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Earl Cooley (smokejumper)

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decided by the incident planning team, and give the men the signal of when to jump. He laid on the floor, next to the open door, with his foreman across from him. Cooley had to take information from the foreman, the pilot, the ground crews, and from what he could see from the air. After denying a few spots, and debating another with the foreman Wag Dodge, he finally decided on the spot he felt would be best to drop the men. (Maclean) The men lined up in groups and he gave them the signal. After four passes, all the jumpers were safely on the ground. After the jumpers landed, the plane made one more pass dumping their equipment on to the ground. They gathered it up and went to meet the ground men who were to meet them. The ground men were not where they were supposed to be. The jumpers were on their own. They continued to move on with the task at hand. As they moved along the gulch, they began to angle downward towards the fire. The fire shifted in what is known as a blow-up and turned on the men. The men panicked then tried to outrun the fire. They were quickly overtaken by the flames. There were only three survivors. (Maclean) This news effected Cooley harshly. He ensured that every body from his crew was recovered before he went home. Thirteen men were killed, twelve smokejumpers and one forest service ranger. This is still known as the biggest smokejumper tragedy. When later inquired about the
247:– parachuting out of an airplane into a fire to get it under control. This had been tried and appeared to prove true in other countries including Russia and Germany. (Bramwell) Many American pilots were unsure about the idea of dropping firefighters into a fire from the air. There are many factors that can go wrong and they were reluctant and hesitant at the idea. Cooley and a partner by the name of Rufus Robinson began to toil with the notion. On July 12, 1940, Cooley and Robinson got their chance to test their idea. The twenty-eight-year-old who had been building roads, towers, and various other structures for the service was ready for the challenge. A forest fire had sprung up along Martin Creek in the 251:. Robinson jumped first followed by Cooley. (Bushey) Their supplies were dropped on the planes’ next pass. (NY times) The next day when the four-man crew reached them, they had the fire under control. They turned around and hiked the 28 miles back to camp. (Bushey). After the service set up the smokejumpers, Cooley began training other young men on how to do exactly the same thing he did. He trained men for what the National Service called “10 o'clock men”, meaning that they could have the fire out by 10 o'clock, on the morning after they had been dispatched (Bramwell). 268:, Cooley said “I am sure I did the right thing that day, but I still look at that map and have thought about it every day since then.” (NYTimes) After the fire, he went with local rangers to see placement of stone and concrete crosses placed on the spots at which each of the men died. It has been said that until his eighties, he would often take trips to ensure the crosses and various plaques, markers, and memorials were still standing. The majority of information on the infamous Mann Gulch fire can be found in 286:
evolve the way these men fought the fires. His goal was to learn something from each jump to make the job safer and more efficient. He served as base superintendent at the jump base in Missoula, Montana until 1975, when he finally retired from the Forestry service Cooley went on to establish the National Smokejumping Association in 1989, of which he served as president from 1993 to 1995, after which he retired from the service all together. He passed away November 9, 2009 at his home from pneumonia.
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Cooley continued to serve and protect people with the service of smokejumping. He went on to train countless jumpers to go into the fire and to get it extinguished quickly. Along with many others whose job is specifically that of studying fire behavior, he worked tirelessly to continually change and
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in Montana. The Canyon, which had cliffs that reached 1,250 at times on both sides, made access for ground crews almost impossible. (Maclean) Cooley was not actually one of the men who jumped on this run. Instead, he was the spotter. His job was to wait for the plane to fly over the spot previously
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in 1911. He was one of 11 children and grew up running through the woods and playing just like a normal kid. Hunting, trapping, and fishing were big parts of his life. He loved anything to do with the outdoors. When he was just a 12-year-old boy, his father suffered a substantial financial setback.
