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Florida first-grader donates lemonade stand money to help victims of Hurricane Dorian

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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — After Hurricane Dorian devastated parts of the Bahamas, 6-year-old Elliott Lefko decided to hold a lemonade stand outside his family’s Florida home to help victims of the Category 5 storm.

“I’ve always wanted to do a lemonade stand,” Elliott said.

His parents, Justin and Lauren, said they decided on a lemonade stand one night after watching coverage on television showing Bahamians suffering from lack of water, food and shelter. The family had a discussion and then quickly got to work.

“We sent it to our neighbors and we posted it just on Facebook like, 'hey look what he’s doing today' kind of thing, and then it just exploded. We had online donations and people wanted us to start a Venmo,” Lauren Lefko said.

The first-grader made a homemade sign and set up shop early Wednesday morning while his school was still closed due to the storm potentially making landfall in South Florida. What the family thought would be a two-hour activity turned into six hours outside and raising more than $500.

“My dad had to run back to the store and buy some more lemonade,” Elliott said.

The parents said they were blown away by their son’s friends who brought their own money from piggy banks and the tooth fairy to donate as well.

“For me, that was touching. It was really neat to see the kids actually do something and feel that they were contributing," Elliott's father said. "They were literally giving everything that they had."

The family went to a Walmart store on Friday night to buy items like tents, first aid kits, blow-up mattresses and sheets to donate to a local charity collecting items to take over to the Bahamas in the coming days.

This story was originally published by Jillian Idle on WPTV.