Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest

Thirtymile Fire Memorial


 




 


 




On July 10, 2001, high temperatures, low humidity and severe drought conditions caused an abandoned cooking fire to ultimately erupt into a devastating firestorm that swept up the Chewuch River valley, trapping 14 firefighters and two campers.

Four dedicated firefighters perished in a valiant effort to battle the Thirtymile Fire.

The Thirtymile Fire Memorial was constructed at the site where Jessica Johnson, Devin Weaver, Karen FitzPatrick and Tom Craven died in the Chewuch River valley on the Okanogan and Wenatchee National Forests, as a lasting honor to their memory.

 


Thirtymile Fire Memorial
[click image to view larger size]

Directions:

From State Route 20 about one-half mile west of Winthrop, Washington, turn north on West Chewuch Road (county road #1213).

Drive slowly and with extreme caution from here to the memorial. The road is narrow with sharp curves.

Travel approximately six miles to a stop sign where the county road joins with Forest Service Road #51. Stay to the left on Road #51 and continue north about 17 miles on a single lane paved road to Andrews Creek trailhead. Here the road turns to a single lane gravel road. The memorial is approximately four miles further, on the left side of the road.


Thirtymile Fire Memorial brochure - printer-friendly version [PDF: 1.2 mb]

Thirtymile Fire Memorial brochure - original publication [PDF: 615 kb]

The Thirtymile Fire Memorial brochure is also available at Forest Service offices on the Okanogan and Wenatchee National Forests.

 


More Thirtymile Fire Information
[including links to Investigation Report, Abatement Plan, Briefing Papers]


 
 
 
 
USDA logo which links to the department's national site. Forest Service logo which links to the agency's national site.