Remembering the 'Four County Fire' three years later
Dec 15, 2024
This article was originally published on Dec. 15, 2022.
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) - It has been three years since a wind-whipped storm moved across Kansas, causing devastating fires and reduced visibility for drivers.
The storm system on Dec. 15, 2021, carried winds that reached up to 100 mph. It caused downed power lines, which sparked numerous fires. One of those fires became known as the "Four County Fire." The fire caused the most devastation in Ellis, Rooks, Russell and Osborne counties.
The blaze was impossible for firefighters to even engage, forcing authorities to order mandatory evacuations of Codell, Natoma, Paradise, Waldo and Luray.
December 2021 Kansas wildfires (KSN Photo)Four County Fire (KSN Photo)Four County Fire (KSN Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Emergency crews respond to field of flames in Ellis County Thursday night, Dec. 16, 2021. (KSNT/ Rebekah Chung)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)December 2021 Kansas wildfires (KSN Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Kansas Forest Service personnel work to control the Four County Fire (Courtesy: Kansas News Service)Livestock after the Four County Fire (KSN Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire (KSNT Photo)Four County Fire aftermath (KSN Photo)A half-burned wooden fence post hangs on barbed wire near Koester's ranch in Russell County. The wind covered the burned grass in this area with a layer of tan soot and dust (Courtesy: Kansas News Service)Burned tree stumps stick out of an ash-covered piece of pasture near Koester's ranch in Russell County (Courtesy: Kansas News Service)Piles of dust and soot resembling desert sand dunes line the edge of a pasture in Russell County, with burned trees dotting the background (Courtesy: Kansas News Service)
Numerous homes, outbuildings and other structures were destroyed. Approximately 1,400 cattle, horses and other livestock perished in the fire. Derrick Scott Kelley died when he became trapped in the fire. Another man, Richard Shimanek, died from burns while trying to save his farm near Leoti.
The Kansas Forest Service said nearly 163,000 acres burned across the state.
The wind-driven dust also caused numerous crashes, including an eight-vehicle pile-up in Grant County. According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, there were 51 non-injury rashes, 20 injuries crashes, and three fatal.
In the aftermath, recovery efforts from the Kansas Department of Agriculture, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, the Office of the Governor and other groups helped repair the damage done.