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Fire!
When the Forest Reserves were created, the most responsible work of the early Forest
Rangers was undoubtedly fire fighting and fire protection. Before the creation of
the Forest Service little organized effort was undertaken to fight fires.
There had been many bad fires in the Southwest that had devastated thousands of
acres. On the mountains above Santa Fe a fire had raged for weeks in the 1880's.
Nothing was done to fight the fire; it was allowed to burn itself out, destroying
tremendous acreage of natural resources. Today the snags of that old fire and burned-over
areas may still be seen on the high mountain side.
The principal instruction given to new Rangers was to patrol their District and
watch for smokes. The Use Book (the manual of instructions) directed that "Officers
of the Forest Service, especially Forest Rangers, have no duty more important than
protecting the Reserves from forest fire."
"Generally the best tools for fighting fire are a shovel, mattock and ax," the Use
Book pointed out. "The Ranger should always carry at least an ax during all the
dangerous season."
The Use Book listed these general principles for fire fighting:
"Protect the valuable timber rather than the brush or waste.
"Never leave a fire, unless driven away, until it is entirely out.
"Young saplings suffer more than old mature timber.
"A surface fire in open woods, though not dangerous to old timber, does great harm
by killing seedlings.
"A fire rushes uphill, crosses crest slowly, and is more or less checked in traveling
down. Therefore, if possible, use the crest of the ridge and the bottom as lines
of attack.
"A good trail, a road, a stream, an open park check the fire. Use them whenever
possible.
"Damp or even dry sand or earth thrown on a fire is usually as effective as water
and easier to get."
On the day that Tom Stewart started his assignment on the Pecos Reserve in 1903,
he rode to the top of the mountains to look at his District. The first thing he
saw was smoke from two forest fires.
"I scratched my head and cussed," Stewart said, "and decided to handle them one
at a time."
For help on one, in the Sapello District, he rode fast to Rociada. Ranchers there
had seen the smoke and were already gathering tools when he arrived, so they hit
for the Sapello. The fire was controlled by next morning.
Without any sleep, Stewart then rode to the other fire, about two miles from the
village of Agua Negra.
Stewart rode into the placita, sought out the alcalde (justice of
the peace) and asked for his help to get men to fight the fire. The alcalde
at first was curt and brushed off the request: "I don't give a damn if the whole
Forest burns up."
Stewart let loose a stream of fluent Spanish, telling him that the people of the
village were users of the Forest, that they would be hurting themselves to let the
Forest burn, and that it was their duty to help put out the fire. He finally convinced
the alcalde, who then got on his horse and began to round up volunteers.
In no time he had collected 15 or 20 men.
"We worked from about 3 p.m. to 3 a.m.," Stewart said, "and we got that fire under
control. The alcalde agreed to stay in charge of the men. And you know, after
that he was the best cooperator I had in my District, right up to the day of his
death."
Roscoe Willson used to enjoy telling about how he had seen Halley's Comet while
he was fire fighting.
"We had a big fire up under the Mogollon Rim above Pleasant Valley," Willson recounted.
"That was in 1910. I went up there from Roosevelt and got the boys. We got some
cowboys too. It was mostly a ground fire. I remember fighting the fire there with
the boys. They were keeping it under control, so I took an old quilt and rolled
up and laid down. I looked up and could see this Halley's Comet just as plain. It
was streaking the whole sky."
Edward G. Miller, who made a life-long career of the Forest Service until his retirement
as Chief of the Division of Lands of the Regional Office, reminiscing about his
early years in the Service, recalled some incidents of fire fighting.
"When he was Ranger on the Flagstaff District, Ed Oldham had complete fire crews
organized from settlers," Miller related. "I can still see George Moore, with a
plow in his wagon, driving his team on a long trot toward a forest fire. You didn't
have to send for him; he watched for smokes and was on the way as soon as he saw
one. The same was true of a lot of those per diem guards, men who were not
part of the regular firemen's or lookouts' organizations. They were appointed as
supplementary guards to go to fires when they saw one, or when called upon by the
Ranger or his assistant. We used some Indians back in those days, but crews hadn't
been organized as they are today at the various Indian pueblos, on the Navajo Reservation,
and in some of the Spanish settlements. We depended largely upon the work crews
at the lumber camps. All the brush crew were trained in fire fighting. Also a lot
of the men around the sawmills had fought fires so often and so much, they were
first class hands."
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A monkey would have felt at home on early-day National Forest fire lookout
towers.
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The early fire guards had very little equipment to work with in fighting fires.
