Buffalo Creek Showing Signs Of New Life, 49 Years After Sludge Spill
Today {February 26} is the 49th anniversary of one of the worst mining catastrophes in West Virginia history, the Buffalo Creek Disaster. More than 100 people died in southern West Virginia when a dam failed.
Gov. Justice visited the Buffalo Creek Memorial to lay a wreath remembering victims of the disaster. He also met with the Buffalo Creek Watershed for a ceremonial stocking of over 1,400 trout in the creek. Restoration work started about 20 years ago.
In 1972, coal companies said an act of God caused a dam holding 132-million gallons of black water to break. State and federal investigations found Pittston Coal was directly to blame for the dams failure. The collapse killed 125 people injuring over 1,100, and left 4,000 people homeless.
The watershed is now touted as one of southern West Virginias most popular trout streams. The Buffalo Creek Watershed covers about 20 miles of stream from the headwaters of Curtis to the Town of Man. Perry Harvey is a member of the Watershed and a survivor of the disaster.
Read more: https://www.wvpublic.org/government/2021-02-26/buffalo-creek-is-showing-signs-of-new-life-49-years-after-sludge-spill