Town burns to ashes in raging Northern California wildfire
GREENVILLE, Calif. (AP) â" Eva Gorman says the little California mountain town of Greenville was a place of community and strong character, the kind of place where neighbors volunteered to move furniture, colorful baskets of flowers brightened Main Street, and writers, musicians, mechanics and chicken farmers mingled.
Now, itâs ashes.
As hot, bone-dry, gusty weather hit California, the stateâs largest current wildfire raged through the Gold Rush-era Sierra Nevada community of about 1,000, incinerating much of the downtown that included wooden buildings more than a century old.
The winds were expected to calm and change direction heading into the weekend but that good news came too late for Gorman.
âItâs just completely devastating. Weâve lost our home, my business, our whole downtown area is gone,â said Gorman, who heeded evacuation warnings and left town with her husband a week and-a-half ago as the Dixie Fire approached.
She managed to grab some photos off the wall, her favorite jewelry and important documents but couldnât help but think of the family treasures left behind.
âMy grandmotherâs dining room chairs, my great-auntâs bed from Italy. There is a photo I keep visualizing in my mind of my son when he was 2. Heâs 37 now,â she said. âAt first you think, âItâs OK, I have the negatives.â And then you realize, âOh. No. I donât.ââ
Officials had not yet assessed the number of destroyed buildings, but Plumas County Sheriff Todd Johns estimated on Thursday that âwell overâ 100 homes had burned in and near the town.
âMy heart is crushed by what has occurred there,â said Johns, a lifelong Greenville resident.
About a two-hour drive south, officials said some 100 homes and other buildings burned in the fast-moving River Fire that broke out Wednesday near Colfax, a town of about 2,000. There was no containment and about 6,000 people were ordered to evacuate in Placer and Nevada counties, state fire officials said.
The three-week-old Dixie Fire was one of 100 active, large fires burning in 14 states, most in the West where historic drought has left lands parched and ripe for ignition.
The Dixie Fire had consumed about 565 square miles (1,464 square kilometers), an area larger than the size of Los Angeles. The cause was under investigation, but Pacific Gas & Electric has said it may have been sparked when a tree fell on one of the utilityâs power lines.
The blaze exploded on Wednesday and Thursday through timber, grass and brush so dry that one fire official described it as âbasically near combustion.â Dozens of homes had already burned before the flames made new runs.
No deaths or injuries were reported but the fire continued to threaten more than 10,000 homes.
On Thursday, the weather and towering smoke clouds produced by the fireâs intense, erratic winds kept firefighters struggling to put firefighters at shifting hot spots.
âItâs wreaking havoc. The winds are kind of changing direction on us every few hours,â said Capt. Sergio Arellano, a fire spokesman.
âWeâre seeing truly frightening fire behavior,â said Chris Carlton, supervisor for Plumas National Forest. âWe really are in uncharted territory.â
Heat waves and historic drought tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American West. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive.
The blaze hit Greenville from two angles and firefighters already were in the town trying to save it but first they had to risk their lives to save people who had refused to evacuate by loading people into cars to get them out, fire officials said.
âWe have firefighters that are getting guns pulled out on them, because people donât want to evacuate,â said Jake Cagle, an incident management operations section chief.
The flames also reached the town of Chester, northwest of Greenville, but crews managed to protect homes and businesses there, with only minor damage to one or two structures, officials said.
The fire was not far from the town of Paradise, which was largely destroyed in a 2018 wildfire sparked by PG&E equipment that killed 85 people, making it the nationâs deadliest in at least a century.
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Weber reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press writers Janie Har and Jocelyn Gecker in San Francisco contributed to this report.
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