Henry Woodrow, long-time Ranger on the McKenna District of the Gila National Forest,
remembered that when he was first assigned as fire guard in 1909 "all the instruction
I had was to go up there and look out for firesand put them out."
"I packed my outfit, which consisted of chuck and bed, on one horse," Woodrow recounted.
"No tools were furnished me. I took my axe and a shovelall the equipment I
had with which to fight fires. No tent was furnished. The first fire I had occurred
on the West Fork of the Gila above the mouth of Turkey Feather Canyon. I rode to
the fire and found an old prospector camped near there by the name of Beauchamp.
He was an old timer in the country, and he already had part of a fire line started
around the fire, which by this time was burning half way up the side of Turkey Feather
Mountain.
"Later in the evening Robert Munro, who had just started work as forest guard, and
a Ranger by the name of Shanks from the Datil Forest, arrived. At that time there
were no telephone lines in the mountains so we had to rely on a messenger to carry
the news and gather up men. Some time during the night Ranger Stockbridge with two
firemen from Apache Cabin came to the fire. Next day Forest Ranger Herbert Fay from
Mogollon with a bunch of men, Bob Reid from Alma Ranger Station, Fred Smith from
Gila Station, Frank Andrews, Deputy Supervisor from Silver City, all were there.
By this time the hard wind had carried the fire all over the south side of Turkey
Feather Mountain and was finally corraled along the top of the ridge.
"When this fire was under control, another was discovered in McKenna Park which
I, with three other Forest Officers, soon got out. Then another was discovered at
Pryor and one on Little Creek south of E-E Corral. The one at Pryor was soon put
out about 100 acres. The one at Little Creek burned over about a section.
Forest Ranger B. H. Cross, from Pinos Altos Ranger Station, came to this fire with
several men and cowboys from the Heart Bar Ranch. Other Forest Officers on this
fire were Deputy Supervisor Frank Andrews, Rangers Bob Reid, Robert Munro.
"When this fire was controlled still another fire was discovered on head of Mogollon
Creek where the trail now crosses to Sycamore and Big Turkey Creek. We went to this
fire, that is, Frank Andrews, Bob Reid, Robert Munro, Fred Smith and I. Later in
the evening Rangers Stockbridge and Fay, and two fire guards came and we started
work on the fire during the night. Next day several cowboys came in from Cliff but
the fire kept traveling southwest at a rapid rate. We kept it from going north across
Mogollon Creek. Finally, on July 4 a light rain came and checked the fire. Next
day all the men went out except one fireman and me. In a day or two he went out
and left me to patrol. I kept patrol around the fire and kept it from breaking out.
I kept this up until July 23 when a general rain came and put it all out. This fire
burned over approximately five sections."
When the call comes for fire duty, it takes precedence over everything elseeven
a dish of long-awaited, mouth-watering ice cream.
That was the experience of Edward Ancona, another career man in the Forest Service,
now retired. He was telling about the time he was serving as Ranger on the Crown
King. It was hot there in the summer time. The only way they had to keep things
cold was to hang them down the well. Ice was almost unheard of. But one hot summer,
arrangements were made to ship in some ice.
"That was the only time I ever got mad, really sore at my job," Ancona said. "An
old fellow had some cows there in the Basin, and he had saved the cream for about
a week or two to make ice cream. The shipment of ice arrived, and the ice cream
was made, and we were all at this party. We were just about ready to serve the ice
cream when a fellow rode up outside and knocked on the door. 'Is the Ranger here?'
he called out. I scringed down in my chair, but somebody answered, 'He's over there.'
He looked over at me. 'Well, you've got a fire up on the ridge up above here. Lightning
just struck a big pine. I can see it from my place.'
"The call of duty was stronger than that of the ice cream. I had to leaveand
that's one of the big regrets of my life. I went out and sat by that burning tree
all night while my friends were eating up the little ice cream that there wasthe
only ice cream in Crown King in two years.
"But I put the fire out, by golly. I sat by it until there was nothing left of it."
Over on the Catalina District, Stanley Wilson was building a log fire-lookout on
Mt. Bigelow. It was a pretty rugged job, putting up the poles and an eight-foot
platform forty feet up. So when Wilson and Frank Howe came in tired on Saturday
night, they were saying how glad they were next day was a holiday.
"If there's a fire, I wouldn't go to it," Wilson said.
"Wouldn't you really, Stan?" Howe questioned.
"Of course not. Tomorrow's a holiday."
Then Wilson remembers that when they got to the cabin, word came that there was
a fire.
"So, of course, we started off to that fire. It was a little different from what
you start with now. We started to the fire, myself and Frank Howe, and a kid named
Pick and an old fellow by the name of Henry Hiller.
