12022-09-25T23:08:20-07:00Reo Tsengb76b2de3ac526aa9d5c9a04387bd01fcc7953652Brush fire (Rio Hondo fire), 195118Depicted is a brush fire emerging in Rio Hondo, a tributary of Los Angeles County whose name derives from the 'deep river' - Rio Hondo - that runs parallel to the San Gabriel River. Even as an area of land named after a body of water, fires still manage to ravage the land, and the efforts to mitigate this state of emergency caused no shortage of worry and damage. The fire spread rapidly through the brushes upon it's kindling, burning more than 50 acres of land and damaging two houses within a few hours [1]. The dry climate helped propagate the fire and spread embers to rooftops where the smoldering did most of its damage [5]. While the fire fortunately maintained itself within the riverbed [4], it didn't make the lives of the Los Angeles Fire Department easy. They had to storm together a 10 unit battalion that aggregated teams from Whitter and the State Department of Forestry to contain the flame. Shown in the image is the efforts of the fire department mobilizing to eliminate the flame. To that end they were able to shut down the fire in two hours, even deploying tractors with dozer blades in order to eliminate the immediate presence of fuel. While the nature of the fire was calmed quickly, quantifiable amounts of damage were done to the surroundings, and fire fighters were dispatched throughout the night to ensure embers didn't form again [1]. Fires like these continued to strike the area, and in 2005, volunteers and Angeles Chapter Staff came together to form a campaign called the Emerald Necklace which aims to plant trees and brushes that reinstate the park experience that perhaps once existed in the area [6].plain2022-12-02T10:49:46-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
1media/EXM-N-12166-014_2.jpg2022-09-27T17:06:49-07:00Bryan Ly8d58588d21ef0f5f11679a72511ab45b09e9c762Chatsworth Brush Fires, 195713Set behind the hazy background of burning brush, four ordinary men are seen battling flames with their shovels. The Chatsworth Brush Fires broke out on July 3, 1957, after sparks from a passing train’s engine flew onto the surrounding dry brush.plain2023-01-03T11:49:12-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
12022-09-25T21:19:06-07:00Greg Rosenkranz993808ebcc70553a5343b39562f4dfd7f8d978e7Fires - Griffith Park Disaster7plain2022-12-02T10:54:02-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
12022-09-25T14:43:28-07:00Rachel Meiselas9f61db40e645f0fbab04bae1a9b90ea88e8a238fHancock Refinery Fire in Signal Hill, 19585plain2022-12-02T10:57:07-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
1media/EXM-N-12952-024_4 (1).jpg2022-09-25T20:42:18-07:00Anvith Nagarjuna92fb74488819d0707ed16268f2542988ab090256Hollywood Hills Fire, 19615This is an image of the Hollywood Hills Fire of 1961. This fire took place in an upscale neighborhood of Los Angeles known as Beverly Hills[1]. Dry and hot weather accompanied by gusting winds caused this fire to spread rapidly.plain2022-12-02T21:25:25-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
1media/EXM-N-9632-011_7.jpg2022-09-24T18:04:59-07:00Will Yeamanb632d72f82e4b9ab135c3728975514bb688559b4Warner Brothers Studio Fire (Burbank), 19526This image depicts a Warner Brothers Studio fire that broke out in the summer of 1952. The fire, beginning around three o’clock in the afternoon of July 9, demolished millions of dollars’ worth of sets and props before igniting the nearby Hollywood Hills.plain2022-12-05T11:22:08-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
12022-09-26T12:50:45-07:00William Parma66751708bde1d353ff804fe7c74afff24b1c5afbTopanga Canyon Brush Fire 19588plain2023-01-03T11:56:38-08:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e