A video tribute to the Granite Mountain Hotshots
Prescott Fire Department – Esse Quam Videri from Traveling Picture Show Company on Vimeo.
thanks Tim
Aug 29
Posted by Admin in Fire Service News | Comments off
A video tribute to the Granite Mountain Hotshots
Prescott Fire Department – Esse Quam Videri from Traveling Picture Show Company on Vimeo.
thanks Tim
Tags: Granite Mountain Hotshots, Prescott Granite Mountain Hot Shots, video tribute to the Granite Mountain Hotshot crew that perished, Zion native part of Granite Mountain Hotshot crew
Jul 12
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A brief video from the visitation for Granite Mountain Hotshot Anthony Rose
Tags: Amazing Grace played by bagpipes at fire department funeral, Anthony Rose, Beach Park Fire District Chief Paul Tierney, fire department funeral, fire department funeral video, fire department walk-through, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Prescott Granite Mountain Hot Shots, Zion native part of Granite Mountain Hotshot crew
Jul 11
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The formal fire department walk-through for Granite Mountain Hotshot Anthony Rose took place Thursday evening in Zion. Here are a few images.
Larry Shapiro photo
Tim Olk photo
Larry Shapiro photo
Larry Shapiro photo
Larry Shapiro photo
Larry Shapiro photo
A galleries with more images can be viewed HERE and HERE.
Previous posts document the homecoming for the deceased firefighter HERE and HERE.
Tags: Anthony Rose, Beach Park Fire District Chief Paul Tierney, fire department funeral, Fire Department Honor Guard, fire department walk-through, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Prescott Granite Mountain Hot Shots, Tim Olk, Zion native part of Granite Mountain Hotshot crew
Jul 11
Posted by Admin in Fire Service Photos, LODD | 2 Comments
For those unable to take part in the events surrounding Anthony Rose returning, here is a short video from the Waukegan Regional Airport Wednesday evening.
Tags: 19 firefighters have died while battling the Yarnell Hill fire, airplane wetdown by airport fire trucks, Anthony Rose, Blackhawk helicopters honor fallen firefighter, Chief Paul Tierney of the Beach Park Fire Department, FF LODD, Fire Department Honor Guard, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Hotshot comes home for burial, hundreds of firefighter honor local hotshot, wildland firefighters, Yarnell Hill Fire, Zion native part of Granite Mountain Hotshot crew
Jul 11
Posted by Admin in Fire Service News, Fire Service Photos, LODD | 1 Comment
Anthony Rose, a member of the Granite Mountain Hotshots who died on the Yarnell Fire June 30th returned home Wednesday evening.
Larry Shapiro photo
Tim Olk photo
Larry Shapiro photo
His ashes arrived at the Waukegan Regional Airport aboard a plane accompanied by a member of the Granite Mountain Hotshots, two US Forestry officers, and members of the Phoenix Fire Department honor guard.
Tim Olk photo
Larry Shapiro photo
Tim Olk photo
In a solemn ceremony attended by several hundred local firefighters, members of the Axemen Motorcycle Club, local police, and many citizens, his ashes were presented to his family along with a flag that was used during the memorial in Phoenix.
Larry Shapiro photo
Tim Olk photo
A procession of police, motorcycles and fire trucks lead a limousine with Anthony’s family to the funeral home in nearby Zion.
More images can be viewed HERE and HERE.
Tags: 19 firefighters have died while battling the Yarnell Hill fire, airplane wetdown by airport fire trucks, Anthony Rose, Blackhawk helicopters honor fallen firefighter, Chief Paul Tierney of the Beach Park Fire Department, FF LODD, Fire Department Honor Guard, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Hotshot comes home for burial, hundreds of firefighter honor local hotshot, wildland firefighters, Yarnell Hill Fire, Zion native part of Granite Mountain Hotshot crew
Jul 10
Posted by Admin in Fire Service News, LODD | 1 Comment
More on the services and honoring of Anthony Rose in an article from the Daily Herald:
The remains of one of the 19 firefighters killed in Arizona last month are being returned to his family in Beach Park.
Chief Paul Tierney of the Beach Park Fire Department says the cremated remains of Anthony Rose will be flown into Waukegan Regional Airport on Wednesday afternoon. He says family of the 23-year-old firefighter now live in Beach Park. The fire chief says the urn containing Rose’s remains will be given to his mother. Rose was raised in Wisconsin.