"We started afoot down the ridge on the back side of Bigelow, which was pretty rough
country, carryin' shovels. Pick was a big awkward kid, and every once in a while
he'd lose his shovel, and Frank Howe would say, 'Stan, Pick's lost his shovel.'
We'd stop and dig up his shovel for him. Well, finally we got to this fireit
was between Edgar and Alder Canyonson the east side of the Catalinas, and
we started at the top of the ridge between 'em. I said, 'Frank, you and Pick take
one side and Henry and I will take the other.' Well, actually we were whippin' with
pine boughs, not usin' our shovels. The last thing I heard of Frank Howe and Pick,
Frank said, 'Stan, Pick's lost his shovel, so how the devil do we fight the fire?'
I said, 'Go ahead and fight the fire.' So we fought that thing and we were doin'
pretty well 'til about 10 o'clock in the morning when the wind began to whip up.
Well, Henry Hiller was quite an old man, and he slipped and slid down the side of
the hill. A little tongue of fire got away from him, and that was that. It went
then for another week and burned 5,000 acres. There were many, many people on it
before it was finally put out. Now that's particularly interesting to me because
later on when I was in the Regional Office, we had a quota out here of 7,000 acres
for the whole Regionand I had burned most of that quota in one fire in my
day!"
Paul Roberts remembers that when he was Supervisor of the Sitgreaves National Forest
there were a few incendiary fires on the Lakeside District. Clarence Shumway was
the Ranger there.
"Everybody knew him, so I figured that he'd have a hard time detecting the culprit,"
Roberts said. "I had Bill Freeman, who was a resident of Snowflake, and Bill always
liked to work for different Federal agencies, so I had Bill play detective and go
up there and see if he could find, or apprehend, the incendiary.
"Bill went up and spent about a week up there, and thought that he had discovered
the culprit. He went to McNary where the JP was located then, to make arrangements
to bring the fellow into the JP and have a hearing. Well, while Bill was tellin'
the JP about the case, the JP became very interested in it and after a while he
said to Bill, 'Well, how much shall we fine him?' Bill said, 'We haven't found him
guilty yet.' And the JP said, 'Oh, Hell, he's guilty all right. It's just a question
of how much we'll fine him.' So Bill took him in the next day, I think and the JP
fined him $25 and costs. Well, $25 happened to be all the money the fellow had and
of course that didn't leave the JP anything, so he rescinded the $25 and fined the
fellow $22.50, plus $2.50 court costs!"
Another problem Roberts recalled was the danger of fire from some of the farmers
who would want to smoke out bees in a bee-tree.
"We had one case on the Pinedale District where a fellow smoked out the bees, but
he hadn't put his fire out and the fire spread a little bit. Dolph Slosser, who
was a pretty good detective, went over and saw horse tracks. Dolph could read horse
tracks as well as he could read writing. He started sleuthin' around to find out
who'd been up there. He was sittin' on the corral one day talkin' to this fellow.
He denied that he had any thing to do with the fire. Dolph looked down at a horse
track and recognized it as one of the horses that had been tied up there near the
fire. He said, 'Well, Bill, (or whatever this fellow's name was) that horse track
is the same track that was up there at that bee tree.' So the fellow admitted. 'Well,
that's mine all right.' He hesitated, then he says, 'There ain't no law against
lyin' a little to keep out of trouble, is there?'"
When O. Fred Arthur* was Supervisor of the Lincoln National Forest he had an incendiary
fire that had tragic consequences.
*O. Fred Arthur started as a Forest guard in 1907 on the Prescott National
Forest. He retired in 1947 as Supervisor of the Cibola National Forest.
There had been two incendiary fires on the Lincoln in March, 1927, and on March
15 another was reported in the Capitan area. Ranger Willard Bond left Baca Ranger
Station for the fire and took with him A. R. Dean and Lloyd Taylor, Dean's son-in-law
and foreman of the Block Cattle Company, whose range extended over the fire area.
Dean offered to drive them in his car, which they loaded with supplies, including
also a rifle and six-shooter. In Capitan, they met Ranger Lee Beall from the Mesa
District with some firefighters.
The two groups drove up into the mountains, stopping at a closed gate in front of
the T. H. Shoemaker house. They left the cars parked near the fence and went on
afoot across the hills to the fire. Later in. the day a fire camp was established,
and about 2 a.m. Ranger Bond walked back to Ranger Beall's car to move it to the
fire camp, about two miles farther east. Then along toward morning Lloyd Taylor,
accompanied by a couple firefighters, Charles Pepper and Apoliano Romero, returned
to Dean's car to pick up additional supplies that had been loaded in it at Capitan.
