Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
An Arizona city honored the 19 firefighters killed battling a wildfire five years ago.
19 killed five years ago battling raging wildfire
PRESCOTT, Ariz. — Nineteen firefighters who died five years ago when they were overrun by a wildfire in a brush-choked canyon in Arizona were honored Saturday at a memorial service.
The event in Prescott featured bell tolls and the reading of the names of the Granite Mountain Hotshots who died June 30, 2013, in Yarnell, northwest of Phoenix.
The service in the city of Prescott also included a moment of silence at the time of their deaths.
The loss of nearly the entire crew reverberated across the country, becoming the deadliest day for firefighters since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The Granite Mountain Hotshots were the only such elite firefighting crew tied to a municipal fire department.
Over the years, signs of the men have sprung up around the communities they fought to protect.
A life-size bronze statue of a wildland firefighter stands at the trailhead of a state park created for them. A plaque near an alligator juniper tells the story of how the crew saved the giant tree. A new learning and tribute center in Prescott features thousands of items that people left outside the crew’s fire station after they died, including T-shirts from other U.S. fire departments.
Next year, a sculpture of a wildland firefighter with the backdrop of Granite Mountain will be added to the city’s courthouse plaza.
Some of the men’s families started groups to honor their loved ones.
“If anything beautiful has come out of this tragedy, it is that people are being educated about the wildland community, not only the hotshots but smokejumpers, pounders, incident commanders, engine jumpers — the work they do and the danger they face,” Deborah Pfingston, one of the firefighters’ mothers, recently told The Arizona Republic.