Lookout Show `n Tell #10:
The First Fire Lookout
The very first firewatch lookout was probably in
the Holy Land on Mt. Masada west of the Dead Sea. During the days of
Christ, King Herod posted guards in towers as his enemies tried to burn his
empire, 2000 years ago, so the Bible says.
The oldest lookout still standing that we've been
able to trace, is the Tuztoromy Firewatch Tower in the city of Sopron,
Hungary. Built early in the 13th Century, remodeled in 1681, it
remains this famous resort city's major attraction... 700 years
later!
The first in America was located in downtown
Harlem, New York. A heavy duty iron bell tower and observation
cupola was built in 1856, on a hilltop in what is now the Marcus Garvey
city park. It had a full-time fire watchman for most of its first eighty
years. In 1986 it was restored in a million dollar national historic
preservation project, and stands today almost like new, at the ripe old age of
153 .
On a hilltop in downtown Helena, Montana, a
firewatcher cab was established atop a wooden bell tower in 1869. It was
fully restored in the 1980s with federal historic preservation funds
also. As the two pictures below show, today it looks just as it did
140 years ago. The "Guardian of the Gulch" even has become the official
emblem on the doors of Helena's city police cars and fire
trucks.
The Southern Pacific Railroad established a fire
lookout on Red Mountain to protect their snowsheds in the northern
California Sierras in 1878.
The first fire lookout strictly for the protection
of American forests from wildfire was established in 1902 at a place called
Bertha Hill in the remote backwoods near Headquarters, Idaho. A
private timber camp cook, Mable Gray, mounted her pony on days following
lightning storms after doing the morning dishes, and rode to the top of a
small knoll, where she'd climb up a makeshift ladder and sit on a big limb
12' up a fir tree. When she spotted a smoke, she rounded up the crew
on her horse. Two years later, in June of 1904, a flimsy pole tower took
shape on the summit. And 107 years later, there's still a Bertha Hill
Lookout; guardian of the million acre private Clearwater-Potlatch
Timber Protective Ass'n.
But, here's where it gets controversial...
Some say that around 1905, a similar crude pole tower also went
up in the woods near Greenville, Maine; another in
Pennsylvania; and another in Massachusetts. Which was
first?

Sopron, Hungary Fire Tower
1681-1955
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Marcus Garvey LO, NY City since 1856
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Helena,
MT fire tower since 1869
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Helena, MT fire tower 2009
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Bertha Hill LO 1902
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Ray Kresek
Fire Lookout Museum
Spokane, WA