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This article originally provided by
The
Logan Banner
February 27, 2008
Buffalo Creek disaster remembered
By JERRY FEKETE, Banner Correspondent, and J.D. CHARLES, Staff Writer
Published: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 5:12 AM CST
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| On this day, 36 years ago, the Buffalo Creek flood washed away several
communities and took with it 126 lives. Another 4,000 people were left homeless
when the wall of water rushed through the Buffalo Creek area destroying
everything in its wake. Banner file photo |
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BUFFALO CREEK — Today marks the 36th anniversary of the Feb. 26, 1972 Buffalo
Creek Flood in which 126 people were killed and another 4,000 were left
homeless, their lives shattered, when a man-made coal slurry pond owned by
Pittston Coal Company burst, spilling millions of gallons of water down on
Buffalo Creek and destroying everything in its path.
The flood wiped out 17 small coal camps on its way through the valley.
Four years ago, on the 32nd anniversary, Rev. Robert Peters remembered in an
interview with The Logan Banner that tragic day in which his mother and father,
Herbert and Martha Peters, were killed by the wall of rushing water that
destroyed most of Buffalo Creek.
"I was working in the mines for Pittston at Toney Fork just three miles above
where the dam collapsed," he said. "I was 38 years old at the time. I was
working laying blocks just inside the drift mouth of the mines and my boss was
Bill Merritt. We started about 7 a.m. that morning and the power went off ...
just a little while later my brother in-law, James Isom, was there. I just knew
something was wrong. James told me that we lost mom and dad. I just fell apart.
They took my truck keys from me."
Peters' voice wavered as he continued his tragic story.
"We went down there to the old home place at Pardee and there was nothing left
there — the railroad ties was turned up into a U shape. I started hollering for
mom and dad on the hill. I then walked up the hillside and walked three miles
down the mountain looking for them. I saw hundreds of people on the hillside. I
walked to Stowe looking for them (but) couldn't find them. Then I headed back to
Toney Fork and walked over the mountain into Curtis," he said.
Peters claims the disaster might have been more man-made than most people
realize.
"I then walked up to the dam after the water had went down," Peters said. "I saw
some blasting caps and I followed the cable back onto the point where there was
a beech tree. There I saw a battery charger. I have always felt bad at myself
because I didn't take a picture of it. "I don't believe they intended to blow up
the dam, but to just try to relieve some pressure. It was a negligent crime, not
willful. There was some fellows who thought they were more qualified than they
were. Late that evening, I took my truck and headed to the head of Buffalo Creek
over into Boone County to my cousin, John Dempsey's house at Greenwood. You
couldn't get down Buffalo Creek — the road was wiped out."
Peters said the tragedy did not end at this point.
"I then headed back to Curtis later that day to my house," he said. "My wife
was in the hospital at Logan and was in a coma for 30 days before the flood.
Then I had another terrible experience when I walked down to Three Forks. Tenace
Simple, a friend, had took a rope and tied it to his wife Goldie and pulled her
out of the raging water. They hollered for me to come over were she was laying,
I grabbed her hand and started praying for her, I could hear her heart beating
but then her heart stopped beating and she died as I was praying for her. We had
to set there and watch her die. I still had my mining work clothes on and was
heading over into Elk Creek as it began to get late that evening. That's where I
spent the night at Ub and Helen Morgan's house. We attended church together.
''They gave me clothes and took me to the morgue at South Man Grade School the
next day to see if I could identify my mother and father, but they weren't
there. The next week, they told me they thought they found mom. I went in there
and, sure enough, it was mom. She had only one scar on her face. Two weeks
later, I was called in to see if I could find dad. There were special police in
there from California, working in the morgue. I remember they put me on a lift
and lifted me to the ceiling of the gym. My head was against the top of the
roof, I had to look down and try to see if I could see dad. I spotted a man with
gray hair that looked like him and pointed it out to them. Sure enough, it was
dad."
The area has seen many changes since the tragedy, Peters said in that interview.
"The only thing I like today about Buffalo Creek is the new road," he said.
"Back then in the 40s and WWII it was a far bigger like Logan. Lorado was
booming. It was so clean, and we had sidewalks — you could buy anything at the
Lorado Company Store. Furniture, dry goods, hardware, even a tailor made suit.
We had a movie theater, barber shop and a beer garden. The company even
sponsored a church, a doctor's office and more. Today you have to drive two
miles to get a loaf of bread. Also, back then everyone cared for each other in
the coal camps. The love and caring was there people would go to the extreme to
help each other. Today, people just drive on by. It's sad.
Peters, who found redemption and salvation through Christ in 1962, retired from
the coal mines in 1992.
Eddie Canterbury and others remember well the tragedy of the Buffalo Creek
flood.
When a dam burst one Saturday morning on Buffalo Creek in 1972, Eddie
Canterbury was just a young National Guardsman who got called out for help.
