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Firefighters killed in Wash. state wildfire mourned

Three firefighters died Wednesday while battling a wildfire in Washington State
Who were the fallen firefighters? 01:52

TWISP, Wash. - The firefighters - members of a specially trained unit that is sent into danger ahead of everyone else to size up a wildfire - rushed up a narrow, winding gravel road with steep hills on either side.

It proved to be a deathtrap.

Their vehicle crashed, and before they could escape, flames rolled over them, killing three firefighters inside and injuring four others nearby, one critically, authorities said.

The tragedy Wednesday night cast a pall in Washington state and brought to 13 the number of firefighters killed across the West this year during one of the driest and most explosive wildfire seasons on record.

On Thursday night, Oregon Governor Kate Brown declared a state of emergency. At the time of the declaration, the fire threatened more than 100 homes and structures, including a local school.

"Winds continue to fuel 13 lightning fires burning together, and they've now pushed across the Washington-Oregon border," Governor Brown said.

The wildfire began in Washington state on August 13 and is estimated at more than 12,000 acres.

The blazes have "burned a big hole in our state's heart," Washington Gov. Jay Inslee lamented Thursday, describing the outbreak as an "unprecedented cataclysm."

3 firefighters killed in Washington state 02:14

"These are three big heroes protecting small towns," the governor said, urging residents to "thank a firefighter."

Fire officials with notebooks and cameras walked the hills and banks near Woods Canyon Road outside Twisp, investigating how the disaster happened. Authorities gave few details, shedding no light, for example, on the crash, other than to say that it was not the accident itself that killed the victims, but the fire.

The deaths happened in the scenic Methow River valley about 115 miles northeast of Seattle, where a series of blazes covering close to 140 square miles had merged. The flames burned an undetermined number of homes and triggered orders to about 1,300 people in the outdoor-recreation communities of Twisp and Winthrop to evacuate.

"It was a nightmare," Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers said. "Everything was burning." He added, "We know it was a firestorm in there."

All three of the dead were U.S. Forest Service firefighters. The agency identified them as Tom Zbyszewski, 20; Andrew Zajac, 26; and Richard Wheeler, 31. Their hometowns weren't immediately released.

Zbyszewski was a junior at Whitman College in Walla Walla, majoring in physics and active in the school's theater department, the college's president said in a statement. He was fighting a fire near his hometown of Carlton when he died.

Zbyszewski's parents, Jennifer and Richard, had both fought wildfires for the Forest Service, and his mother still works for the agency, overseeing trails and campgrounds in Okanogan National Forest. They said he enjoyed the work and he felt it was important to be able to protect the homes of people he knew.

The parents told CBS News their son - who was their only child - was the light of their lives.

"It's gonna be hard to go on without him to tell you the truth," said Richard Zbyszewski.

"I was more proud of him than I could ever express," said Jennifer Zbyszewki through tears. "We know that he would want us and everyone to be happy. So that's what we have to do, work towards that to you know, to get to the point when we can feel be happy again."

All three men were from highly specialized crews that go into dangerous areas as fast as they can to examine a scene and report back to commanders on what needs to be done, said Bill Queen, a firefighting spokesman.

"It just kind of exploded and they got caught in a burn over," said Queen, referring to what happens when conditions change so rapidly that flames overtake firefighters.

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Tom Zbyszewski. Tom Zbyszewski's Facebook page

Nearly 29,000 firefighters - 3,000 of them in Washington - are battling some 100 large blazes across the drought- and heat-stricken West, including Idaho, Oregon, Montana and California.

Conditions deteriorated in Washington on Thursday, with high winds and high temperatures. A mandatory evacuation order was issued Thursday night for the 1,000-person town of Tonasket in north-central Washington, about 60 miles northeast from where the firefighters were killed.

Jessica Gardetto of the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, said the 13 dead firefighters so far is a relatively high number. There were 10 fatalities last year and 15 in 2012. But there were 34 in 2013, including 19 members of an elite firefighting crew killed by an out-of-control wildfire near the small town of Yarnell, Arizona.

Of the injured in Washington, the most seriously hurt is Daniel Lyon, 25, of Puyallup. The Forest Service employee had burns over 60 percent of his body and was listed in critical condition at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, the Forest Service said.

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A photo of Andrew Zajac from Facebook. Andrew Zajac's Facebook page

Two of the injured work for the state Department of Natural Resources and one is a contractor with that agency. They have been released from the hospital, DNR spokeswoman Carrie McCausland said. She declined to release their names.

Rick McCauley, a manager at Sun Mountain Lodge, which sits at the end of an 18-mile road winding through forests from the town of Winthrop, said he had about 70 rooms filled when he decided to evacuate the hotel.

"We looked at the fire coming over the hill and made the decision to clear everyone out," he said. "There's only one road in and out, so we don't want to take any chances."

Steve Morse, who lives near the Twisp fire, said he watched flames "kind of hop-scotching these ridges, working toward our house."

"I can't even imagine. To lose your life fighting fire, it's horrible for a family, and it's just a bad deal," he said.

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