From NPR:
CANADIAN, TEXAS — As the longtime editor and publisher of The Canadian Record, Laurie Ezzell Brown had covered many wildfires in the drought-plagued Texas Panhandle. But nothing prepared her for what she saw after the Smokehouse Creek Fire last year.
“Everyone I know lost something,” Ezzell Brown told The Texas Newsroom, as she stood surrounded by the newspaper’s archives at its office downtown. The fire, she said, “had moved so quickly and done so much damage in so little time, it was shocking to see.”
The amount of earth it scorched, the high winds and how the fire jumped from place to place made this fire different, she said.
“The firefighters that I talked to said they’d never seen anything like it,” Ezzell Brown remembered.
The Smokehouse Creek Fire would eventually become the largest wildfire in Texas history, burning over a million acres. Two people were killed and hundreds of structures were destroyed, including 53 houses in Canadian. The fire started in late February and burned through mid-March.
A year later, residents of Canadian and the surrounding ranchlands are still picking up the pieces of their lives. They say a full recovery could take years.

Rancher Shane Pennington shows a photo on his phone of the Smokehouse Creek Fire in Canadian, Texas on Monday, Feb. 24, 2025. Rachel Osier Lindley / The Texas Newsroom
A firsthand look at Smokehouse Creek fire recovery
Ezzell Brown has lived most of her life in Canadian. While The Canadian Record stopped publishing a print edition in 2023, Ezzell Brown still maintains the newspaper’s website and social media. In the fire’s immediate aftermath, she straddled the line between journalist and neighbor — documenting the losses of her friends and loved ones.
“I started going out and seeing what had burned and then talking to the homeowners who were picking up, you know, whatever remained of their lives,” Ezzell Brown said. “And there wasn’t much left.”
With a population of about 2,200, Canadian is one of dozens of idyllic-looking small towns dotting the Panhandle plains. It is situated just 30 minutes from the Oklahoma state line, surrounded by golden, rolling hills. Around town, most burned out homes and buildings have been leveled, but traces of the destruction linger.
The ranching industry, the economic anchor of the region, took a sizable hit. About 85% of Texas’ beef cattle come from the region. The Smokehouse Creek fire killed more than 15,000 head of cattle, an immense loss in a region where ranching isn’t just an industry, but a way of life.