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[Deathwatch] Red Adair, world-renowned firefighter, 89
- Date: Sun, 8 Aug 2004 01:29:29 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Deathwatch Central <cdw@slick.org>
- Subject: [Deathwatch] Red Adair, world-renowned firefighter, 89
Red Adair, world-renowned firefighter, dies
Sunday, August 8, 2004 Posted: 4:18 AM EDT (0818 GMT)
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Southwest/08/08/obit.red.adair.ap/index.html
HOUSTON, Texas (AP) -- Paul N. "Red" Adair, a world-renowned oil well
firefighter who revolutionized the science of capping exploding and
burning wells, has died, his daughter said. He was 89.
Adair, who boasted that none of his employees ever suffered a serious
injury fighting the dangerous fires, died Saturday evening of natural
causes at a Houston hospital, his daughter, Robyn Adair, told The
Associated Press.
Adair founded Red Adair Co. Inc. in 1959 and is credited with battling
more than 2,000 land and offshore oil well fires, including the
hundreds of wells left burning after the Iraqis fled Kuwait at the end
of the Persian Gulf War in 1991.
The 5-foot-7 Houston native proudly spent his 76th birthday clad in his
traditional red overalls, swinging valves in place as his crews capped
117 Kuwaiti wells left burning by retreating Iraqi troops.
"Retire? I don't know what that word means," he told reporters at the
time. "As long as a man is able to work and he's productive out there
and he feels good -- keep at it. I've got too many of my friends that
retired and went home and got on a rocking chair, and about a year and
a half later, I'm always going to the cemetery."
Adair, who finally did retire in 1994 and sold his company, was
instrumental in expediting the shipment of crucial supplies and
equipment into Kuwait by testifying before the Gulf Pollution Task
Force and meeting with then-President George H.W. Bush about the
logistics of the firefighting operation.
Thanks in part to Adair's expertise, a firefighting operation expected
to last three to five years was completed in nine months, saving
millions of barrels of oil and stopping an intercontinental air
pollution disaster.
Adair barely changed his hectic pace as he continued to pursue his
specialty. His concession to later years was an occasional
mid-afternoon nap as a crew boss watched over operations. His hearing
had deteriorated somewhat because of years of standing amid thundering
well fires.
"It scares you: all the noise, the rattling, the shaking," Adair once
said, describing a blowout. "But the look on everybody's face when
you're finished and packing, it's the best smile in the world; and
there's nobody hurt, and the well's under control."
Adair spent a lifetime using explosives, drilling mud and concrete to
control and cap wild well fires.
His death-defying feats included battling the July 1988 explosion of
the Piper Alpha platform that killed 167 men in the North Sea.
His daring and his reputation for having never met a blowout he
couldn't cap earned him the nickname "Hellfighter." It inspired the
title of a 1968 movie based on Adair's life, "The Hellfighters," in
which John Wayne played him.
"That's one of the best honors in the world: To have The Duke play you
in a movie," Adair said.
Adair, who never showed fear in life, joked in 1991 that the hereafter
would be no different.
"I've done made a deal with the devil," Adair said. "He said he's going
to give me an air-conditioned place when I go down there, if I go
there, so I won't put all the fires out."