Woman, 91, still missing 2 weeks after massive Colorado fire
DENVER (AP) — Near the starting point of a Colorado wildfire that destroyed over 1,000 homes and buildings, one man stayed home in an apparent attempt to save a voluminous collection of papers documenting his family’s history plus his personal writings and records of his community activism.
Robert Sharpe, 69, was spotted last month trying to fight the fire and waved off at least one warning for him to evacuate his home in a semi-rural area near Boulder, according to his brother Milt Sharpe. His remains were found inside his home a week after the Dec. 30 fire tore through the area.
The search was still on Friday for the only other person still listed as missing in the fire — at a site where a home burned on the outskirts of the town of Superior, downwind from the fire’s origin point and across open fields and hiking trails at the edge of suburbia.
“We are still actively working on the searching for and identifying the remains of the second missing person,” Boulder County Sheriff’s spokesperson Carrie Haverfield said.