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1964 Coyote Fire and Post-Fire Debris Flows 📂 Entry Series

Occurred Sep 22, 1964 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 12, 2026
📍 Santa Barbara foothills, Coyote Road to Santa Ynez Mountains, Santa Barbara County, CA
Tags: Climate & Fire Weather Debris Flow Evacuation FEMA & Disaster Relief Historical (Pre-2000) Montecito Fire Protection District Recovery & Rebuilding Santa Barbara City Fire SB County Fire Department South Coast U.S. Forest Service Vegetation Management Water & Firefighting Infrastructure Wildfire Wildland-Urban Interface
Inclusion Criteria: Wildfire Event
At a Glance
📰 4 Sources
👥 11 People
Key individuals: Don MacGillivray, Bill Hansen, Bill Richardson, Howard Haradon, Frankie Richardson, Stubby Mansfield + 3 more →

Description

  • Acreage: 67,000 acres (21,000 on private land)
  • Ignition: September 22, 1964, at approximately 2:00 p.m.; faulty vehicle exhaust system
  • Containment: October 1, 1964
  • Structures Destroyed: 157 total structures (including 94 residences)
  • Injuries/Fatalities: 1 fatality (Firefighter John L. Patterson, Sr.); 18 to 227 injuries (discrepant records)
  • Lead Agency: U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and Santa Barbara City Fire Department (Unified Command)

Sparked in the Santa Barbara foothills during a period of extreme heat, the Coyote Fire devastated 67,000 acres and claimed the life of a Klamath National Forest firefighter. The disaster stands as a regional turning point for its massive structural losses and the catastrophic debris flows that followed the denudation of 30,000 acres of steep watershed. Its legacy is defined by the first major local deployment of B-17 air tankers and a lasting controversy over federal fire suppression policies.

The blaze originated near Coyote Road and Mountain Drive when a defective muffler ignited parched grass. Initial suppression efforts by local and federal crews were thwarted by fierce Sundowner winds and high-voltage power lines that obstructed aerial maneuvers. The fire rapidly crested the Santa Ynez Mountains, invading the Santa Ynez River drainage and threatening the Paradise Road community. Tactical challenges were compounded by thousands of residents attempting to protect properties, which clogged narrow access routes and hindered pumper deployment.

On the fire's third day, a tragic wind shift at Romero Saddle overran a crew from Yreka, resulting in the death of John L. Patterson, Sr. and several narrow escapes. While a fortuitous wind change eventually spared the Painted Cave community from a planned tactical backfire, 94 homes across the front country were lost. The event marked an early milestone in aerial firefighting technology, with contract pilots like Howard Haradon flying converted World War II bombers at stall speeds through narrow, smoke-filled canyons to drop over 500,000 gallons of borate retardant.

The fire's aftermath proved as destructive as the flames. With roughly 30,000 acres of south-facing slopes stripped of vegetation, a heavy rainstorm on November 9, 1964, triggered 20-foot walls of mud and rock in Montecito and Cold Spring canyons. These debris flows swept away bridges and inundated the Lower Village, establishing a recurring hazard profile for the region. In the years following, the disaster sparked intense political friction between local rangeland associations advocating for controlled burns and a Forest Service policy that prioritized total fire suppression.

🔗 Related Entries

Entries in this series (1)
↳ 1964 Post-Coyote Fire Debris Flows Strike Montecito and Santa Barbara Nov 9, 1964

Sources (4)

Source: Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade
Date: January 1, 2022
Read full article → https://sbbucketbrigade.org/timeline/1964-coyote-fire-flood/
Source: Santa Barbara County Fire Safe Council
Date: September 1, 2021
Read full article → https://sbfiresafecouncil.org/the-great-coyote-fire/
People Mentioned (1)
Implementer 1
👤 Chief May primary Implementer
Fire Chief at Santa Barbara City Fire Department
Referenced as 'Chief May' in the Santa Barbara City Fire Department report, he was directing the department's resources and response during the fire.
Source: Santa Barbara Independent News
Date: September 30, 2009
Read full article → https://www.independent.com/2009/09/30/coyote-fire-sept-22-oct-1-1964/
People Mentioned (10)
Implementer 3
👤 Jerry Berry primary Implementer
Fire Control Officer / Line Boss at Santa Barbara Ranger District, U.S. Forest Service
The Santa Barbara Ranger District's fire control officer who served as a Line Boss and coordinated the rescue of trapped firefighters.
👤 Bill Hansen primary Implementer
Forest Supervisor at U.S. Forest Service
The Forest Supervisor who made the decision to backfire along Highway 154, a move that would have sacrificed the Painted Cave community but was ultimately unnecessary due to a wind shift.
👤 Stubby Mansfield primary Implementer
Zone Boss at U.S. Forest Service
A fire official who was appointed zone boss for the Paradise area and later the Potrero Seco fire zone, directing firefighting efforts.
Participant 3
👤 Howard Haradon primary Participant
B-17 Pilot
Pilot of the B-17 air tanker 'Old Girl' who made numerous fire retardant drops, including one that temporarily saved the Richardson home.
👤 Don MacGillivray primary Participant
Mayor at City of Santa Barbara
The mayor of Santa Barbara who was on the scene of the fire and assisted in the response, including being present during the arrest of a suspected arsonist. Source 163 confirms he was 'on the scene almost constantly' and ordered food/evacuation centers.
👤 Noel Young secondary Participant
Resident
A friend of Bill Richardson who helped him rescue his animals and novel manuscript before his house was destroyed by the fire.
victim 3
👤 John L. Patterson, primary victim
Firefighter at Klamath National Forest
A firefighter from Yreka (Klamath National Forest) who was overrun by flames and killed at Romero Saddle, becoming the sole fatality of the Coyote Fire.
👤 Bill Richardson primary victim
Resident
A Mountain Drive resident whose self-built adobe home was initially saved by an air tanker drop but later destroyed in the fire.
👤 Frankie Richardson primary victim
Resident
Wife of Bill Richardson, a Mountain Drive resident whose home was destroyed in the fire.
Witness 1
👤 Howard Stitl secondary Witness
Professor of Education at Westmont College
A professor at Westmont College who, with his wife, provided refreshments to firefighters while protecting their on-campus home.
📋

Why This Entry Is Included

Wildfire Event
WILDFIRE_EVENT
definitive
A wildfire or brush fire in Santa Barbara County that resulted in significant acreage burned, structures damaged or destroyed, evacuations ordered, injuries, fatalities, or required multi-agency response. Includes named fires and significant unnamed incidents.
Curator's Justification
Primary classification for a 67,000-acre blaze with significant structural loss and a firefighter fatality.

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