Lookout Site Regions: ORIGIN SITE ~ Northwest, RE-LO SITE ~ Northwest
The move of the Galena Lookout L-4 cab to become the Maloney Ridge Lookout is a good example of a Type 3 Re-Location. Like most of these cases where a lookout, or part of a lookout, is moved to become the fire lookout at a second site, it was later removed from the second site. No structures remain at either the Galena or Maloney Ridge site, but lookout artifacts can be seen at both.
The FFLA web site (www.firelookout.org) provides this information about the ORIGIN SITE, Galena Lookout: ”Built in 1931, this L-4 cab was moved to Maloney Ridge in 1941 and is now gone.” There is some uncertainty about the dates of the construction and of the move of this lowland lookout. Several sources gave dates ranging from 1931 to 1935-36 being given as the date that an L-4 cab was built here. What is known is that it must have been built by 1934 at the latest as Panoramic photos were taken on August 8, 1934 from the top of the cab.
There is even more confusion concerning the dates of the move of the L-4 cab to Maloney Ridge and the dates of its use there. Both the FFLA website and Rex’s Forest Fire Lookout Page in www.firelookout.com give 1941 for the date. Rex gives this info for the Maloney Ridge lookout: “1941: L-4 cab moved from Galena Mtn.. 1942: AWS cabin. 1953: L-4 cab. Destroyed 1969.” Eric Willhite provides data on his web site indicating that the Aircraft Warning System was using a Galena station at least through 1942 and 43. The AWS built sleeping quarters at Galena on 10/7/43.
There was a USFS Galena Guard station near the Galena Lookout. It is possible that the AWS used the Guard Station rather than the lookout site. If that were the case, it could explain the apparent discrepancy in the dates for the L-4 cab move. (More research is needed to clear this up.)
The best information that I have found to date indicates that the Galena L-4 cab was moved to become the 1st Maloney Ridge Lookout in 1941. Then the AWS built a cabin there in 1942. The Galena cab was either removed then or in 1953 when a second L-4 fire lookout replaced the earlier buildings. This second L-4 was then removed in 1969. Nothing remains at the Maloney Ridge Lookout Site now but some concrete and steel lookout artifacts and a nearby set of communication towers.
The Galena Mountain Lookout cab was move from the lowland ORIGIN SITE to become the Maloney Ridge LO in 1941
We visited the Maloney Ridge LO site in May, 2012.
The reason for this name is a bit mysterious as the lookout was at 3364’on a northwesterly ridge of 4410′ Sobieski Mountain. There is a Maloney Ridge west of Sobieski, but the lookout was not on it. We got to the lookout site by walking up an often-gated road. The lookout was gone, but there was a modern communication complex several hundred yards before the abandoned lookout site.
We visited the Galena Mountain Lookout Site on August 3, 2020.
This lowland lookout was not atop a mountain but was on a wooded slope near the bottom of the North Fork Skykomish River Valley. At 1240′, the lookout site is only about 1/4 mile and 100 vertical feet above the Index-Galena Road. The steep off-trail walk to the site through the forest covered with growth and downed branches was harder than the statistics suggest. Eric Willhite, Paul Michelson and Craig Willis had searched the brush and finally found the site in 2018. We used the clues and GPS coordinates in Eric’s trip report to guide us in our search.