Last month, Paradise, Calif. was hit with the most destructive wildfire in California’s 168-year history. Tales of endurance and selflessness have helped salve the wounds of the Camp Fire, which took at least 85 lives and destroyed nearly 19,000 structures before officials said it was contained on Nov. 25. Among the saviors were thousands of firefighters, from California and across the U.S., and people like Brad Brown—untrained citizens who risked their lives to save others from what residents have called “the fires from hell.” Brown, a hospital chaplain in Paradise, Calif., arrived at the hospital that morning to find an evacuation already in progress. He jumped in, racing to get patients into ambulances. And when workers ran out of ambulances, he loaded three patients—two who had been in intensive care and one who had been in hospice, unable to walk—into his own vehicle, which was soon stuck for hours in gridlock because cars up ahead had already burst into flames. “You could hear the fire,” Brown tells TIME. At one point, Brown found himself facing a wall of fire. He couldn’t see the other side, but the sick, scared patients in his minivan needed care. “What do you do? You can’t turn around at this point,” he says. “So I just floored my minivan and drove through the flames.” Brown, photographed by @philipmontgomery in an RV where his family stayed after the fire, is one of TIME’s heroes of 2018. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME

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Last month, Paradise, Calif. was hit with the most destructive wildfire in California’s 168-year history. Tales of endurance and selflessness have helped salve the wounds of the Camp Fire, which took at least 85 lives and destroyed nearly 19,000 structures before officials said it was contained on Nov. 25. Among the saviors were thousands of firefighters, from California and across the U.S., and people like Brad Brown—untrained citizens who risked their lives to save others from what residents have called “the fires from hell.” Brown, a hospital chaplain in Paradise, Calif., arrived at the hospital that morning to find an evacuation already in progress. He jumped in, racing to get patients into ambulances. And when workers ran out of ambulances, he loaded three patients—two who had been in intensive care and one who had been in hospice, unable to walk—into his own vehicle, which was soon stuck for hours in gridlock because cars up ahead had already burst into flames. “You could hear the fire,” Brown tells TIME. At one point, Brown found himself facing a wall of fire. He couldn’t see the other side, but the sick, scared patients in his minivan needed care. “What do you do? You can’t turn around at this point,” he says. “So I just floored my minivan and drove through the flames.” Brown, photographed by @philipmontgomery in an RV where his family stayed after the fire, is one of TIME’s heroes of 2018. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME


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