CA CA - Butte Co, Male, Victim #53 of Camp Fire, In Burned Home on Schwyhart Ln, Concow, Nov 2018

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Gardener1850

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CONCOW, Butte County — Victim No. 53 was pulled from the rubble of someone else’s life.

One year after the historic Camp Fire blasted through the Sierra Nevada foothills, 84 people who died in the flames have been identified. But one person endures as a mystery — a man whose remains were found in the scorched footprint of a mobile home, burned beyond recognition, in this tiny community just east of Paradise.

He may have died a hero. And we may never know his name.

In the wake of the fire that swept through Butte County on Nov. 8, 2018, the worst blaze in California history, Victim No. 53 was carefully unearthed from the property on Schwyhart Lane in Concow. How did he come to be there? No one knew.

This was the home of Lon and Ellen Walker.

[...]

On the morning of the fire, Lon, 76, picked up a load of lumber in Plumas County. He had been about to quit his trucking job so he could take care of Ellen, who at age 73 suffered from fibromyalgia and didn’t like using her walker. She moved slowly about their place, tending to the fruit trees and four cats. The calico, Ginger, was her favorite.

The fire that ignited around 6:15 a.m. under Pacific Gas and Electric Co. transmission lines moved quickly, traveling west nearly 3 miles to Concow within an hour. Ellen was among many people the fire trapped in their homes and cars.

Lon feared the worst, that she’d indeed died in the fire. But when confirmation of her death came, weeks later, there was also a strange piece of news — the presence of Victim No. 53.

The two victims’ bodies had appeared to be one, until anthropologists from Chico State University distinguished three kneecaps among the remains. A year after he was found, authorities still have few clues to who he might be.

[...]

No unclaimed vehicles were found near the mobile home on Schwyhart Lane. And no men with links to the area were unaccounted for. One guess was that Victim No. 53 might have rushed in to try to save Ellen from the advancing flames, losing his life trying to do a good deed.

[...]

This fall, the case of Victim No. 53 landed with Margaret Press, the co-founder of the DNA Doe Project.

The organization in Sebastopol takes on investigations that have eluded coroners. It works in the field of genetic genealogy, which combines DNA testing with the type of research people use to build family trees, and was central in leading to the arrest last year of Joseph James DeAngelo, the suspected Golden State Killer who terrorized California in the 1970s and 1980s.

Press uses GedMatch, a website that compares DNA to offer a percentage likelihood that two people are related. Parents and children share 50% of their DNA, as do siblings. That number drops to 25% for grandparents and 12.5% for cousins. For Victim No. 53, Press hopes to find, if not a first cousin, perhaps a third cousin that shared the same great-grandfather.

Read more (very long article): A name lost in flames: Did the last unidentified victim of the Camp Fire die a hero?
 
USA Today article from 11/5/2018 mentions this too.

Is it possible the wind was so ferocious that it carried this man into the area as it destroyed the home? "....only three give clues to who they might be — he was a man, older and had dental work with crowns." I wonder if there are any dental matches.

This poor woman. I wonder if she thought this man was an angel coming to her. She and whoever was with her must have thought they were in hell. I hope the smoke inhalation got to them before the fire so there was no pain.

One victim of The Camp Fire remains unidentified nearly one year later

Some snips from the article:

At the Schwyhart Lane house, the team was looking for someone specific: a 72-year-old wife and mother named Ellen Walker who was feared to have not been able to escape.

They found her that day. Like most who fell victim to the intense heat of the Camp Fire, her body had been reduced to fragments of bone.

But what that team did not know, as they meticulously collected the remains for transport to the Sacramento County Coroner’s Office, was that she was not the only person to die in that home.

Mixed with Ellen’s bones were the remains of another person, whose identity remains a mystery to this day.

There is no matching missing person’s report, no known grieving family, no DNA to compare to and no logical explanation for why the bones were found where they were.

Several facts are known about the second person who died at the home along Schwyhart Lane, but only three give clues to who they might be — he was a man, older and had dental work with crowns.
 

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