Pepper was carrying a lantern, standing at the rear of the car. Taylor was getting
some things from the front seat when two shots were fired from the vicinity of the
nearby Shoemaker house. Pepper felt a sting in the back of the neck. Later they
decided it was a sliver from a piece of rock, struck by one of the bullets. Pepper
immediately dashed out the lantern and all three ran for the brush. A bit later,
Taylor quietly made his way back to the car to get the equipment, then they returned
to the fire and reported the incident.
After daylight, Taylor and Dean returned to the car to move it to the fire camp,
and they discovered that the rifle and six-shooter that were in the car had disappeared.
They discovered also that the car had two bullet holes. One had entered through
a front curtain, passing through the back cushions. The other had hit the running
board, damaging wiring directly underneath the car. Both bullets had narrowly missed
Taylor, one apparently went a few inches above his body and the other a few inches
below as he stooped to get something from the front seat.
Later on in the morning, the Rangers sent word to Supervisor Arthur at Alamogordo
that some shots had been fired at the firefighters, supposedly by Shoemaker in front
of whose house the cars were parked.
In his report to the Regional Forester later, Arthur wrote that he had been advised
that "a little evidence had been collected already identifying Shoemaker with this
fire."
"I then called Mr. French, Assistant Solicitor at Albuquerque, and told him in a
general way what had happened and requested that he come down and assist in the
collection of additional evidence and prosecution of the case in event such action
proved warranted."
Arthur decided to go to the fire and left about 1 p.m. in a Forest Service truck
and took with him W. C. White, executive assistant, who had previously served as
Ranger in that District. That night they met Solicitor French in Capitan, and drove
out to the fire area at daybreak to interview the parties concerned with the shooting.
Pepper, who had been nicked by the sliver of rock, did not want to press any charges,
and evidence regarding the incendiary fire was insufficient for a government case.
"Mr. French and I decided that in the event complaints were made and search warrants
issued for the stolen firearms, the matter could be turned over to the local authorities,
which would provide sufficient time for the government to go ahead in the collection
of evidence," Arthur wrote in his report.
"Ranger Bond said he was anxious to recover his rifle, and stated on his own responsibility
he would make a complaint and request a search of Shoemaker's premises.
"We therefore left with him and drove to Carrizozo, reaching there about 6 p.m.
and talked the matter over with the justice of the peace and Sheriff Sam Kelsey.
A search warrant was issued, which Mr. Kelsey said would be served the following
day."
Before they left the office, Arthur got word that Lloyd Taylor, Dean, and Pepper
were coming to Carrizozo and to await their arrival. It turned out that Dean was
pretty much upset when he returned from the fire to find his car damaged and the
guns stolen and talking it over with Taylor and Pepper, they decided on their own
initiative to make the necessary complaints. So an additional warrant was issued,
charging assault with deadly weapons.
The following morning Sheriff Kelsey and his deputy, Pete Johnson, arrived in Capitan
and a strategy meeting was held with the Forest Service officials.
It was decided that the Sheriff and Dean would first go to the Dixon Ranch, because
Dixon was supposed to be on friendly terms with Shoemaker and they would try to
persuade him to intercede with Shoemaker to give himself up to avoid bloodshed.
The deputy sheriff and Forest Rangers and ranchers were deputized and assigned to
designated places to determine primarily the whereabouts of Shoemaker so that if
Dixon could not get him to surrender, the Sheriff and Dean would make the arrest.
Arthur and Deputy Johnson were assigned to the nearby Koprian Ranch, and at the
fire camp they picked up White, Arthur's assistant, and a pickup truck which White
drove. White and Deputy Johnson sat in front, both with rifles, and Arthur sat on
a spare tire in the back of the truck.
"Reaching the highway about a mile and a half away we turned west toward Encinosa,"
Arthur said in his report. "As we rode down a hill, at the bottom of which a side
road leads down from the Shoemaker Ranch and passing the Hipp Ranch joins the highway,
I looked ahead and saw two horses at the mail box, on one of which was a woman.
