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Fast-moving flames scorch the Smokies

At least 3 killed, 14,000 flee as wildfires stalk tourist hub

- Adam Tamburin atamburin@tennessean.com The (Nashville) Tennessean

KNOXVILLE, TENN. Flames tore through the Great Smoky Mountains on Monday night and into Tuesday, killing at least three people, scorching hundreds of homes and businesses and sending more than 14,000 fleeing from the resort towns of Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge.

Tourists and residents scrambled to outrun the blaze, which was pushed from the Great Smoky Mountains National Park into the towns by wind gusts of almost 90 mph.

Drivers navigating narrow mountain roads shot video footage showing flames swooping in from the shoulders of the roadway at the height of the evacuation.

Wildfires have ravaged the Southeast throughout the month, and the haze of smoke has settled in across the region. But emergency responders seemed blindsided by the intensity of the wind- whipped flames Monday night.

A Gatlinburg fire official said more than 20 fire calls came within 15 minutes at the peak of the chaos.

As day broke Tuesday, the extent of the damage came into grim focus. Buildings were reduced to charred shells, and many beloved tourist destinatio­ns reported heavy damage or destructio­n. The devastatio­n grabbed the attention of millions of people across the globe who have memories of vacations spent in the mountains of the country’s most visited national park.

The center of Gatlinburg ’s tourist district escaped heavy damage, but “it’s the apocalypse” on either side, said Newmansvil­le Volunteer Fire Department Lt. Bobby Balding.

Although rooms at the Dollywood theme park and resort were evacuated as a precaution, Dolly Parton said Tuesday that the area had been spared.

At shelters, hundreds of survivors wondered how much they had lost.

Shari Deason and her boyfriend scooped up their 14month-old son, William, when the evacuation order came, but

they left everything else behind at the Bedrock Motel.

“I don’t know if we’ve got a room to go back to,” Deason said. “I don’t know if we’ve got anything to go back to.”

The unpreceden­ted fire began when embers from a wildfire on nearby Chimney Tops Trail in the national park blew into Gatlinburg about 6 p.m. as the heavy winds doubled in speed, according to Gatlinburg Fire Chief Greg Miller.

Cassius Cash, the park’s superinten­dent, said the Chimney Tops fire burned about 50 acres on Sunday. By Monday, 15,000 acres were engulfed.

More than 200 firefighte­rs poured into the area from as far west as Memphis, and the Tennessee National Guard used a helicopter to dump water on the flames.

About 12 people were treated for fire-related injuries, a Gatlinburg official said.

Three people with severe burns were taken to Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville for treatment, according to the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency. A Vanderbilt official said those patients were in critical but stable condition Tuesday afternoon.

As residents filtered back in the area to take stock of the damage, they came to grips with the impact on the community.

“Many people come from all around the world just to enjoy the beauty of this park and enjoy the beauty of this city,” said Bryan Aleman, who works at a bank in Gatlinburg and lives in Pigeon Forge. “Everybody’s gonna suffer from it. This is what Gatlinburg is: a tourist destinatio­n for the entire nation.”

Gatlinburg’s tourist district escaped heavy damage, but “it’s the apocalypse” on either side.

Newmansvil­le (Tenn.) Volunteer Fire Department Lt. Bobby Balding

 ?? ANDREW NELLES, THE TENNESSEAN, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Polo Gutierrez climbs onto the foundation of a destroyed home to try to see if his apartment building is still standing.
ANDREW NELLES, THE TENNESSEAN, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK Polo Gutierrez climbs onto the foundation of a destroyed home to try to see if his apartment building is still standing.
 ??  ?? Shari Deason holds 14month-old son William outside a makeshift Red Cross shelter on Tuesday. They evacuated, leaving almost everything behind, including his diapers. AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS, KNOXVILLE NEWS SENTINEL
Shari Deason holds 14month-old son William outside a makeshift Red Cross shelter on Tuesday. They evacuated, leaving almost everything behind, including his diapers. AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS, KNOXVILLE NEWS SENTINEL

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