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A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL2 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL3 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL4 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL5 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL6 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL7 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Smoke rises over the prairie during a recent wildfire, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. Two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, 11 aircrew members, and 10 ground firefighters supplied over 54,000 gallons of water to help contain the fire.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL8 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Smoke rises over the prairie during a recent wildfire, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. Two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, 11 aircrew members, and 10 ground firefighters supplied over 54,000 gallons of water to help contain the fire.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL9 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL10 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL11 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL12 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL13 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Firefighters from the Nebraska National Guard’s 155th Air Refueling and the 755th Engineer Battalion use their skills to prevent rekindling of a wildfire April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The firefighters were part of a joint force that responded to additional fires earlier in 2026 and had been periodically deployed on state active-duty orders to support firefighting efforts.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL14 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Firefighters from the Nebraska National Guard’s 155th Air Refueling and the 755th Engineer Battalion use their skills to prevent rekindling of a wildfire April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The firefighters were part of a joint force that responded to additional fires earlier in 2026 and had been periodically deployed on state active-duty orders to support firefighting efforts.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL15 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Firefighters from the Nebraska National Guard’s 155th Air Refueling and the 755th Engineer Battalion use their skills to prevent rekindling of a wildfire April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The firefighters were part of a joint force that responded to additional fires earlier in 2026 and had been periodically deployed on state active-duty orders to support firefighting efforts.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL16 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Firefighters from the Nebraska National Guard’s 155th Air Refueling and the 755th Engineer Battalion use their skills to prevent rekindling of a wildfire April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The firefighters were part of a joint force that responded to additional fires earlier in 2026 and had been periodically deployed on state active-duty orders to support firefighting efforts.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL17 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL18 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL19 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL20 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL21 / 21Show Caption +Hide Caption –
A UH-60 Black Hawk crew from Company G, 2-104th General Aviation Support Battalion, assists in fighting wildfires, April 23 – 25, 2026, near Broken Bow, Nebraska. The Soldiers had originally planned to conduct a field training exercise in the area, but diverted assets to assist with real-world domestic operational needs.
(Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Phillip Cowen)VIEW ORIGINAL
BROKEN BOW, Neb. – Nebraska National Guard members conducted aerial and ground firefighting operations April 23–25 in response to the Pressey Park Fire, supporting a joint effort with state and local agencies as the wildfire burned thousands of acres with no initial containment.
Two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from the Army National Guard dropped 82 water buckets totaling 54,120 gallons during the three-day response. The mission included 11 Army National Guard aviators and a joint hand crew of six Air National Guard and four Army National Guard personnel operating alongside local, state and interagency partners.
The fire, estimated at approximately 8,000 acres and 0% contained during early operations, drew a coordinated response from multiple organizations, including the Nebraska Forest Service, Nebraska Emergency Management Agency and Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
“We are the Joint Emergency Response Crew, a joint Army and Air task force here, side by side with local resources from neighboring cities and counties,” said Master Sgt. John Williams of the 155th Air Refueling Wing Fire Department. “All working side by side to try and extinguish this fire.”
National Guard aviation crews had initially planned a field training exercise in the area focused on aerial firefighting operations but were redirected when the wildfire ignited nearby.
“We were training for a field training exercise,” said Capt. Emily Voeller, an aviation officer with Golf Company. “We’d been planning for it for several months. On the way out here, a fire kicked off probably eight miles from here… now, instead of doing the planned training exercises that we had… now we’re doing a real-world mission.”
Voeller said crews arrived prepared with aircraft and equipment, including water buckets staged in advance for training, allowing for a rapid transition to a real-world response under state active-duty orders.
Operations required coordination with local fire chiefs and volunteer departments, with daily briefings held to align aviation and ground efforts. Guard crews worked within flight-hour limits and adjusted to equipment challenges, including operating at times with a single functional water bucket.
Williams noted the response marked the unit’s second deployment and third wildfire mission in Nebraska this year, an unusually high operational tempo for this point in the season.
“This is our second deployment and our third wildfire in Nebraska this year, which is more than any other year at the end of April,” Williams said.
Officials emphasized the collaborative nature of the mission, with Guard members integrating into a broader response network of local volunteers and state agencies working to contain the fire and protect affected communities.
The Nebraska National Guard remains postured to continue supporting civil authorities as wildfire conditions persist across the state.
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