Mountain National Park, officials said.

The rain had stopped out in the Gulf of Mexico, allowing oil- and gas-production platforms and rigs to look for damage and get operations kick-started again on Monday. Federal regulators said evacuations had shut down about 61 percent of oil production and 46 percent of natural-gas production in the Gulf.

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