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Long Lake West vanished from the map after one of the most destructive Adirondack fires of 1908. This forgotten place was once a real railroad community deep in the Adirondacks, and its destruction became part of a much larger chapter in North Country history. Long Lake West had homes, a school, a church, a hotel, a general store, a post office, and a railroad station. Families raised children here. Workers built lives here. Travelers stepped off trains here. Then, in September 1908, a spark reportedly escaped from a passing steam locomotive. The surrounding forest was dangerously dry. Years of logging had left branches, treetops, bark, and debris scattered across the ground. When the wind changed, the fire grew beyond control. Nearly 100 people had to escape by train as Long Lake West burned behind them. The Wilderness Inn was destroyed. The railroad station disappeared. The school, church, post office, general store, homes, barns, and other buildings were lost. The heat reportedly twisted railroad tracks and melted barrels of nails together. Then a building containing dynamite exploded, tearing down communication lines as the Adirondack forest continued to burn. But the destruction of Long Lake West is only part of the story. The 1908 Adirondack fires exposed a much larger problem involving steam locomotives, logging slash, drought, weak fire protection, and the rapid industrial transformation of the Adirondack wilderness. The disaster helped push New York toward stronger forest fire laws, expanded patrols, mountain observation stations, and the fire towers that would eventually become part of the Adirondack landscape. Inside This Episode: • The forgotten history of Long Lake West and the railroad community that once stood there • How a locomotive spark reportedly helped ignite the devastating Adirondack fires of 1908 • The abandoned places and industrial ruins left behind after the town disappeared • How logging, railroads, and dry forest debris created a disaster waiting to happen • Why this lost piece of Adirondack history helped change forest protection in New York This is more than the story of a forgotten town. It is the story of the railroad that helped build Long Lake West, the fire that erased it, and the disaster that changed how New York watched the Adirondack forest for the next spark. Welcome to Triple T Tales, a series exploring forgotten places, strange stories, hidden history, and bizarre truths from the North Country and beyond. Hosted by Beard Laws, these episodes dive into abandoned towns, industrial ruins, eerie backroads, and the kind of stories most people drive past without ever noticing. Timestamps 00:00 — Intro: imagining Long Lake West and the fire that erased it 00:32 — Long Lake West as a real working town 01:02 — The fire begins after a spark lands near the tracks 01:32 — The fire spreads through dry forest slash and along the railroad corridor 02:02 — Long Lake West is destroyed, revealing a larger regional disaster 02:32 — How railroads helped create the conditions for the fire 03:01 — Episode title and thesis: the town, the railroad, and the burn 03:11 — Reconstructing what Long Lake West was before the fire 03:38 — The Adirondacks were not always the wilderness people imagine today 04:38 — The Mohawk and Malone Railway and the growth of rail-connected communities 05:36 — A vivid picture of Long Lake West before the fire 06:35 — Why Long Lake West matters as a forgotten railroad community 07:03 — A. A. Lowe’s industrial operations in the Adirondacks 08:03 — Steam locomotives and the danger of sparks in a flammable landscape 09:28 — Logging slash and why it made fires worse 09:58 — The contradiction: the system that sustained towns also endangered them 10:28 — Earlier warnings: major Adirondack fires before 1908 11:21 — The 1903 fires and growing concern about prevention 11:51 — September 9, 1908: the spark that started the fire 12:20 — Fire crews respond, but the railroad keeps moving 15:15 — The town prepares to evacuate 15:45 — A train becomes the only escape route 16:44 — Nearly 100 people are rescued 17:11 — The emotional reality of leaving a burning home behind 18:08 — Reconstructing the destruction from written records 19:08 — Why each lost building mattered to community life 20:35 — Dynamite in the storehouse and the explosion that followed 21:34 — Telegraph and telephone lines are destroyed 22:03 — Why the disaster became even harder to coordinate 23:23 — A reminder that the 1903 fires were already a warning 24:17 — New York faces the need for systemic change 26:12 — The shift from suppression to early detection 29:15 — How disaster helped shape modern Adirondack conservation 30:11 — Final reflection on the spark 31:10 — Closing thoughts Explore more at Beard Laws Studio. New Triple T Tales episodes explore backroad mysteries and lost Americana — subscribe to explore with us. #TripleTTales #Adirondacks #NorthCountry #ForgottenPlaces #NewYorkHistory Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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