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Spudman
March 24th, 2009, 02:36 PM
The town where I grew up just had another devestating fire that destroyed another block of Main Street.

Several historic buildings in the 700 block of Main Street were destroyed by fire Monday. Firefighters from Miles City, Forsyth, Terry and Glendive responded to the fire. Many other businesses experienced smoke damage.

http://milescitystar.com/news/PH%20Fire%2023%20look%20of%20disaster.jpg
Photo by Steve Allison

Monday, March 23

Main Street block ablaze; many businesses lost in historic district
By Elaine Forman
“Heartbreaking” was the word on many people’s lips as they watched the north side of the 700 block of Main burning out of control Monday morning.
Remodeling was being done in the basement of the former Burlap and Lace site when the fire broke out. The original call came in at about 8:30 a.m. as a fire in the basement of Burlap and Lace, according to Incident Commander Tod Miller of Miles City Fire & Rescue.
Miller said the cause of the fire was not determined.
Gloria Grenz of the Park Place and 600 Cafe said Mike Wacker and John Peila were starting the Horseshoe Bar at the site.
“Two young men that really stuck their neck out to have a business on Main Street, and they lost everything,” Grenz said. “They were going to be open before Bucking Horse Sale.”
At noon, Miller said all the firefighters were pulled out of the building and they were fighting “totally defense,” meaning they were fighting it only on the outside.
At that point the goal was to keep the fire to the four buildings (the Arnold Building to Good Things) and keep it out of Stockhill Jewelers “as best we can, “ Miller said.
Firefighters were on the roof across Main Street to keep an eye on conditions.
Karen Martin was coming to open up Family Floral at 8:50 a.m., and as she rounded the corner of 8th and Main streets, smoke was already bellowing out of the door of Burlap & Lace.
The workers from the remodeling project were already on the site.
She had to cross the street to walk around the smoke, then approached the front door to Family Floral and saw black smoke inside the flower shop.
“I opened the door only until firefighters said it’s okay.”
Shaun Lockie has a Farmers Insurance Group office in the Arnold Building and began smelling smoke at 9 a.m. Once he saw smoke coming out of the roof in the Burlap and Lace site, he began clearing his office, then helping the Cellar move furniture out.
“We do our best to get everything out that we can,” he said. “It was nice to see everyone pitching in and helping out. It’s hard to believe it’s happened.”
He keeps an upbeat attitude. “It is what it is. You can’t change it. ... As long as no one is seriously hurt. ... You’ve got to pick up and keep moving forward.”
Still it is hard to fathom “especially taking as many businesses as it did,” he said.
“I can’t imagine all the smoke damage. You can see all the soot on the building walls (across the street),” he said.
Denis Leidholt, owner of the Cellar Casino, said the smoke was coming into his building by 8:15 a.m., and they evacuated right away.
Apparently a bystander helping to carry out items from one of the businesses was taken by the ambulance from North 8th Street.
Gayle Muggli of Copper Thimble said this is the third time the business has been involved in a fire.
When Carla Muggli started the business, it was at the Milligan Building on the 500 block of Main when a fire broke out about 20 years ago. When Coast to Coast burned on June 20, 1989, Copper Thimble was at the end of the block and had to move its merchandise out.
Now it has been destroyed for the second time.
“Maybe it’s time to quit. It’s so sickening to see the whole thing burn,” Muggli said.
The utility pole behind the Cellar is a main tower for power for the area, so power was lost or shut off in the 800 block of Main also. Washington Middle School was closed because it had no power.
Businesses across Main Street, including Stockman Bank, were evacuated. Bank employees had moved art work and other valuables to the vault.
Bystanders helped clear some of the buildings, and some of those items were also going into the vault.
Firefighters from the Custer County Rural Volunteer Fire Company, Terry, Forsyth and Glendive had responded to the fire.
Custer County Sheriff’s Office and reserve officers, and Miles City Police Department were providing security and traffic control.
Ash fell all over town, and an air quality permit was issued.
At the Park Place, a Red Cross station was set up for the firefighters and other emergency providers with food and supply donations from the 600 Cafe, Pepsi, Blue Rock Distributing, Holy Rosary Healthcare, Albertsons, Subway, Reynolds, Wendy’s and more.
Susan Maddox of the Red Cross said people are giving money to help the situation.
“I am just so sad and everyone is so sad ...,” Grenz said.
Stan Markuson, president of the Miles City Branch of Stockman Bank, said that the bank’s vault was used by John Stockhill Jewelry to store their inventory.
“As a precautionary measure,” the bank put their artwork in the vault also, he said.
“We know we have smoke damage already,” otherwise they are just watching for burning embers on the roof, he said.
“We have a disaster protocol to make sure everyone is out of the building,” Markuson said.
Most of the employees have left work and are on standby.
The phones have been rerouted and are set up in the Stockman Center on Bridge Street with computers to handle corporate business, he said.

sunvalleylaw
March 24th, 2009, 02:39 PM
Wow, I am sorry. It is amazing to me in this day and age that we can still lose large chunks of towns due to fire.