I do not recall seeing anyone else, but the thought occurred to me that possibly
the other horse belonged to Shoemaker. Because of their position and, also, because
of mine in the rear of the car, we drove past them before I noticed the other party,
who proved to be Shoemaker. He was standing alongside his horse, near the butt end
of his rifle which was in a scabbard hanging on the left side of the saddle, the
butt in a forward position. Going about 100 or 150 feet, the car stopped and Johnson
got out and started walking back on my left side; my back being toward the front
end of the car. My attention was concentrated on Shoemaker to see that he did not
make any movement. I cannot say exactly how far Johnson had gotten when Shoemaker
reached for his rifle. Johnson whirled and started back. I then noticed that he
carried no firearms. He said, 'Look out, he is going to shoot.' My gun was on the
bottom of the car at my side. I grabbed it and jumped out on the right hand side
and ran around in front of the car. White remained in the seat. Shoemaker started
shooting. I fired also. Johnson grabbed his rifle quickly, took his position on
his knee in front and at the left hand side of the car. I recall his saying, 'Throw
up your hands, Shoemaker.'
"Johnson was directly in my line of fire at Shoemaker. I could not do much shooting
without exposing my entire person, while Johnson remained in a way protected. I
did not fire over three shots if that many, Shoemaker was firing rapidly. My time
was spent trying to shoot from underneath the car. During this time my attention
was distracted from our main purpose twice; once seeing White slip down into the
seat, and it occurred to me that he was shot. Immediately afterward I decided that
he was slipping down out of the way of the bullets; the other time was when he pitched
forward on his face in the rut of the road directly in front of the car. I further
noticed during that time that the woman on horseback had pulled out to the north
side of the road, sitting on her horse and viewing the entire scene. The firing
stopped and I saw Shoemaker laying face downward on the ground. Johnson started
toward him, I returned to White. Immediately upon going back I saw Shoemaker crawling
for his rifle. Johnson hurried back and asked if I had any shells left in my gun.
I replied there was, he said, 'Give it to me,' which I did. He ran back and when
about halfway, Shoemaker was within five or six inches of his rifle and reaching
for it. Johnson fired a shot which ended Shoemaker's life. The saddle horse had
been shot and was staggering around on the north side of the road. Johnson went
over and finished him.
"Johnson came back and we gave our attention to White. His face was terribly mutilated,
and I saw no hopes for him. Johnson said we would put him in the truck and rush
him to Ft. Stanton, 25 miles distant. I replied that there was no use, that the
radiator had been shot to pieces and that we could not go over a mile, but for him
to remain there and I would rush back to camp and get another car. Before leaving
I went over to the woman and asked her to please ride to the Hipp Ranch and tell
them to come down. I got out and started running to camp when I met French and Strickland
and others who had not left the camp. We got in French's car and went to the shooting
and found that Johnson had left with White in the mail car which had passed along
directly after I left. Newt Kemp was at the scene. We let out one or two parties
and Strickland, Boone, French and I drove on. . . .
"An inquest was held over Shoemaker's body, at which time the woman's testimony
was secured. She proved to be the wife of Mr. Guy Hix, a Block cowpuncher. I was
not present at this hearing, but my testimony and that of Mr. Johnson was taken
that night before the coroner's jury.
"In closing I might add that the guns covered by the search warrant were afterwards
found in the Shoemaker house."
White died at 9:30 p.m. on Friday, March 18. Ironically, when he was a Ranger on
that District he had been threatened several times by Shoemaker. Whether Shoemaker
knew that White was in the cab of the pickup is not known, of course. Shoemaker
may have been merely firing blind at the back of the truck. Newspaper reports of
that day said five slugs of soft nose bullets had pierced the rear, and it was regarded
as a miracle that Arthur and Johnson had escaped.
The Associated Press reported that Shoemaker was alleged to have refused to make
payments to the Forest Service on his land, that he generally opposed the Forest
Service and had boasted that he set fires in 1925 and 1926 as well as the fire then
raging, which required about 75 men to control.
Forest fires have plagued the Forest Service since the inception of the organizationbut
constant vigilance has resulted in a splendid record of fire protection.
After he became District Forester in 1908, Arthur C. Ringland began to plan a program
of increased fire protection for the Southwestern Region.
"The logical way to bring this about," Ringland wrote to his Supervisors in Region
3, "is by a careful study of the conditions on the Forests and the adoption and
use of a definite fire plan."
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Arthur C. Ringland, first Southwestern District (Regional) Forester
(1908-1916) pioneered fire planning.
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Among the suggestions Ringland made were construction of lookout stations on high
peaks, construction of telephone lines from lookout stations to Ranger's or Supervisor's
headquarters, construction of trails for fire patrol and roads for rapid transfer
of firefighting forces, placing in strategic locations tool boxes and firefighting
tools, and provision for volunteer and hired firefighters.
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Ringland and Southwestern Regional Forester Wm. D. Hurst, Regional Office,
Albuquerque, New Mexico, May 15, 1972.