277:. Maclean sat down with Cooley and the survivors and wrote down the details of this event. The National Forestry service also has the incident investigation with interviews from Cooley and the three survivors within their archives. 239:. Terrain in the mountains in the 1930s was almost inaccessible, and the roads almost nonexistent. (Bramwell). The challenge became focused on finding a way to get to the fire faster. The agency came up with an idea on attaching “ 188:(USFS), where he was concerned with developing new methods of fighting forest fires. In 1940, he was one of the first U.S. firefighters to parachute from a plane onto a wildfire. Cooley went on to train others to fight fires by 243:” to a plane to drop on the fire. Although the idea was tested several times, it proved ineffective and was cancelled. (NY times) Cooley thought he could do something with the plane and brought up the idea of 362: 35: 219:
He went back to high school and graduated from the class of 1930. After graduation, he went on to attend and graduate from the forestry school at the
211:(NYTimes). He dropped out of school to help support his family. He relied on his abilities to hunt, fish, trap, and farm in order to help earn money. 352: 357: 326: 304:
Martin, Douglas. “Earl Cooley is Dead at 98; Fought Fires as Original Smokejumper.” The New York Times 15 Nov. 2009, page A32. print
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Sullivan, Patricia. “Smokejumper One of 1st to Make the Leap.” The Washington Post 13 November 2009, B05 sec.: Web.
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Bramwell, Lincoln. “Firefighters in the Sky.” Magazine of the Western History 2015: 60-69
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The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of
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Bramwell, Lincoln “History of Smokejumping.” Fire management today 2015: 5-7
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Maclean, Norman. Young Men and Fire. Chicago: U of Chicago, 2017. Print
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The agency was looking for ways to improve the methods used to fight
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Bushey, Chuck. “Passing of an Era.” Wildfire 19.1 (n.d.): 4. Print.
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On August 5, 1949, a fire broke out inside of a gulch in
77: 194:. After his retirement from the USFS, he set up the 198:, of which he was president from 1993 to 1995. 8: 231:In 1937, Cooley started his career with the 184:(1911–2009) spent his career working in the 50:Learn how and when to remove these messages 169:Learn how and when to remove this message 151:Learn how and when to remove this message 7: 363:20th-century American firefighters 14: 31:This article has multiple issues. 196:National Smokejumper Association 109: 61: 20: 39:or discuss these issues on the 1: 353:University of Montana alumni 358:People from Hardin, Montana 379: 323:- Daily Telegraph obituary 249:Naz Perce National Forest 72:is written like a story 261:Helena National Forest 221:University of Montana 86:neutral point of view 78:rewrite this article 206:Cooley was born in 186:U.S. Forest Service 274:Young Men and Fire 82:encyclopedic style 179: 178: 171: 161: 160: 153: 103: 102: 54: 370: 270:Norman Maclean's 174: 167: 156: 149: 145: 142: 136: 113: 112: 105: 98: 95: 89: 80:to introduce an 65: 64: 57: 46: 24: 23: 16: 378: 377: 373: 372: 371: 369: 368: 367: 333: 332: 329:- Facebook page 317: 292: 283: 266:Mann Gulch fire 257: 255:Mann Gulch Fire 233:Forest Service. 229: 217: 208:Hardin, Montana 204: 175: 164: 163: 162: 157: 146: 140: 137: 126: 120:has an unclear 114: 110: 99: 93: 90: 75: 66: 62: 25: 21: 12: 11: 5: 376: 374: 366: 365: 360: 355: 350: 345: 335: 334: 331: 330: 324: 316: 315:External links 313: 312: 311: 308: 305: 302: 299: 296: 291: 288: 282: 279: 256: 253: 228: 225: 216: 213: 203: 200: 177: 176: 159: 158: 122:citation style 117: 115: 108: 101: 100: 69: 67: 60: 55: 29: 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 375: 364: 361: 359: 356: 354: 351: 349: 346: 344: 341: 340: 338: 328: 325: 322: 319: 318: 314: 309: 306: 303: 300: 297: 294: 293: 289: 287: 280: 278: 276: 275: 271: 267: 262: 254: 252: 250: 246: 242: 238: 234: 226: 224: 222: 214: 212: 209: 201: 199: 197: 193: 192: 187: 183: 173: 170: 155: 152: 144: 134: 130: 124: 123: 118:This article 116: 107: 106: 97: 87: 83: 79: 73: 70:This article 68: 59: 58: 53: 51: 44: 43: 38: 37: 32: 27: 18: 17: 284: 272: 258: 245:smokejumping 230: 218: 205: 191:smokejumping 189: 181: 180: 165: 147: 138: 119: 91: 76:Please help 71: 47: 40: 34: 33:Please help 30: 348:2009 deaths 343:1911 births 327:Earl Cooley 321:Earl Cooley 241:water bombs 182:Earl Cooley 337:Categories 290:References 202:Early life 141:March 2018 133:footnoting 94:March 2018 36:improve it 215:Education 42:talk page 129:citation 281:Legacy 227:Career 84:and a 237:fires 131:and 339:: 223:. 45:. 172:) 166:( 154:) 148:( 143:) 139:( 135:. 125:. 96:) 92:( 88:. 74:. 52:) 48:(

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U.S. Forest Service
smokejumping
National Smokejumper Association
Hardin, Montana
University of Montana
Forest Service.
fires
water bombs
smokejumping
Naz Perce National Forest
Helena National Forest
Mann Gulch fire
Norman Maclean's
Young Men and Fire
Earl Cooley
Earl Cooley
Categories
1911 births
2009 deaths

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