The Weekly Vista

Volunteer felt saved by a feeling

- LYNN ATKINS

Dorothy Miller is sure that someone is looking after her. An active volunteer in her 70’s, Miller had a feeling she should not go home one night in late December. The feeling probably saved her life.

One of her many volunteer projects is with the cemetery preservati­on group and she shares it with her friend Bill Degge. She’s helped Degge publish several books about Benton County residents who served in the Confederat­e Army. They also clean gravestone­s in many of the tiny cemeteries around Benton County. That night Degge decided to go home early and he went to his Rogers home instead of spending the night with Miller in Bella Vista.

When she found herself alone without anything pressing to do, Miller decided to visit a casino. Casinos, she explained, provide needed stress relief and a break from her busy schedule. So she was by herself when she pulled into to her driveway and opened the garage door around 11 p.m.

She immediatel­y saw a small fire in the garage. At first, it seemed to be a single chair that was on fire, so she called 911 and following the dispatcher’s instructio­ns. She entered the house through the front door to wake up her adult son. The smoke was already thick inside the house, so she called out to him, made sure he was awake and went back outside.

Unfortunat­ely, her son exited the house through the kitchen, opening the door between the house and the garage. When he opened the door, it created a draft, and the fire expanded. He left the door open so it allowed even more smoke inside the house.

“The fire trucks got there as soon as he walked out of the garage,” she wrote in an email. “I yelled for him to get away as the gas can and my trailer was sitting right outside the garage door with our baling wire on it. I can’t believe how the wire melted on the trailer but when the tire blew out it blew the gas can and it went all over the garage and set the whole thing on fire as the firemen were hooking up the hoses. They did a great job but it burned the garage door and contents so fast I was amazed.”

Later, the firefighte­rs told her that if she had been asleep in the house, the smoke probably would have killed her before the fire woke her up.

Although she lost the contents of her garage, it could have been much worse. She had just returned boxes of historic documents to the Bentonvill­e Library. She had spent most of the pandemic working on those files at home. Many photos were destroyed but many of those were also saved electronic­ally on her phone.

Most of what was inside the house is salvageabl­e, she said, although there was a lot of smoke damage and some major repairs will be needed before she can move back in.

There were lots of other documents in file cabinets in the garage, but she had already gone through them and found the most important informatio­n.

There were tubs of books and other documents that belonged to former Benton County Judge Cary Anderson, who first recruited Miller to help with historic preservati­on. Those were lost too.

There was also a quilt frame that she used to show her Civil War quilt, but only the frame was lost. The quilt itself is safe.

She lost a lot of tools in the garage. Many of the tools were used when she got volunteers or jail work details to help in the cemeteries. Other tools belonged to her late husband and she’s sorry to have lost those.

The worst thing, the 77-year-old volunteer said, was losing her deep sea fishing equipment. She loves deep sea fishing.

 ?? File photo ?? Dorothy Miller said the worst thing lost in her house fire was her deep sea fishing equipment.
File photo Dorothy Miller said the worst thing lost in her house fire was her deep sea fishing equipment.

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