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And as a closing note, Ringland wrote that "I feel that it is an important part
of good administration to make Rangers, who bear the brunt of the hard work in firefighting,
feel an intense interest in the preparation of the plan under which this fighting
must be done."
Ringland had been a Ranger,* so he knew the job from the Ranger's viewpoint. The
Forest Service's long-standing policy of promotion from within the organization,
which resulted in so many early Supervisor appointments from the ranks accounted
for the close-knit spirit of teamwork that marked the early years of the Forest
Service.
*Ringland was one of the original group of students recruited by Gifford
Pinchot at the turn of the century, and in 1905 when he graduated from the Yale
School of Forestry, he became a charter member of the Forest Service. He began his
career as a Ranger on the Lincoln National Forest and was appointed District Forester,
with headquarters in Albuquerque, effective Dec. 1, 1908, serving in that capacity
for eight years. He went on to an important career in the Federal government after
service in the AEF during World War I, then in charge of mass feeding of children
of Czechoslovakia by the American Relief Administration, directed by Herbert Hoover,
and the relief and evacuation of White Russian refugees in Constantinople in cooperation
with the League of Nations, 1922-23. In succeeding years he held numerous high government
appointments in the Department of Agriculture, the World War II Relief Control Board,
and the Department of State, retiring from that agency in 1952. At the time of this
writing (1972) he was living in Washington, D. C.
Paul Roberts who had worked as a grazing inspector and as Supervisor of the Sitgreaves
National Forest in the 1920's, put it this way: "It was a period of tremendous crusading
spirit; I don't know whether the Forest Service could ever get that same type of
thing going again or not, because a lot of those fellows that had the crusading
spirit didn't know anything about forestry. They were ex-cowboys and lumberjacks
and all that sort of thing, but they believed in it. Most of 'em went into it because
of the spirit of adventure and because it was something worthwhile. It took a hardy
breed to do the job and they did it. Whatever their faults and failures, they still
did a tremendous job of getting the Forests established and going."
Today the Forest Service has a couple other rugged breeds of fellows working for
them and fighting fires. These are the professional smokejumpers and the Indian
and Spanish-American villagers who have been organized into professional year around
firefighting groups, on call at the sound of the telephone ring any time of day
or night.

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The organized "Southwestern Firefighters" are famous for "hitting 'em
fast and hard" throughout the western states.
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The Forest Service discovered years ago that an organized crew was much more efficient
in fighting fire than a pick up crew of volunteers or hired labor. Indians are particularly
suited for this work since they are used to rugged country, hard manual labor, and
working as a crew. Since others in their pueblos or reservations can take over their
labors at home, they can leave at any time. And they may be gone anywhere from a
couple days to two months.
Each of the Indian or Spanish-American groups has its own distinctive hardhat decoration
and name. The first of these was the Mescalero "Red Hats" organized in 1948. Now
there are picturesque designs on hats for groups from the Rio Grande pueblos, from
the Arizona pueblos and reservations, and from the Spanish-American villages of
northern New Mexico.
The hardhat fighters must be between the ages of 18 and 60 in good physical health,
determined by periodic medical examinations.
In 1971 more than 3,000 trained firefighters, organized into 20-man crews, were
available to the land managing agencies. Since the first call from outside the Southwestern
Region came from California in 1950, these elite troops have battled wildfire throughout
the western states.
A couple dozen smokejumpers in the Southwest operate from Silver City, close to
the Gila National Forest which has a high incidence of fire over the years. Much
of the National Forest and Gila Wilderness can be reached only on foot or horseback,
and the use of aerial firefighters makes fire suppression quickly available.
Besides the twin-engined planes which fly the smokejumpers to the fires, aerial
tankers are also used to carry multi-ton loads of slurry, a fire-retardant mixture
of chemicals and water. Helicopters are used both to carry firefighters and to retrieve
them and their equipment.
Gilbert Sykes, of Tucson, a long-time Ranger on three Districts of the Coronado
National Forest, believes that one of the first uses of an airplane in connection
with a forest fire was in 1921.
"We had a big fire in the Catalinas back in 1921, nearly 10,000 acres," Sykes said.
"It came up out of the Canyon del Oro and topped out along the ridge to Summerhaven
and right up to the top of Mount Lemmon and out on the San Diego Ridge. The Bureau
of Public Roads had just completed a new road up the side of the mountain and we
used that. Some of the fire lines stopped going around the mountain north and east,
and this road made a pretty good line. Fire spilled over in a few places but the
road held it in the real dangerous, deep canyons there on that side.
