WYNOLA FIRE HISTORY
Wynola’s Wildfire Legacy
Wynola’s landscape and community have been shaped by wildfire. Over the years, several major fires have threatened homes, disrupted lives, and tested our resilience. This page highlights key wildfires in our area’s recent history, what happened, how we responded, and what we’ve learned to better prepare for the future.
Read the sections below to explore each fire and its lasting impact on our community.

Inaja Fire
November 25, 1956
Shortly after 8:00 pm on November 25, 1956, with the Inaja Fire already ablaze, four U.S. Forest Service firefighters, 13 inmate firefighters, and a corrections officer were working to build a trail in San Diego River Canyon’s Cleveland National Forest. On a ridge just 1,000 feet below the crew, the fire had flared up and was moving toward them. Seeing its rapid progression, the scraper crew boss on the canyon rim issued two warnings in quick succession for the crews to evacuate the area. But the fire moved quickly uphill, cutting off the escape for part of the crew.
- One U.S. Forest Service firefighter and six inmate firefighters escaped without injury.
- Eleven who were trapped in the flashover died—including seven inmate firefighters, three U.S. Forest Service firefighters, and the corrections officer.
In total, the fire burned 43,611 acres within the Cleveland National Forest and adjoining land protected by the State of California. It also destroyed five homes.
Origin and Progression of the Inaja Fire
The Inaja Fire was set by a 16-year-old boy on the Inaja Indian Reservation at 9:10 am on Saturday, November 24, 1956. He later told investigators, “I just got a mad, crazy idea to do it. I threw a match in the grass to see if it would burn.” The fire was quickly spotted by lookouts at 9:15 am, and a crew of three arrived with a tanker at 9:25 am to control the fire. Realizing that they could not control it alone, additional crews and resources were dispatched. By 5:00 pm that night, the fire had already burned 25,000 acres and threatened at least 100 homes nearby.
On the second day of the fire, the fire slowly advanced up the steep hills against along the ridges in the dry San Diego River Canyon. There were fire flare-ups along the small ridges in the canyon. The fire was burning more slowly on the east side of the canyon, where the fire burned into the wind, than on the west.
- On the east, control lines were constructed with tractors.
- The crew then began to widen the trail by hand and start a patrol of 4-person tankers.
- Crews attempted twice to clear the trail from the top of the rim to a canyon by hand, but were evacuated as the trails were flanked by the main fire.
- In the afternoon, a third fire line was started from the canyon rim, and they cleared 1,000 feet before they were pulled from the area.

Because of this wind, helicopters were not able to aid the firefighting efforts until after 4:00 pm that afternoon. A night line boss scouted the area, flying higher to avoid the wind. He was unable to get a clear view of the fire lines and others being constructed because of the wind and smoke.
- One sector boss and one crew boss with 20 inmates were to burn out along the tractor-built line on the canyon rim and down the fire line.
- The other sector boss with three crew bosses, the correctional officer, and 13 inmates started to clear brush along the hand trail toward the riverbed.
Between 4:00 and 7:00 pm, the fire calmed down, just as the night crews reported for duty to pick up where the day crews left off. At 7:18 pm, the sector bosses synchronized their watches and planned to check in at 7:55 pm.
Sunday Night: Warnings and the Flashover
With the night crews in place, a tanker on the rim stretched a hose line to hold the fire. But a section of hose burst, losing some of the tank water, and by 8:00 pm they were out of water. The scraper crew boss gave his crew instructions and then proceeded to the rim of the canyon, as instructed by the sector boss, to see how the burning-out was progressing. When he reached the rim of the canyon, he saw that the main fire had flared up just 1,000 feet below his crew. He relayed a warning and crews began making their way back up the canyon, but at an unhurried pace.
Two minutes later, he saw the fire running up to the main ridge where they were working, so he followed up with a more urgent warning. Two crew members who were closest to the rim escaped, and two more who were at the upper part of the fire line found a clearing below a rock bluff on the cleared line. Within a few minutes, five more who had been working lower made it to the clearing. Nine more made their way up the to the canyon rim, but were outrun on the right by the fire, which had crossed the cleared trail. Five crew members went left and struggled up a 15-foot bluff and ran another 75 feet to safety with the fire only feet behind them. As the fire reached the rim, the flashover occurred to the left, just below the small bluff.
Eleven crew members were cut off on the small bluff when the flashover occurred. As the fire ran up the ravine it pushed gases, which exploded when it reached the rim. Observers and survivors confirmed the flashover, including two crew bosses on the opposite side of the main fire who observed it run up the ravine beside the ridge and up the trail near the top. Several firefighters and officers stayed with their crew, helping others to escape. One survivor was grateful for a fellow crew member who helped him climb over the rock bluff when he was too exhausted to continue.



