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National Fallen Firefighters Foundation

Roll of Honor

Fire Planner
Age: 42
Year of Death: 2024

Brian Robert Wolgamott

Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge firefighter Brian Wolgamott passed away on November 28, 2024, after a two-year battle with cancer. Brian started his wildland fire career in 2012. In 2022, after many years working with the USDA Forest Service as a firefighter, Brian accepted a position with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wildland fire program at the Klamath Basin refuges in Tule Lake, California, as a fire engine operator and fire planner.

Shortly after accepting this position, Brian and his family found out he had cancer. He began treatments in Seattle, Washington, while he continued to work. Despite his diagnosis and many long days of travel to receive treatment, Brian maintained a positive attitude and a hearty sense of humor.

“Brian’s unwavering strength and dedication to his profession, even in the face of adversity, truly stands out,” said Ken Griggs, Project Leader of the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex. “Despite the challenges posed by chemotherapy, Brian didn’t take a back seat and maintained his fitness and fire qualifications for as long as possible. Brian’s relentless work ethic shone through as he continually sought ways to make impactful contributions to the team.”

When he was no longer able to staff a fire engine, Brian stepped up to support his refuge in other ways. He took on tasks such as water quality monitoring, reprogramming radios, maintaining the local wildland fire supply cache, and serving as the station’s safety officer. Brian continued to support operations on the many large wildfires in the northwest as a dispatcher. He completed his last fire assignment just a month before he passed.

Troy Parrish, Klamath Basin Fire Management Officer, shared that, in the thick of receiving chemotherapy, Brian was still the first to volunteer and help a coworker unload a truck of firewood. “Brian consistently proved to be a man of his word. Whenever I needed someone reliable to get a job done, Brian was undoubtedly my first choice,” said Parrish.

To his friends and family, Brian was charismatic and always extended a helping hand. He shared his love of adventure and athletics with his wife, Marie, and their three children, Bryton, Maddox, and Elsie.

Brian was brought home to his final resting place with dignified transport and under a 24-hour Honor Watch. The Honor Guard held a memorial service and burial with full honors for Brian, and he was laid to rest in his service uniform.

Brian’s wishes are to spread awareness, especially to his brothers and sisters in wildland fire, to advocate for themselves and to get cancer screenings early and often.

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