More Than a Store: What Community Really Means After Disaster

Richard and Add Beale were fossil-hunting in the area near Chinese Camp, off the road to Yosemite, about a decade ago when they noticed a ‘for sale’ sign. A few years later they sold their home and packed up their two children and moved to the town where they’ve become community icons.

The American Red Cross could not help communities recover from disasters without the help of community partners. In Chinese Camp, a historic small town outside Sonora that was devastated when a lightning-sparked fire swept through on September 2, 2025, one standout partnership included Richard and Add Beale, owners of the Chinese Camp Store.

Ten years ago, when the Beales first noticed the “for sale” sign on the run-down store and tavern on the road from Sonora to Yosemite, they could not have imagined they would be where they are today: the well-established owners of the store and serving as the Chinese Camp’s recovery hub from wildfires that destroyed 50 of the homes in a community that has only 150 residents.

Immediately after the wildfires, the Beales tried to fill the needs of desperate residents and first responders by giving them whatever they had on the store’s shelves. Soon, they welcomed the Red Cross to the store grounds to distribute food, water and supplies. Later on, they allowed Red Crossers to repurpose part of the store’s parking area as a place to meet with affected residents. The Red Cross provided financial and other assistance, such as replacement of medications and eyeglasses, to aid the recovery of those who lost their homes.

The picnic tables in the store’s garden became a place for the Red Cross and the community to gather, to eat, rest, work and share their stories under shade trees, with the background accompaniment of the Beale’s flock of goats, chickens and ducks, and the gentle music of a koi pond waterfall and wind chimes. 

The Beales say most Chinese Camp residents want to rebuild and return to the community, despite the fact that a majority of the town’s structures have been destroyed. And those residents say a big reason is the Beales, who bought and renovated the store eight years ago, making it the center of the community. 

“People around here are so kind, so nice,” Add says. They help her out when she needs it, and “they know if they need help, they can come here.”

The Disaster

On Sept. 2, 2025, a Tuesday, Richard was at work in Livermore when Add called to tell him about the fire and the evacuation warnings.

“Don’t leave, I’m coming,” Richard said, and jumped into his car. But the mandatory evacuation order came long before he made it home. He met his family in Oakdale, where they spent the night in a hotel.

Richard Beale, owner of the Chinese Camp Store, shows a photo of the damage caused to the tiny community by September 2 lightning-sparked fires.
More than 50 homes, and all but one of the historic buildings that remained in the Gold Rush-era town of Chinese Camp, were destroyed. The historic St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church remains standing on a hilltop but is no longer in use.

The store’s generator had kicked in and the family could see the store was surviving by looking at security camera feeds on their phones. The next day, even though the roads into Chinese Camp were still closed, the family was allowed to visit there with the crew from the local Fox News station.

The power was still out that day. Not knowing how long their generator fuel would last, they hauled the store’s ice cream freezer into the parking lot. They filled it with other perishable foods and urged those who had not evacuated or were fighting the fire, to help themselves.

 “That was all gone by the time we got back,” Richard Beale says.

The Beale’s had to leave with the news crew, but the next day, because “it’s so frustrating to sit and wait in a hotel,” they used back roads to avoid roadblocks and moved back into their still standing home. They opened the doors to the store and started cleaning.

“That’s what we were aching to do, get back and start fixing things,” Richad says. Their outdoor restroom building had burned both inside and out but was intact and usable after some scrubbing.

Their generator stopped only a few hours before the power came on, but their house does not have a generator, so they lost their own food, but not the store’s stocks.

The Store

The Beales were on an unsuccessful fossil-hunting trip when they chanced upon the store and its ‘for sale’ sign.  Richard, a scientist who works as the radiological operations manager at Lawrence Livermore Labs, and his family of four had been living in Tracy.

When they found it, the store was only open intermittently and “was a bit of a dump. But that’s good, so I could afford it,” Richard says.

A few years later, the family sold their Tracy home and made the big move. Their daughter was a teenager and their son was in middle school.

Add says she was a little leery at first because she had grown up in Bangkok, Thailand and always lived in cities, and the store is miles from almost everything. “I dreamed to own a store,” she says. “I didn’t dream it (would be) in the middle of nowhere.”

But once she had researched and found school and shopping options, Add says she was all in.

By the time fires struck, the family was deeply embedded in the community and the store, especially its garden, had become a gathering place.

The Community

After the fire, Richard made a spreadsheet listing the Chinese Camp residents and their needs and those who had offered to help and what they could give. He took time off the job that he says “pays the bills” so he could be there to help.

When tourists on their way to or from Yosemite asked about the fire, he urged them to donate to a fund for the residents.

After the September 2 fire, Richard Beale started a spreadsheet documenting what local residents needed to help them recover from the fire and resources available to them. He knows everyone in the small town and has also helped to connect people worried about the fate of acquaintances in the town.

In addition to household items and clothing, which were moved to Nancy’s Hope in Jamestown when a light rain hit, everything from chain saws to generators had been donated. Cases of water, boxes of food, ice chests and protective masks were coming and going.

“I think Add and I were able to help a lot,” Richard says.  “We’ve just given out tons of things people needed.”

The residents agree. Alexis Trakas, who lost her Chinese Camp home in the fire, said Add and Richard “make a safe haven for everybody.”

“I don’t know what we’d do without them,” she said.

The Red Cross workers say the same. Darlene Avery, a Red Cross volunteer from Great Falls, Colorado, said the Beales have been “so critical” to helping the Red Cross connect with the affected residents. “They have been so helpful to us,” she said.

What will happen to Chinese Camp remains to be seen. Most residents did not have fire insurance because they could not afford it, and the community had never before been hit by a wildfire.

But they know the Chinese Camp Store and the Beales were there when they needed them.