Its tributaries are Brushy Run, Mill Run, Indian Camp Run, Buck Run, and Dutch Fork. These streams flow through the townships of East Findley, Donegal, Hopewell, and Buffalo, and the creek itself empties into the Ohio River[6] at Wellsburg, West Virginia
The stream was possibly named for a Buffalo trace that once passed through the valley.[7][8]
History
The Buffalo Creek area was first visited by Europeans in the 1600s by LaSalle. Later in 1749, Captain Celeron de Blainville sailed down the Ohio River planting lead plates to claim land for France. These claims were then nullified during the Treaty of Paris of 1763.[9]
Settlement of the watershed began in the early 1770s with James Caldwell. In 1773, Thomas Clark and some Germans settled along Dutch Fork, hence the name of the tributary.[7]
The mouth of Buffalo Creek was the location of Wells Fort. A number of other forts were located in the watershed and include Rail's Fort (1770s), Ramsey's Fort (1770s) - near Bethany, and a blockhouse called Coon's Fort east of Bethany.[10]
A stockade, called Rices Stockade, was located near the present Town of Bethany. Rices Stockade was the scene of an Indian raid in 1782.[11]
The Washington County part of the watershed had an additional eight forts (see reference for names).[7]
The watershed was the location of a number of mills, the most prominent of which was Waugh's Mill (a flour mill)[12] built in the 1790s.[13]
Oil was discovered in the watershed at Taylorstown, Pennsylvania in 1885.[14]
Course
Buffalo Creek rises at Pleasant Grove, Pennsylvania, in Washington County and then follows a westerly course into West Virginia to join the Ohio River at Wellsburg, West Virginia.[3]
Watershed
Buffalo Creek drains 162.71 square miles (421.4 km2) of area, receives about 40.1 in/year of precipitation, has a wetness index of 316.09, and is about 80% forested.[5]