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'This too shall pass': After flood, Welch residents reflect, clean up, move forward

Nearly three weeks after record-setting flooding struck the southern West Virginia community of Welch in McDowell County, locals are still digging river mud out of basements and relying on donated bottled water for safe, clean drinking water. ÂÒÂ×ÄÚÉä Gazette-Mail staff visited Welch on March 4, 2025, to observe the current state of communities surrounding Welch and how recovery from the flood is progressing.

Nearly three weeks after floodwaters engulfed southern West Virginia, Welch, in McDowell County, remains caked in mud. Towns across the coalfields are still digging out, one wheelbarrow of debris at a time.

The initial shock has given way to determination. Residents are proud of the community's display of resilience. What they say is a lack of outside assistance has led neighbors and volunteers to step in.

Welch Flooding -- MAIN

Jack Watson dumps a wheelbarrow of mud on the street, on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in front of a neighbor’s house by where he and his wife Kathy Watson live on Lake Drive in Welch.

Welch Flooding

A house on Riverside Drive in Welch Tuesday, March 4, 2025, where a hillside across the road had slid down into the front yard and the Tug Fork River had flooded the backyard during the rainstorm and flooding in February.

Welch Flooding

Flood debris lies next to the Tug Fork River in downtown Welch on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, after the river had gone back down following the flooding in February.

Morrisey, Seward tour flooding in Welch

Gov. Patrick Morrisey (left), Brig. Gen. Jim Seward, adjutant general of the West Virginia National Guard, and a West Virginia State Police trooper from Morrisey’s security detail tour flood-damaged Welch, McDowell County, on Feb. 17, 2025.

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Welch Flooding - SECOND -- Aerial

A dust cloud settled over downtown Welch in McDowell County, as seen in this aerial photo on March 4, 2025. The dust cloud was a result of dried mud from the Tug Fork River left behind after flooding on Feb. 16, 2025.

Welch Flooding

RIGHT: On Tuesday, March 4, 2025, Sandi Blankenship, executive director of God’s Grace Ministries, shows how high the February flood waters got into the basement of her building in Welch. She and her ministry has helped with flood recovery efforts in Welch.

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Welch Flooding - SECOND -- Aerial
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Welch Flooding -- MAIN
Welch Flooding

Welch Elementary School teacher Kimberly Pendry stands in the mud outside her house on Riverside Drive in Welch on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, near where the flooding Tug Fork river had covered her front and back yard and entered the crawl space under her house.

Welch Flooding

Welch Elementary School Principal Sarah Diaz inside the school in Welch Tuesday, March 4, 2025. The school sustained little flood damage but many of the teachers and students had their homes flooded by the Tug Fork River and creeks in the area causing the county schools to suspend classes for weeks.

Welch Flooding

Workers with Cotton Global Disasters restoration company from South Carolina clean the windows of the Sip & Spill restaurant on the ground floor of the Renaissance Village apartment building in Welch on Tuesday, March 4, 2025. Bags and boxes of donations sit on the sidewalk in the foreground.

Sierra Marling covers health and education. Reach her at 502-783-6738 or . Follow on X.