Spudman
March 24th, 2009, 02:42 PM
There are many videos online if you just Google them.
This one is from the back of the Cellar Casino

http://watchfreestreaminglive.blogspot.com/2009/03/miles-city-fire-miles-city-montana-fire.html

The Cellar Casino is owned by my old drummer. It is completely gone as are buildings all around it. Also gone is the mens clothing store that I worked in in high school. These buildings were very old and had a lot of historic significance and memorabilia in them. All of it is gone.

Many years ago other part of Main Street suffered the same fate. The once continual building to building store fronts were replaced by 1/2 block gaping holes. Many buildings had a great historic significance and non replaceable historic memorabilia was lost. Arson was the cause of all of these fires. The current fire was due to a welding accident during a remodel.

Many photos can be seen here.
http://melanieframephotography.smugmug.com/gallery/7698726_TzBp9#498004731_bENh5

just strum
March 24th, 2009, 02:44 PM
Geez that looks like a major part of history that is gone. I take it that it is a "small town USA". I can understand it being like a piece of you taken away.

Sort of similiar, I was reading the paper the other day and they had an article that the Catholic grade school was being torn down. That is the trifecta of my schooling prior to college being torn down. The school I went to for kindergarden was torn down when I was in my 30's, the high school was torn down when I was in my 40's and now the school I attended for 8 years will be torn down this summer. While the removal is by design, it certainly cannot compare to the loss that town has taken by this fire.

sunvalleylaw
March 24th, 2009, 02:47 PM
Spud, as you know, we lost historic Whiskey's here (the local watering hole where decent bands played and the hub of the nightlife). It hurts small towns to lose those anchors. I am sorry for you and your drummer, and the townspeople.

Spudman
March 24th, 2009, 02:58 PM
Strum
They pulled down the old hospital that everyone over the age of 15 was born in just 2 years ago. Surprisingly that video is on you tube. Now it's just an empty lot.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3oWujGi_z0

We lost our historic Crossroads Inn supper club where two routes converge out in the valley to fire. Several bars, many small mom and pop shops, Coast To Coast, a grain elevator and more that I'm forgetting also lost to fire. The bowling alley on the edge of town where I used to work, several motels and other business are all gone because of deterioration.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tHQlkLZq2o
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvVP2ICcrC4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4zR5mYmbEs

Only one building survived yesterday's fire on that block.

just strum
March 24th, 2009, 03:16 PM
Strum
They pulled down the old hospital that everyone over the age of 15 was born in just 2 years ago. Surprisingly that video is on you tube. Now it's just an empty lot.


WFfURSTLvfw

mrmudcat
March 24th, 2009, 04:32 PM
Sorry for ya brother:(

Spudman
March 24th, 2009, 04:42 PM
Sorry for ya brother:(
Thanks Muddy.
It was just such a cool thing growing up in that small western town. Main Street was awesome. Everyone looked you in the eye and said "howdy". It's really sad that the town is vanishing.

Robert
March 24th, 2009, 06:13 PM
Sorry Spud, it's sad when this happens. You know, if you moved up here and play in my band, I'll say howdy to you every day. :)

Spudman
March 24th, 2009, 06:32 PM
Sorry Spud, it's sad when this happens. You know, if you moved up here and play in my band, I'll say howdy to you every day. :)

Thanks but it's really cold up there.

tjcurtin1
March 24th, 2009, 06:41 PM
Sorry to hear that, Spud. Sounds like your town has really been ravaged - it's scary to think that your entire personal history, and that of your neighbors can disappear like that.

Spudman
April 2nd, 2009, 03:17 PM
There are 2 photos that morph between then and now on this link. Sad.
http://www.montanasnewsstation.com/Global/story.asp?S=10054547

just strum
April 2nd, 2009, 03:40 PM
Living in a small town with historic buildings, I realize the impact that it could have on the community. It's not just the loss of a business (most can set up shop somewhere else), but the loss of a landmark that cannot be replaced.

I watched the slide show too and it is amazing how quickly a fire can take away history.

Spudman
April 2nd, 2009, 04:56 PM
I just found out that that whole burned section is now leveled. No structures standing at all like in the pictures.

just strum
April 2nd, 2009, 05:03 PM
I just found out that that whole burned section is now leveled. No structures standing at all like in the pictures.

I hope someone doesn't come up with the idea "Hey, we could use more parking space" or "A BP station (assuming they have BP) would look good there"

piebaldpython
April 2nd, 2009, 05:25 PM
Sorry to hear about parts of your town being destroyed.
Even in big cities like Philly, buildings that have been part of the skyscape for years bite the dust from time to time and it is sad to see that happen.

Hmmmmmmmm......was it Judy Collins or Joni Mitchell that said..."...put up a parking lot and paved over paradise."

oldguy
April 2nd, 2009, 07:39 PM
Sorry, Spuds.
I've been watching it happen here in the midwest for twenty yrs. It's sad, and it's real. Downtown St. Joseph, Missouri is a ghost of the business district of my childhood.