"Hugh Calkins was then our Forest Supervisor on the Coronado in Tucson. He managed
to get an army airplane from Fort Bliss to do some scouting. I think it was one
of the first times a plane had been used for aerial work on a fireat least
down in this area. Hugh made several flights over the fire. . . . He said he got
a lot of good information from this aerial scouting, but the pilot flew pretty high.
"We started probably one of the first attempts at parachute dropping of supplies.
It was about 1936 on the Chiricahuas. I was Ranger at Portal at the time. Charlie
Mayes was an old pilot who had flown everything since about 1912. Fred Winn got
him to make some tests down at Douglas. He was running a little field in Douglas
at that time, out east of town. We made several drops, test drops, and decided we
were pretty good. Fred Winn got the bunch up at Rustler Park to try some dropping
up in the timber there at the top of the mountain.
"Fred would take a friend of his on 'show-me' tripsoh, about once a month,
on the Chiricahuas. That was one of Fred's favorite retreats to get away from it
all on weekends. They would stay up at Cima Park, there in the old cabin. They would
take 2 or 3 horses up and would spend the weekend, he and Mrs. Winn and Johnny Ball,
from Bisbee. Johnny Ball was quite a photographer. Fred wanted this officially recorded,
this dropping, so he could show the boys here and there, and maybe back in Albuquerque,
how good it was: Charley Mayes came over about the scheduled time and made some
nice drops. We had just got some new radios at the time and we dropped one of those
to see how it came down.
"It came down in good shape and we dropped a case of eggs and it came down and only
a few of them broke. Johnny Ball was busily photographing each drop as it came down.
One almost hit him, he was so enthusiastic, it plunked right down beside him. When
he got all through Fred came over and said, 'Well, John, did you get some good shots
of that?' 'I believe so,' he said, and he started to put his camera away. Then he
said, 'Oh, my God, lookI forgot to take the cap off my lens.'
"So all these drops were dudsall these photographs. We didn't try it again
that time. The next year we made several drops down around the Santa Rita Range
Reserve trying the various size loads. The pilot and some of the boys got together
and when he had made about his last drop, all of a sudden a man came out of the
plane and he fell and fell and fell and his 'chute didn't open, and he plunked down
about two or three hundred yards from the bunch. Everyone started running over there
except two or three of us who happened to be in the know. It was a dummy they had
thrown out, but it gave them quite a thrill anyway."
Improved efficiency and modern firefighting techniques have steadily diminished
losses from fire, even though the number of fires has increased.
Recalling a series of fires, Robert Diggs, of Williams, Arizona, a long-time Forest
Service career man, commenting on firefighting, related that "it was in 1956 that
we had the Dudley Fire. Then after we got the Dudley Fire controlledit was
about 17,000 acreswe looked across to Mingus Mountain, and there she was blowing
up right on Mingus Mountain. They just put the whole shooting match into a DC-3
plane and took them right on into Prescott. They took the same organization right
off the Dudley Fire and put them on the Mingus Fire. That was 15,000 acres, and
we nailed that one. We got home in time for a Fourth of July rest, then went right
back to Safford on the Outlaw Fire.
"It is remarkable the way Forest Service crews can adapt themselves to a situation;
to different Forests and different terrain, and different organizations, so to speak.
They just click.
"Of course, you've got the Indian crews, and boythose crews are fine! I don't
know what we would do without them, how we would get the job done, whether it's
Hopi No. 8 or Santo Domingo No. 2 or any of the others.
"Now we have the slurry planes. Those slurry planes are good. We used them on the
Hell's Canyon Fire down here. We had a 500-acre fire south of Bill Williams. It
could have been one of the largest in the history of the Forest Service if it had
come across Bill Williams, but we nailed it."
C. A. (Heinie) Merker, of Santa Fe, a career man in Region 3 since 1923, recalled
the 1954 fire on the Los Alamos Reservation as one of the most unusual he had been
involved with. At the time Los Alamos was still a "secret city."
"The fire wasn't so big, but was it made into a big thing," he said. "I first saw
the fire from my backyard here in Santa Fe when it started. Immediately I recognized
that we were in troubleor could bewhen we found out it was on Los Alamos
land.
"I sent Leon Hill over to advise them. Well, he spent the afternoon advising them.
All the time they were trying to put the thing out and didn't know how to go about
it. Finally, I went over. Just about the time I landed there, they came to the conclusion
they had a bull by the tail. In the meantime, stories got out that the town was
threatened. That got back to the Washington office of the Atomic Energy Commission,
and they established a 'hot line' between Washington and Los Alamos. Then Albuquerque
got word of it and they sent a whole staff up from down there. Toward evening, the
powers-that-be at Los Alamos came to me and said, 'Now look, we don't know how to
fight forest fires. How about you taking over?' I said, 'Who's going to pay the
bill?' They said, 'Oh, don't worry about that, we'll pay the bills. Just put the
fire out.'
