Editor’s note: Next week the Center for Rural Strategies, which publishes the Daily Yonder, will post the digital premiere of “East Kentucky Flood,” a half-hour documentary about the July 27, 2022, flash flood that killed 43 people and displaced thousands. This clip from the documentary features Gwen Johnson with the Hemphill Community Center in Letcher County.
When the roads finally opened in Eastern Kentucky after July’s deadly flash flood, help rolled into the small mountain community of Hemphill from some unlikely sources, according to resident Gwen Johnson.
Along with customary donations like canned goods and water, a rental truck arrived full of coolers of meat and a new gas grill, Johnson said. Three men got out of the truck and started setting up shop.
“They said, ‘We’ve come to cook for you all,’” said Johnson.
And cook they did: hamburgers, hot dogs, steaks, and even Spam, a mountain delicacy in the right hands.
“The next morning when I get down here, they say, ‘We got you breakfast over here,’” Johnson said. “And they fixed me up with a Spam sandwich on white bread. Now I really never tasted nothing no better.”
The men seemed to be in especially good spirits, fueled by the joy of volunteerism, perhaps. Libation may have played a role, as well.
“They stayed with us three days,” Johnson said. “I don’t think they drew a sober breath while they was here. They just kept on a-cooking.”
Johnson said the men disappeared as quickly as they came, leading her to call them “the drunk angels.”
“I mean they were unlikely-looking angels, but I really believe they were angels.”
Johnson’s story is part of a Center for Rural Strategies documentary detailing the efforts of several East Kentucky communities to recover from the 2022 flash flood that killed 43 people and left thousands homeless.
The half-hour video has aired regionally and will air statewide at 10 p.m. EST, on Wednesday, Feb. 15, on the Kentucky public television network, KET. The video will be available for streaming the next day.
Johnson helps coordinate the Hemphill Community Center, which serves as an epicenter of recovery efforts in the former coal-camp town, also known as Jackhorn.
Nearly a foot of rain fell on the region July 27, resulting in regional flood levels up to 40% higher than previous records.
This photo is repulished with permmission. Read the original here.
The Daily Yonder is a nonprofit newsroom that provides news, commentary and analysis about and for rural America. It is the news platform for the Center for Rural Strategies, which has offices in Whitesburg, Kentucky, and Knoxville, Tennessee.