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1977 Sycamore Canyon Fire Destroys 234 Homes After Kite Hits Power Line

Occurred Jul 26, 1977 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 8, 2026
📍 Sycamore Canyon, East Mountain Drive, Santa Barbara, CA
Tags: Building Codes & Fire Standards Climate & Fire Weather Evacuation Historical (Pre-2000) Insurance Recovery & Rebuilding South Coast Southern California Edison Water & Firefighting Infrastructure Wildfire Wildland-Urban Interface
Inclusion Criteria: Wildfire Event
At a Glance
📰 4 Sources
👥 13 People
Key individuals: William Patterson, Payne Green, Charles Graham, Richard Peterson, Denny Bungarz, Harry Peyton + 7 more →

Description

The 1977 Sycamore Canyon Fire was a destructive wildland-urban interface fire that destroyed 234 homes in Santa Barbara in just seven hours. Ignited by a kite striking a power line, the blaze was driven by powerful sundowner winds with gusts up to 90 mph. The event highlighted the extreme fire danger in hillside communities and led to significant changes in local building codes and defensible space requirements.

On the evening of July 26, 1977, amid severe drought conditions, a man lost control of a metal-framed kite near Coyote Road and East Mountain Drive. The kite became entangled in a 16,000-volt Southern California Edison power line, creating an electrical arc that showered sparks into the dry brush below, igniting a fire at approximately 7:30 PM.

Initial firefighting efforts seemed promising, but at 8:45 PM, after air tankers were grounded for the night, a powerful sundowner wind event began. With gusts reported as high as 90 mph, the fire exploded into a firestorm. The blaze spread with extreme speed, becoming what fire officials later described as a "wood-roof conflagration," where burning wood shingles were carried by the wind, igniting one home after another. Firefighters were quickly overwhelmed by the rapid spread and a critical failure of water pressure in the area's hydrants.

By sunrise the following morning, the fire was largely contained after a marine layer moved onshore, reversing the wind's direction. In approximately seven hours of intense burning, the fire destroyed 234 homes (though some historical accounts cite 195) across just 800 acres, causing over $26 million in property damage. While there were no fatalities, the event prompted an emergency declaration from Governor Jerry Brown.

The Sycamore Canyon Fire's legacy was its stark demonstration of the vulnerability of homes built in Santa Barbara's fire-prone canyons. The disaster spurred immediate and long-lasting discussions on improving fire-resistant building standards, particularly for roofing materials, creating mandatory defensible space around structures, and upgrading water infrastructure to support firefighting efforts in the wildland-urban interface.

Sources (4)

Source: Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade
Date: January 1, 2022
Read full article → https://sbbucketbrigade.org/timeline/1977-sycamore-fire/
Source: Santa Barbara County Fire Safe Council
Date: January 1, 2021
Read full article → https://sbfiresafecouncil.org/fire-history-of-santa-barbara-county/
Source: Other
Date: February 1, 2014
Read full article → https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260364095_7-Sycamore_Canyon_Fire_1977
People Mentioned (11)
Implementer 3
👤 Denny Bungarz primary Implementer
District Ranger at U.S. Forest Service
As the Santa Barbara District Ranger for the U.S. Forest Service, he joined the command post and helped direct the aerial firefighting efforts.
👤 Charles Graham primary Implementer
Fire Chief at Montecito Fire Department
As Montecito Fire Chief, he was one of the first chief officers to respond and helped establish the initial command structure for the fire.
👤 Richard Peterson primary Implementer
Fire Chief at Santa Barbara City Fire Department
As Santa Barbara City Fire Chief, he was part of the unified command team and made the critical decision to commit all city engines to the fire.
Participant 3
👤 Jim Endersby primary Participant
Captain at Santa Barbara Fire Department
The Captain of a three-man engine crew that became trapped by the firestorm and survived by deploying emergency fire shelters.
👤 Danny Paulin primary Participant
Firefighter at Santa Barbara Fire Department
A member of a three-man engine crew that became trapped by the firestorm and survived by deploying emergency fire shelters.
👤 Dave Stanley primary Participant
Firefighter at Santa Barbara Fire Department
A member of a three-man engine crew that became trapped by the firestorm and survived by deploying emergency fire shelters.
victim 4
👤 Lee Wardlaw Jaffurs primary victim
Resident / Author at N/A
A resident whose childhood home and grandmother's home were destroyed in the fire; she later used the experience as inspiration for a young adult novel.
👤 Jim McCloskey primary victim
Homeowner / Victim at N/A
A resident whose home was destroyed; he broke his ankle while trying to defend it and had a harrowing escape through the flames.
👤 Edward Murphy primary victim
Deputy Public Defender / Resident at N/A
A resident and Deputy Public Defender who had a narrow escape by car after the fire consumed enough oxygen to initially keep the engine from starting.
👤 Harry Peyton primary victim
Homeowner / Victim at N/A
A resident whose home was destroyed and who was seriously burned after being caught in the firestorm while trying to shelter outside his house.
Witness 1
👤 Joan Crowder primary Witness
Staff Writer / Resident at Santa Barbara News-Press
A News-Press staff writer and new resident in the fire area whose personal story of trying to get past roadblocks to check on her children and home was detailed at length.
Source: Washington Post
Date: July 28, 1977
Read full article → https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1977/07/28/santa-barbara-fire-ravages-250-homes/93498e3b-2450-42eb-8c39-00c7c0015e41/
People Mentioned (2)
Implementer 1
👤 William "Bill" Patterson primary Implementer
County Fire Chief at Santa Barbara County Fire Department
Served as the County Fire Chief and was appointed as the overall fire boss for the multi-agency response to the Sycamore Fire.
victim 1
👤 Payne Green primary victim
Police Officer / Homeowner at Santa Barbara Police Department
Was a Santa Barbara police officer whose home in Sycamore Canyon was destroyed by the fire; his personal story of loss was documented.
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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
The event was a wildfire that destroyed over 200 structures, burned hundreds of acres, and required a massive multi-agency response, meeting the core requirements of this criterion.

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