A toast tonight to honor Gordon Knight, former co-owner of the Wolf
Tongue Brewpub in Nederland, Colorado, who died a hero on Tuesday.
Knight was the third person claimed by the Big Elk Fire, near Rocky
Mountain National Park, a toll which has shaken Front Range residents.
Many of us visited Wolf Tongue while it was open. He was also involved
in the Estes Park Brewpub, and the Twisted Pine and High Country
microbrewries in Boulder.
Among those interviewed in the article below is our good friend Jim
Parker, Knight's former business partner at Wolf Tongue, and before that
on the staff of the American Homebrewers Association. Parker is himself
regarded as somewhat of a hero, for his brave and ultimately successful
battle against cancer.
The following article appears on the front page of today's edition of
the Boulder Daily Camera, and may also be seen online at
http://www.dailycamera.com/bdc/mtn_towns_news/article/0,1713,BDC_2428_12997…
Roger Deschner rogerd(a)uic.edu
------ begin forwarded text ----------
The Daily Camera, Boulder, Colorado
Pilot's father: 'He was my great hero'
By Justin George and Christine Reid, Camera Staff Writers
August 1, 2002
They say Gordon Knight veered his doomed helicopter away from
firefighters on the ground as one last selfless act.
If he had lived, friends said, he wouldn't have taken any credit.
He rarely did.
At home, he kept his Great American Beer Festival Gold medals - honors
that breweries customarily turn into television commercials - in a sock
drawer.
During the Vietnam War, he earned a Purple Heart flying helicopter
missions, something his father never knew.
"He never told me that," said Knight's father, Leonard Knight. "He
never
did brag much."
Friends, relatives, business partners and firefighters said much the
same about Knight, the 52-year-old Boulder pilot killed Tuesday when his
Lama helicopter crashed five miles south of Estes Park while fighting
the Big Elk fire.
When his aircraft was in trouble, instead of setting it straight down
where two crews of firefighters were working, Knight steered away to
avoid endangering their lives, said Marc Mullenix, Boulder Wildland Fire
Division chief.
"That's just the kind of guy he was," Mullenix said.
Knight was born and raised on a cattle farm near Scottsbluff, Neb.,
where he was a state-champion wrestler. He joined the Army and flew
scout missions and troops into battle during the Vietnam War.
"He was my great hero," his father said. "He was my best friend."
Later, Gordon Knight flew tourists in Hawaii. He also worked as a
commercial pilot in places such as Indonesia and Africa.
He was the first pilot for Life Flight rescue service in Des Moines,
Iowa, said Michael Whipp, a 32-year-friend and business partner, who
first met Knight taking a physical for the Army.
Knight met his wife, Susan, while shuttling near-death victims from car
wrecks to hospitals in Des Moines. She was an onboard nurse, Whipp said,
and the couple later worked for Flight for Life in Denver.
Knight began fighting wildfires about 26 years ago and at one time
co-owned a business with Whipp that contracted helicopters to the U.S.
Forest Service and other agencies battling wildfires.
He was known for his proficiency in dropping buckets of water with great
accuracy, firefighters said. Since June 1, he logged more than 200 hours
fighting fires, including the Hayman fire, Colorado's largest ever.
He was directly credited with saving homes from the Million Fire near
South Fork in the Rio Grande National Forest in Rio Grande County.
When not fighting fires, Knight made award-winning beer. He won three
gold medals for the beers Renegade Red, Twisted Amber and Coffee Porter
at three different breweries he co-owned over the years.
"He was one of the finest brewers in the country," said friend Jim
Parker, who co-owned the Wolf Tongue Brewery in Nederland with Knight in
1998 and 1999.
Parker entered Knight's Coffee Porter in the Great American Beer
Festival in Denver after Knight would not.
He won gold.
When Parker faced cancer more than two years ago, Knight borrowed
beer-making equipment and re-made a beer the pair had sold in Nederland
called Mr. Hoppy.
Knight sold the batch, renamed Sir Hoppy, in the Denver area and gave
$2,000 of the proceeds to his ailing friend. He never told Parker about
his plan beforehand.
"He just does not want to take any credit for anything, ever," said
Parker, who now lives in Oregon.
Parker remembers Knight dipping into his pockets and giving employees
advances they never had to pay back.
That was a surprising act for a frugal businessman who "could make a
dollar scream" when he ran the Twisted Pine Brewery in Boulder, said
majority owner Bob Baile.
But, Baile said, Knight was a generous man outside of work expenses.
He once drove almost 150 miles to the Royal Gorge in southern Colorado
every Thursday during a summer to take over an injured race-car driver's
day job flying weekend tours over the scenic chasm.
He gave the salary to his friend's wife.
"It was always someone else first," said Baile, recalling Knight's anger
when Baile framed the gold medal for Twisted Pine's Twisted Amber and
hung it with Knight's name in the brewery's entrance.
But he was as careful and meticulous a businessman as he was a brewer,
Baile said.
"His whole life was conducted by the book," he said, a sentiment echoed
by firefighters.
Friends and firefighters were not surprised that Knight's last words
came over the radio quietly and calmly:
"Helicopter going down."
A public memorial service honoring Knight will be at 5 p.m. Friday at
Planet Bluegrass, 500 W. Main St., in Lyons.
Camera Staff Writer Greg Avery contributed to this report.
Contact Justin George at (303) 473-1359 or georgej(a)dailycamera.com.
Copyright 2002, The Daily Camera. All Rights Reserved.