- Old Fire (2003)
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Old Fire Location San Bernardino Mountains Date October 25, 2003
17:37 (PDT)Burned area 91,281 acres (369.40 km2) Ignition source Arson Land use Mixed, residential and wildlands Fatalities 6 The Old Fire was a wildfire that started on October 25, 2003 in the San Bernardino Mountains, in San Bernardino County of southern California.
It was one of over a dozen wildfires burning in Southern California wildlands at the same time. This included the huge Cedar Fire, the second largest fire in California's history after the Santiago Canyon Fire of 1889.
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Old Fire wildfire
Fanned by the Santa Ana winds, the Old Fire burned 91,281 acres (369.40 km2), destroyed 993 homes and caused 6 deaths. The fire threatened San Bernardino and Highland, as well as the mountain resort communities of Cedar Glen, Crestline, Running Springs and Lake Arrowhead and forcing upwards of 80,000 residents to evacuate their homes. Part of California State University, San Bernardino burned during the fire.
The fire was fully contained by November 2, 2003 with the help of rain and snow.[1] The final cost of the fire was $42 million. The Lake Arrowhead community is now part of a Redevelopment Agency which is controlled by a Board of Supervisors.
Old Fire, Padua, and Grand Prix wildfires
A USFS report on the "true" combined costs of the 2003 Old Fire, Padua, and the Grand Prix wildfires (the Grand Prix Fire merged with the Old Fire and the part of the Grand Prix Fire that crossed into Los Angeles County was known as the "Padua Fire") was nearly $1.3 billion. When cleanup, watershed damages and other costs are considered beyond the expenses for firefighting and property damage, wildfire impacts are much higher. About 750,000 acres (3,000 km2) were blackened across five southern California counties.[1]
Arsonists
On August 7, 2007, local newspapers reported that 25-year-old Jeremiah D. Hope, of Riverside faced federal charges for starting a blaze that eventually merged with the Old Fire. Authorities said Hope had been evacuated from his Crestline home when he and some friends off-roaded onto dry vegetation in order to get a better view of the Old Fire. The vehicle's catalytic converter reportedly sparked a second fire near Playground Road, which firefighters dubbed the Playground Fire. That fire quickly consumed forest land and later became part of the Old Fire. Hope faced misdemeanor counts of causing the National Forest to burn without a permit and one count of placing a vehicle in a dangerous area.
In 2009, Rickie Lee Fowler was charged with igniting the Old Fire. Authorities believed that he was a passenger in a vehicle that was seen leaving the area where the fire started; the driver of the van, Martin David Valdez, Jr., died of a gunshot wound in 2006. A grand jury indicted Fowler October 19, 2009, with one count of arson of an inhabited structure, one count of aggravated arson, and five counts of murder.
Victims
The murder victims identified were Charles Howard Cunningham, 93, of San Bernardino; Ralph Eugene McWilliams, 67, of Cedar Glen; Chad Leo Williams, 70, of Crestline; James William McDermoth, 70, of San Bernardino; and Robert Norman Taylor, 54, of San Bernardino. All five victims died from indirect consequences of the fire, due to physical or emotional strain.[2]
See also
- List of California Wildfires
- Wildfire suppression
- Fire ecology
- 2010 California wildfires
- 2009 California wildfires
- November 2008 California wildfires
- Summer 2008 California wildfires
- October 2007 California wildfires
- Cedar Fire
References
- ^ a b "One fire fully contained". CNN (Time Warner). 2003-11-02. http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/West/11/01/california.wildfire/. Retrieved 2009-04-29.
- ^ "Indictment Names Fowler As Old Fire Suspect". RIMOFTHEWORLD.net. 2009-10-25. http://www.rimoftheworld.net/columns/neufeld/old_fire. Retrieved 2009-10-26.
External links
- Old Fire Burn Map
- Old Fire Final Update
- USDA Preliminary Report on Expenditures
- The Old Fire - One Year Later
- The Old Fire Photo Gallery
- The Old Fire Recovery Group
- Still Photos During First hours of The Old Fire in San Bernardino - Larry R. Erickson
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Notable California wildfires by size #1 - Santiago Canyon Fire of 1889: 300,000 acres (469 sq mi; 121,406 ha) est. · #2 - Cedar Fire: 273,246 acres (427 sq mi; 110,579 ha) · #3 - Zaca Fire: 240,207 acres (375 sq mi; 97,208 ha) · #4 - Matilija Fire: 220,000 acres (344 sq mi; 89,031 ha) · #5 - Witch Fire: 197,990 acres (309 sq mi; 80,124 ha) · #6 - Marble-Cone Fire: ~178,000 acres (720 km2) · #7 - Laguna Fire: 175,425 acres (274 sq mi; 70,992 ha) · #8 - Basin Complex fire: 162,818 acres (254 sq mi; 65,890 ha) · #9 - Day Fire: 162,700 acres (254 sq mi; 65,842 ha) · #10 - Station Fire: 160,557 acres (251 sq mi; 64,975 ha) · #11 - McNally Fire: 150,670 acres (235 sq mi; 60,974 ha) · #12 - Old Fire (2003): 91,281 acres (143 sq mi; 36,940 ha) · #13 - Harris Fire: 90,440 acres (141 sq mi; 36,600 ha) · #14 - Indians Fire: 76,554 acres (120 sq mi; 30,980 ha) · #15 - Moonlight Fire: 65,000 acres (102 sq mi; 26,305 ha) · #16 - Sawtooth Complex fire: 61,700 acres (96 sq mi; 24,969 ha) · #17 - Ranch Fire: 58,401 acres (91 sq mi; 23,634 ha)Categories:- 2003 wildfires
- Wildfires in California
- San Bernardino Mountains
- History of San Bernardino County, California
- 2003 in California
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