Tags: 19 firefighters have died while battling the Yarnell Hill fire, Anthony Rose, Chief Paul Tierney of the Beach Park Fire Department, FF LODD, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Yarnell Hill Fire
Jul 9
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A NOTICE TO ALL BROTHERS AND SISTER IN THIS AREA…Brothers and Sisters:As you know, 19 Prescott firefighters were killed in the line-of duty while battling the Yarnell Hill wildfire in Arizona. One of the deceased firefighters, Anthony Rose, had ties to Illinois and lived in the northern suburbs of Chicago for a couple years before moving to Arizona with his family. His remains are being returned to the Waukegan Regional Airport on Wednesday evening as Illinois will be his final resting place and services are planned for Thursday evening in Zion.
The IAFF has made a request to assemble an honor detail of uniformed personnel at the airport on Wednesday to honor Brother Rose’s service and sacrifice. We also encourage members to attend the services and fire department walk-through
on Thursday evening. Details about each are below.Return of Brother Anthony Rose to Illinois:
Waukegan Regional Airport (map below)
Wednesday, July 10, 2013Fire Department members arrive by 7:30pm
Plane arrival: 8:30pm
Please enter off of York House Road and go north on McAree Road to the Fire Service Entry Gate. There will be a staging officer at the gate to direct you.________________________
Visitation/FD Walk-through for Brother Anthony Rose:Congdon Funeral Home (Phone: 847 746-1234)
3012 Sheridan Rd
Zion, IL 60099Thursday, July 11, 2013
Visitation: 5-9 pm
Fire Department line-up: 6:30pm
Fire Department walk through: 7:00 pm
________________________Waukegan Regional Airport
3550 N McAree Rd, Waukegan, ILCongdon Funeral Home Website
http://www.congdonfuneralhome.com/runtime.php?SiteId=12196&NavigatorId=751897Chicago Sun Times Article about Tony Rose
http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=news%2Flocal&id=9159892
From the Office of the Illinois Fire Marshal (Facebook)
Firefighter Anthony Rose of the Prescott Fire Department was one of nineteen Firefighters who died in the Line of Duty on June 30, 2013 while battling the Yarnell Hill wildfire in Arizona. The family of Firefighter Rose lives in Beach Park, Illinois and as such he is returning home to Illinois as his final resting place.The remains of Firefighter Rose (along with his Fiancée escorting him) will arrive at Waukegan Regional Airport on Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at 20:30 hours. Fire department personnel who wish to take part in the honor detail should be at the airport by 19:30 hours. Enter off of York House Road and go north on McAree Road to the Fire Service Entry Gate. There will be a staging officer at the gate to direct you.
Visitation and services will be Thursday, July 11, 2013 at the Congdon Funeral Home, 3012 Sheridan Road, Zion, Illinois from 17:00 to 21:00 hours. A formal fire department walk-thru will be at 19:00 hours. Fire department personnel will be lined up outside the funeral home by 18:30 hours where there will be a number of staging officers on site.
If you have any questions, please contact Chief Paul Tierney, Beach Park Fire Department, at 847-662-2642, Chief Joe Holomy, IFCA Funeral Committee, at 217-821-9877 (cell), or Jeff Bruno, AFFI Honor Guard, 815-573-1649 (cell).
Tags: 19 firefighters have died while battling the Yarnell Hill fire, Anthony Rose, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Prescott Granite Mountain Hot Shots, Yarnell Arizona, Zion native killed in Arizona wildfire
Jul 8
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ABC15.com has an article describing the trip home for the 19 hotshot firefighters who lost their lives fighting the Yarnell Fire in Arizona last week.
PHOENIX – Nineteen firefighters killed in a wildfire a week ago went home for the last time on Sunday, their bodies traveling in individual white hearses in a somber caravan for 125 miles through Arizona cities and towns.
The nearly five-hour-long procession began near the state Capitol in Phoenix, went through the town where the Granite Mountain Hotshots were killed and ended in the mountain community of Prescott, where they lived and will be laid to rest this week.
Thousands of people from across the state and beyond stood patiently in triple-digit temperatures in Phoenix, lined highways and overpasses along the route, and flooded the roads of downtown Prescott to pay their respect to the 19, whose deaths are the greatest loss of life for firefighters since 9/11.
They included fellow firefighters, the men’s family members, complete strangers and residents of Yarnell, the small town they died trying to save.
Those along the procession cried, they saluted, they held their hands over their hearts.
“It’s overwhelming to watch this slow procession of 19 hearses,” said a tearful Bill Morse, a Flagstaff fire captain who has been stationed in Prescott for a week helping Prescott fire deal with the tragedy. “The ceremonious air of it all. It’s heartbreaking.”
