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smokejumpers


Smokejumpers Help Ohio Fight Beetle Fire

May 05, 2016 Rhonda Santos, APHIS Public Information Officer

Smokejumpers are a unique breed. They are people who are willing to jump, really parachute, out of an aircraft to provide a quick attack on forest fires. While smokejumpers are highly trained, experienced firefighters, they are also expert tree climbers. These firefighters usually work in rugged...

Forestry Animals Plants

Seventy Years Could Not Erase the Memory of a Wildfire Hero

October 28, 2015 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

It’s been a busy few months for the Triple Nickles, the U.S. Forest Service’s first African-American smoke jumping crew. On Aug. 6 of this year a member of the crew who was the first recorded death of a hot shot wildland firefighter was posthumously honored at his gravesite that was recently found...

Forestry

Smokejumpers Celebrate 75 Years of Service

August 10, 2015 Christine Cozakos, U.S. Forest Service

In 1940, Rufus Robinson and Earl Cooley made U.S. Forest Service history parachuting onto a fire over Martin Creek on the Nez Perce National Forest in Idaho. This historic jump started an elite smokejumper program, a program born of necessity and innovation. Since then, smokejumpers have played a...

Forestry

Smoke Jumping Into History

June 02, 2015 Robert Hudson Westover, U.S. Forest Service, Office of Communications

Most people don’t conjure up images of the U.S. Forest Service when they think of the Smithsonian’s Air and Space Museum. But every fire season the work of the Forest Service’s planes and helicopters, carrying smokejumpers, are vitally important to controlling the spread of wildland fires. This is...

Forestry

Forest Service Smokejumpers Part of Disney Magic with New Animated Film

May 14, 2014 Leo Kay, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service and movies-goers have seen agency-managed lands as the backdrop for dozens of motion pictures over the years, but this year it is participating in the magic of Hollywood in a slightly different way – as a creative consultant for the soon-to-be-released “Planes: Fire and...

Forestry

Pioneer African-American Smokejumper Laid to Rest at Arlington National Cemetery

February 03, 2014 Deidra McGee, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

During World War II, a time when segregation was still a part of everyday life, a group of 17 brave men took the plunge to serve their country and become the first all African-American paratrooper unit known as the Triple Nickles. The battalion’s original goal – to join the fight in Europe – was...

Forestry

Where the Moon Trees Grow

January 14, 2014 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

Many space enthusiasts know that one of the U.S. Forest Service’s most famous former employees was astronaut Stuart Roosa. The smokejumper circled the moon as part of NASA’s Apollo 14 mission more than 40 years ago. However, what most folks don’t know is that Roosa brought a group of tiny travelers...

Forestry

Shasta-Trinity National Forest Brings Christmas Cheer to Disadvantaged Youth

January 06, 2014 Stephanie Bryant, Pacific Southwest Region, U.S. Forest Service

For some, it can be a bit challenging to get in the holiday spirit in Redding, Calif., because the area typically has warm winter temperatures. But this year, residents were treated to a Dec. 6 snowstorm, which offered the Shasta-Trinity National Forest a wintery-white backdrop for its annual...

Forestry

Veterans Find Training, Jobs with the U.S. Forest Service

November 08, 2013 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service actively recruits eligible veterans for multiple occupations. Currently, veterans make up over 12 percent of the Forest Service workforce. The agency values the experience, commitment and work ethic that veterans bring to the job, as well as their significant skills and...

Forestry

First African-American Smokejumpers Take their Last Jumps

October 24, 2013 Deidra L. McGee, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

In the summer of 1945, a group of African-American paratroopers for the U.S. Army became smokejumpers assigned to a special Forest Service mission known as “Operation Firefly.” Also known as the Triple Nickles, they represented the 555 th Parachute Infantry Battalion for colored soldiers who set out...

Forestry
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