A Look at the Numbers
On the evening of Wednesday, November 28, four days after it was set, the fire was finally brought under control. The Inaja Forest Fire has been called one of the greatest arrays of personnel and equipment ever assembled to fight a forest fire in San Diego County history.
- A fleet of equipment was formed, including:
- Three helicopters
- Four air tanker planes
- Two scouting planes
- 27 bulldozers
- A fleet of 90 stake, tank, and pickup trucks
- Over 2,000 men fought the fire, including 1,300 under U.S. Forest Service supervision:
- 500 Native Americans from the local and Southwestern Region
- About 500 Navy personnel
- 200 inmates from San Diego County and State Honor Camps
- Other organized crews
In Memoriam
The Inaja Memorial Picnic Area was created on Highway 78, east of Santa Ysabel. It is part of the Inaja Trail, which is one of four San Diego trails that make up the larger National Recreation Trail. This memorial site features breathtaking views of the San Diego River Canyon, a family picnic area, and a stone monument to the eleven crew members who died.
CREDIT: www.firehero.org; www.fs.usda.gov; nfsl.contentdm.oclc.org
Cedar Fire
OCTOBER 25, 2003
The Cedar Fire was the largest wildland fire in California history. It started 25 miles east of San Diego, in the Cleveland National Forest, when a hunter became lost and lit a small fire to signal for help. It quickly spread out of control. At 5:30 in the evening of Oct. 25, 2003, it was reported at 20 acres. By midnight, it was 5,500 acres, and by 3 a.m., 62,000 acres. The Cedar Fire first crossed into the city of San Diego at 6:30 a.m. on Oct. 26.
The Fire-Rescue Department responded with 50 engine companies, 11 brush rigs, nine truck companies and two airport firefighting rigs. The communities of Scripps Ranch and Tierrasanta were hardest hit by the fire. By the time containment was declared on Oct. 28, 28,676 acres within the city had burned, 335 structures were destroyed, and 71 others were damaged. The dollar loss was estimated at $204 million. Throughout the county, the Cedar Fire destroyed 280,278 acres and 2,820 buildings and killed 15 people.

View of the Cedar Fire from southbound Interstate 5 near Pacific Beach, on the first morning of the fire

Smoke from the fires drifts toward Arizona and Nevada, after the wind shifted on October 29.
Fire progression
The Cedar Fire began in the Cuyamaca Mountains within the Cleveland National Forest. It was first reported at 5:37 p.m. PDT on October 25, 2003, to the south of Ramona in central San Diego County. At the time it began, at least eleven other wildfires were actively burning in Southern California. Within ten minutes of the initial report, the U.S. Forest Service had deployed 10 fire engines, two water tenders, two hand crews and two chief officers. Within 30 minutes, 320 firefighters and six fire chiefs were en route.
An ASTREA helicopter of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department that was rescuing a hunter spotted the fire at about the same time as the first phone report was received and called for an air response. Another sheriff’s helicopter equipped with a Bambi Bucket was dispatched to drop water on the fire. When the helicopter was only minutes away from the fire, a Forest Service fire chief cancelled the water drop because policy required the cutoff of aerial firefighting 30 minutes before sunset, a decision which was later severely criticized by the public, media, and other elected officials.

Drivers scramble up the embankment to escape from Interstate 15, as the Cedar Fire crosses the freeway.
Between the time the fire started and midnight the predicted strong easterly Santa Ana winds surfaced and the fire burned approximately 5,319 acres. By 3:00 a.m., 62,000 acres (250 km2) had burned. Overnight, the fast-moving fire killed 12 people living in Wildcat Canyon and Muth Valley in the northern part of Lakeside, who had little or no warning that the fire was approaching. The fire destroyed 39 homes on the Barona Indian Reservation. In only a few hours, the Cedar Fire pushed southwest over 30 miles (48.3 km) and burned over 100,000 acres (400 km2) at rates of up to 6,000 acres (24 km2) per hour. The fire also crossed several large highways, including Interstate 15, and by noon on October 26, the fire was burning hundreds of homes in the Scripps Ranch community of San Diego, and was threatening many others.
On October 26, the fire forged into Alpine, Harbison Canyon, Lake Jennings and Crest, burning hundreds more homes in areas that had been devastated by the Laguna Fire 33 years earlier. By October 28, the strong easterly Santa Ana winds died down and the fire turned east, consuming another 114,000 acres (460 km2). The entire community of Cuyamaca, most of nearby Cuyamaca Rancho State Park, and more than 500 homes surrounding the town of Julian were destroyed.
On October 29, a group of firefighters attempting to defend a house in Riverwood Estates, near Santa Ysabel, became entrapped and overrun by the fire. One firefighter/engineer died. Another firefighter sustained severe injuries, and two others were hurt. Firefighters finally achieved full containment of the Cedar Fire on November 3, and the Cedar Fire was completely brought under control on December 5.
CREDIT: www.sandiego.gov; wikipedia.org
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