"On Saturday, Feb. 26, 1972, one of the worst man-made disasters in history hit
us," Canterbury said yesterday. "Over 120 people lost their lives when a dam
burst and a wall of water and coal waste 30 feet high rushed into the area."
Canterbury said that he had to get to Buffalo Creek through Kelly Mountain and
Amherstdale. When he arrived, survivors of the tragedy were covered with mud.
For the next 17 days, the young guardsman helped with the recovery effort.
Canterbury's unit was in charge of recovering bodies.
"I was in the National Guard and I was having breakfast that morning with Tom
George, who was the publisher of The Logan Banner at that time. We got a call
that something had happened. ...I was driving a jeep and the water came up over
the bumper at Morrison’s."
Canterbury said he was not prepared for the devastation the flood wrought. Steel
beams from bridges and railroad tracks were twisted like pretzels from the force
of the water.
"When the water came down at Pardee there was a mobile home there that it hit.
It literally burst," Canterbury said. "And yet the flood would hit one house and
not touch the next one right across the road from it. One house would be
destroyed and the next would be untouched. "
One Logan County deputy drove up the roads warning people the dam had burst,
and according to Canterbury many people would not have known what was about to
hit them.
"You have to remember, this was at 8 o'clock on a Saturday morning when most
people were sleeping in. A lot of people had no warning. People at Pardee and
Lorado were trapped in their houses. There were 57 bodies recovered at one
bridge alone. National Guard trucks drove up and down creeks to gain access to
populated areas because the bridges were often washed out or destroyed.
Canterbury said the weather was very warm when the flood hit, but soon it got
much colder, which affected the recovery effort, making it harder.
To add insult to injury, the guardsmen had to deal with looters the first
night of the flood.
"We were not armed then, but we were the next night," Canterbury said, adding
that the guardsmen were grateful to the Salvation Army for the help they
received as well as meals. When supplies and mobile homes were sent in, the
Oceana Police gave them tickets. "The governor sent some very mean state police
in to deal with them. After that the relief people came through... I went up to
the last coal camp, Curtis, and it was like being in another world."
Canterbury shared his experiences in a past interview. He spoke about his own
first-hand experiences in digging bodies out of the clinging mud and added that,
today, Buffalo Creek does not even resemble what it looked like before the
devastating flood.
"You can only imagine the devastation this thing caused," he said.
"The wall of water was 30 feet high. It was the first time I ever lifted a body
with rigor mortis. It was like lifting concrete. A lot of people’s lives were
forever changed that day forever — whole families were lost. I was only 24 years
old and it was rough on me to experience that as just a kid.
Of all the hardship and difficulty, Canterbury said the hardest thing to deal
with was recovering the corpses.
"It was a thing I never want to experience again," he said.
The son of the man who warned Logan County of the Buffalo Creek Flood recalled
more of that fateful day of horror which will forever live on in the memories of
people who experienced it first hand.
Ronald H. Scaggs is the son of Buffalo Creek survivor Garland Scaggs, who
recently passed away.
Garland Scaggs will probably always be remembered for being the first person to
contact the local radio station, warning people that the Buffalo Creek dam was
about to break and they needed to evacuate the area when the water burst through
and flooded the area. More than 100 lives were lost in the flood.
"Dad was at the Amherst Coal Company store the morning of the flood," Scaggs
told The Logan Banner. "He was shooting the bull with some of his friends. In
walked Steve Dasovich who was running Buffalo Mining at the time. Steve was
looking for some rain suits for those of us at Lorado at the time. Steve had
just given me his rain jacket before he went to Lundale. He told those there
that everyone was afraid the dam was going to burst at Three Forks. There were
no rain suits so Steve went back up Buffalo Creek toward Lorado."
Scaggs said the disaster happened within moments.
"Not long after that Dad and his friends heard a very loud roar. They looked
outside and all they could see was debris — pieces of houses, a woman on a
mattress, etc." he said. "They saw no water at the time. Dad ran to his car and
drove to his and Mom's house at Robinette. He got out about 50 yards ahead of
the debris. On the way, he saw some men on the bridge at Stowe. He stopped and
asked them what they were doing there. They told him they were told by an
Amherst Coal Company official to go there and take a woman off a mattress as she
went by. Dad told them they were not going to be able to do that because of the
massiveness of the debris in front of the flood and that they needed to get to
high ground. They did just that. He drove on home and told Mom to go to a
neighbor's house on the hill behind theirs. He called the radio station and
talked with Bill Becker. He then tried calling our home to see where I was. The
phone went dead. He then went up the hill behind the house and watched as the
flood went by. He did not see the crack in the dam. He was not an inspector. He
was the payroll manager for Amherst Coal. "
Scaggs said that Marty Backus of the Beckley Register Herald had once done a
story on the incident what was accurate to what had happened that day.
"I believe Marty was working at the radio station that Bill Becker owned and
maybe received the call from Dad," he explained.
Some people's lives were destroyed by the Buffalo Creek Flood. Others have
managed to overcome the tragedy.
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