Each and every fire that was made was using Piggy's glasses.
Piggy
make a fire on the hill.
Piggy was the last boy to reach the top of the mountain.
In "Lord of the Flies," the boys use green branches and leaves from the island to make the fire give off more smoke. They discover that adding these materials helps the fire create more visible smoke signals.
Ralph keeps forgetting to maintain the signal fire in "Lord of the Flies" because he gets caught up in the chaos and distractions on the island. The boys are preoccupied with hunting, fighting, and their own desires, which causes them to lose focus on the importance of the signal fire for their rescue. Additionally, Ralph's leadership struggles and the growing savagery of the other boys contribute to the neglect of the fire.
Instead of going to the other side of island to check the fire the boys want to make a fort. The boys also want to roll rocks.
The only way fire is made on the island is by using Piggy's glasses.
He makes a stand against Jack and the choir boys because they had not acted upon their responsibility of keeping the fire going.
They make three huts.
Jack and his hunters make the boys leave Castle Rock in the novel "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. They set fire to the forest to flush out Ralph, Piggy, and the other boys hiding there, forcing them to flee for their lives.
Yes, at the end of the novel "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, a naval officer arrives and rescues the remaining boys from the island.
The initial fire is started after Ralph explains, during their second meeting, that in order to get rescued they need to attract the attention of passing ships and airplanes with a signal fire on the mountain top.