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The goal of this blog is to help readers locate their lineage and discover the forces that motivated them, and learn how they lived their lives--told in their own words in the BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS trilogy, from the 1860s to the early 1930s. The indexed names will be published here frequently, along with an excerpt and a historical photograph if available. ** Scroll Archives at right.

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Thank you ~~ Mona Leeson Vanek ~aka~Montana Scribbler



Monday, February 18, 2019

1910 Fire Torched NW Montana

Vignette Vol. 1 No. 13
Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS 


Excerpt - Noxon 1910. Forest fires held the homesteaders captive in 1910. Rain was scarce, leaving the forest tinder dry. With the government beginning to prosecute timber thieves, loggers who'd cut trees illegally found a natural opportunity. Fire left no evidence. Fires cropped up everywhere, it seemed. By early August the air was so smoke laden the sun rose an orange red globe inching across a hazy sky each day, and dropping like a blood red dish behind the mountains each night. The newly organized forest service and settlers alike fought fires throughout the scorching summer.(*USFS 1910 Commemorative.)

Photograph courtesy of Wallace
"Wally" Gamble, ca 1910

Clifford Weare shut down his sawmill, taking his crew of men out to fight fire on July 20th. A month later a forest service crew came to relieve them. Weare's men were exhausted, sleeping only by logs on the ground.

Trainloads of 1910 Firefighters

On the 20th of August the wind rose to gale force. For two days along a line from north of the Canadian boundary south to the Salmon River it blew, licking hundreds of little fires into big ones. Fire lines that had been held for days were scorched away under the fierce blast that turned the sky a ghastly yellow. At four o'clock it was black dark ahead of the roaring flames.
"You could hear the roar from the fire for days. The ashes floated over Noxon just like snow."
The air felt electric, as though the whole world would go up in spontaneous combustion as the heat of the fire and the great masses of flaming gas created tumbling whirlwinds mowing down swathes of trees in advance of the flames. In forty-eight horrendous hours many fires raced unchecked over thirty to fifty miles across mountain ranges and rivers.

Tired USFS firefighters, Photo
courtesy Granville Gordon 1910
 



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