In downtown Prescott, a bustling and sometimes-rowdy area filled with bars and other businesses known as Whiskey Row grew eerily quiet as the hearses drove by, essentially stopping all activity for several minutes.
Many along the route carried American flags and signs that read, “Courageous, selfless, fearless, beloved,” “Yarnell remembers” and simply, “Heroes.”
Motorcycle escorts, honor guard members, and firefighting trucks accompanied the 19 hearses along the route.
In both Phoenix and Prescott, the procession drove under giant American flags hoisted above the street with the raised ladders of two firefighter trucks. Bagpipes played as crowds were hushed silent by the enormity of the loss.
A red and white DC-3 airplane used for wildland firefighting released long purple and pink ribbons overhead with each firefighter’s name on them; the ribbons drifted slowly down to the earth just before the hearses came to a stop outside the Yavapai County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Inside each hearse were the American flags that were draped over the men’s bodies at the site of their deaths in Yarnell. The flags have been with them since and will be until they’re buried. After that, the flags will be given to their families.
Family members of the firefighters watched the procession in private, away from the public and members of the media, as it passed by a massive makeshift memorial outside the fire station where the men were based in Prescott. The memorial includes hundreds of personal messages, pictures of the men, American flags, and variations on the number 19 — 19 water bottles, 19 shovels, 19 toy fire trucks surrounding a stuffed Teddy bear.
Since their fellow firefighters arrived at the scene where they were killed, the fallen firefighters have not been alone, a tradition among those in the profession in the U.S.
“Since they were discovered, they have never been out of the presence of a brother firefighter,” said Paul Bourgeois, a Phoenix-area fire chief who is acting as a spokesman in Prescott for the firefighters’ families. “From the time they were taken to the medical examiner in Phoenix, while they’re at the medical examiner’s office, when they are received in a funeral home — there will always be a brother firefighter on site with them until they are interred.
“That’s something people don’t realize. We never leave your side,” he said of the tradition. “It’s a comfort to the survivors, whether they’re families or fellow firefighters.”
The firefighters were killed a week ago in the Yarnell Hill fire, sparked by lightning on June 28. Crews were closing in on full containment after the fire destroyed more than 100 homes in Yarnell and burned about 13 square miles. The town remained evacuated but residents were expected to be allowed to return home on Monday.
The crew of Hotshots was working to build a fire line between the blaze and Yarnell when erratic winds suddenly shifted the fire’s direction,
The complete article with a video segment is HERE.
Memorial T-shirts are being sold to benefit the families of the 19 firefighters who perished.
From Image Apparel Solutions:
… our son is a Golden Eagle Hotshot wildland firefighter. He had interviewed with the Granite Mountain Hotshots earlier this year and met some of the crew that sadly lost their lives last week battling a fire near Prescott Arizona. This tragedy hits far too close to home, so we want to help the families of the fallen firefighters in whatever small way we can. We were able to connect with the United Phoenix Fire Fighters Association, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. They have established a fund for the families. With their support, we are selling a memorial t-shirt with all profits going specifically to these families. Please join us in showing support for the families of these brave men.
From The United Phoenix Firefighters Association:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
David Leibowitz
(602) 317-1414
david@leibowitzsolo.comFIRE FIGHTER UNION ESTABLISHES RELIEF FUND; 100 PERCENT OF TAX-DEDUCTIBLE DONATIONS WILL GO TO FAMILIES OF THE YARNELL FALLEN ACCOUNT NOW OPEN AT CHASE BANKS STATEWIDEPHOENIX – The United Phoenix Fire Fighters Association, together with Prescott Fire Fighter’s Charities, have established a 501(c)3 relief fund to handle donations to benefit the families of the fallen killed in the Yarnell Fire.
Every penny – 100% of your tax-deductible donation – will go to benefit the families of our brothers who made the ultimate sacrifice.
Please make your individual or corporate donation at any Chase bank.
Account information:
United Phoenix Fire Fighters Association Account
Account #987218757.If donors have any questions, they can contact the UPFFA Office at
(602) 277-1500.For interviews or media requests, contact David Leibowitz at the above contact information.
An article HERE from the TImesunion.com describes and illustrates conditions surrounding the burn over that occurred.
Tags: 19 firefighters have died while battling the Yarnell Hill fire, Firefighter LODD, Golden Eagle Hotshot, Granite Mountain Hotshots, Prescott Fire Fighter's Charities, United Phoenix Fire Fighters Association, Yarnell Arizona, Yarnell Hill Fire, Yavapai County Medical Examiner's Office
For the finest department portraits and composites contact Tim Olk or Larry Shapiro.
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