A Little Rock-born grandmother who appeared in the movie "The Blues Brothers" died last week at her home in Altadena, Calif., as a wildfire raged through the community.
Records, radio logs and interviews show that some residents were not told to evacuate via electronic alerts until many hours after the Eaton fire started.
As embers wafted overhead against a reddening sky, Adonis and Denise Jones grabbed a few belongings and left their house last week in Altadena, California ... was a little further out, but ...
Decades ago, the writer Octavia Butler had imagined a Los Angeles ravaged by fires. The Altadena cemetery where the science fiction and Afrofuturism author is buried did
Born in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1929 ... days after Curry died in the California wildfires. (AP Photo/Eugene Garcia) Curry died last week at her home in Altadena as the Eaton Fire raged through the community. Her granddaughter had dropped her off ...
Barbara Shay, the owner of the Little Red Hen Coffee Shop, right, stands with her daughter, Annisa Faquir. Their restaurant was a community hub in Altadena, Calif., for decades.Credit...
A Little Rock-born grandmother who appeared in the movie "The Blues Brothers" died last week at her home in Altadena, Calif., as a wildfire raged through the community. Dalyce Curry's ...
Southern California Edison on Monday reported a fault on a power line connected miles away from ones located near the origin of the Eaton Fire, the deadly blaze that
Members of the California National Guard stand near rising smoke, as the Eaton Fire continues, in Altadena, Calif., Jan. 12, 2025. Shannon Stapleton/Reuters Twenty-three people have been reported ...
Under mandatory evacuation, Jones and several other Altadena residents were met by yellow caution tape and National Guard and California Highway ... up there and put any little spot fires out ...
The Altadena fire wiped out much of a historic black enclave in this picturesque town in the San Gabriel Valley.
After authorities reopened parts of Altadena for the first time since the Eaton fire, residents returned to a grim checkerboard of destroyed homes next to others that were largely spared.