"I got hold of Otto Lindh (Regional Forester) on the phone and told him about it.
He hotfooted it up there, and Mayhew Davis (Chief of Operations) came up. Oh, everybody
came up. They even drew up a written agreement as to who was going to pay for what.
"The head of technical services there, Norris Bradbury (the director of the Los
Alamos Scientific Laboratory) stayed up the whole night. About every half hour he
would come up to our headquarters wanting to know for sure that the fire wasn't
going to get across the highway that runs north and south. He didn't explain what
was on the other side of the highway, but every time a spark would go over there,
everything was turned loose to get on that spot fire. I found out later it was some
sort of explosive stuff down there. What it was I still don't know. But he was sure
concerned that the fire was going to get across the highway and get into the technical
area. I guess all hell would have broken loose if it had.
"We finally got the fire under control the next afternoon. Everybody and his dog
were up there, including all sorts of Indians. Everybody who had come in through
the gate, including the firefighters and the Indians, were registered and their
names taken and they were given a badge. There was one person who got in that did
not have one of those things. How he got in nobody could ever find out, but he had
a devil of a time getting out. They had no record of him. He had no badge. It was
Dahl Kirkpatrick, Chief of Timber Management!"
Merker said that an interesting thing about the fire was, who started it? It was
learned that the sponsors of the Boy Scout camp (one of them was the fire chief)
was clearing the site of old slabs and set fire to it.
"They set it off in the evening and they stayed all night watching it burn. When
morning came it was pretty well burned up, and they left one man and a boy to watch
it. They went to the spring there to get some water. When they got back the wind
had come up and it threw a spark out, and away she'd gone. Well, the fire chief
and the manager of the city had set the thing off. Boy, were their faces red!"
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The story of the live Smokey Bear began when a burned, frightened cub
was rescued from a man-caused forest fire on the Lincoln National Forest in 1950.
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About nine-tenths of the forest fires nation-wide are man-caused, from cigarettes
thrown from cars, camp fires left unattended, failure to put out fires when leaving
camp or dropping lighted smokes or matches on the ground. Years ago the Forest Service
began a continuing campaign to get the cooperation of the public in preventing forest
fires.
Their star salesman in this campaign is Smokey. Although a fictitious Smokey preceded
him, there has been a real Smokey since June, 1950. In the man-caused Capitan fire
on the Lincoln National Forest in May, when 17,000 acres of forest land were destroyed,
the men on the fire line discovered a cub bear that had been severely burned about
the feet and was near death from shock, burns and hunger. Ray Bell, chief field
man of the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, volunteered to take the cub to
Santa Fe to a veterinarian to see if its life could be saved. After emergency treatment,
Bell kept the cub at his home for several weeks until it was completely recovered.
It was named Smokey for the poster bear of the Forest Service, State Foresters,
and The Advertising Council. Then the cub was flown to Washington and presented
by the Forest Service to the Washington Zoo to aid in the campaign for prevention
of forest fires and conservation of wildlife.
Smokey has become an eloquent and living symbol of the need for fire prevention.
Pictures of the tiny cub taken during his convalescence were used extensively in
publicity, and the appealing little fellow found a place in the hearts of America's
children and grownups alike.
J. Morgan Smith, who was Assistant Director of the Smokey campaign, is now Assistant
Regional Forester, Division of Information and Education, with offices in Albuquerque.
His collection of Smokey pictures, clippings and other material includes a number
of letters addressed to Smokey.
A North Dakota girl wrote, "I read in our 'Young Citizen' that it cost billions
of dollars every year to pay for the damage done by fires, so I am contributing
five cents to help pay for the damage." A Burbank, California mother wrote to say
that Smokey was her five-year-old son's "very best friend." "No one would dare throw
a lighted match or cigarette out in the forest or mountains when he is in range,"
she wrote.
Another California mother wrote to Smokey to say that her son was seven years of
age "and practically stands at attention when you talk on television. There is never
a cigarette thrown from our car any more. We really get told!"
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Smokey, who makes his home at the National Zoo, Washington, D.C., is
visited by people from all over the world who know his story.
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Today, fully grown, Smokey lives in the Washington Zoo and still attracts thousands
of visitors. The story of his rescue from a tragic fire in New Mexico has been told
and re-told in publicity stories, magazine articles, TV and radio programs and in
cartoons. Forest Service officials regard the Smokey campaign as the most powerful
single force in preventing wildfires in the United States today.
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