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HOME PAGE OF VISITING WASHINGTON’S RE-LOCATED LO SITES AND THEIR ORIGINS

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What’s a Re-Located Lookout?

Many fire lookouts that were no longer considered useful in fire detection were destroyed in place.  Others, the Re-Located Lookouts, were moved to a new location where they were used for other purposes.  Some of these, the Type 1 Re-Located LOs, were given or sold to towns or public museums to be displayed to the public.  Others, the Type 2 Re-Located LOs, were sold to private lookout fans who moved them to their private property.  Another few, the Type 3 Re-Located LOs, were moved to a second location where they continued to be used in fire detection.  There were plans to move several others, but these moves failed.  I called these failures the Type 4 Re-Locations.  Each re-location involves two sites; 1) the Origin Site where it was used in fire detection and 2) the Re-Location Site it was moved to.  In some cases the re-located LO was later destroyed.

Lookout Regions

The definition of the lookout regions used in this website’s Posts are the same as used by Ray Kresek in his book Fire Lookouts of the Northwest

8) WA Coast; 9) Northwest WA; 10) Mount Rainier; 11) Southwest WA; 12) South Central WA; 13) Central WA; 14) North Central WA; 15) Northeast WA; 16) Southeast WA

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By hiker99ralph

I am a long time hiker and more recently have added lookout chasing to the hiking hobby. I served as a lookout fireman at the Hoodoo Lookout in the Blue Mountains in the summers of 1957 and 1958. I got away from lookouts after that until retiring when I started chasing lookouts.