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FIREFIGHTER HISTORY 11/20

 Karl Thompson    November 20, 2020    No Comments

11/20/1870 a Baltimore City (MD) firefighter died “while operating at a fire in a tobacco warehouse, when the walls of the building collapsed, trapping him and two other firefighters under tons of rubble. The other two firefighters were dug out alive and recovered.”

11/20/1870 a Lancaster, PA firefighter “died as a result of injuries sustained the previous day, when he and several other firefighters were caught under a collapsing wall while operating at a major fire that destroyed a cork factory. The firefighter sustained a fractured skull, fractured leg, and severe burns and scalding to his back.”

11/20/1907 an Oakland (CA) firefighter died after being suffocated by ammonia fumes while operating in a cellar fire at the Collins Brothers’ Drug Store.

11/20/1920 a Chicago, IL firefighter was injured and died at a fire at 3452 S. Wood.

11/20/1953 two Lafayette, IN firefighters died from injuries they received “while washing down spilled gasoline at the Wonder Bread Bakery, the vapors exploded burning several firefighters. The two firefighters died several hours after the incident. The incident also took the life of a third firefighter, two days later on November 22, 1953.”

11/20/1976 an Evansville, IN firefighter “collapsed from smoke inhalation while fighting a fire on October 8, 1976. He died on November 20, 1976 from a heart attack caused by the smoke inhalation.”

11/20/2017 an explosion and fire that killed man and injured more than thirty people, including firefighters, at a manufacturing plant in New York’s Hudson Valley. The explosion happened at around 10:15 a.m. in the north section of Verla International, a business that makes cosmetics, primarily nail polish located at 463 Temple Hill Road in New Windsor, Orange County, New York.

11/20/2013 Bronx, NY, Hunts Point Terminal Market fire killed three after an unattended candle in the basement started the fire. The Hunts Point Terminal Market that has revenues exceeding $2 billion a year — more than any other produce terminal market in the world, according to its website.

11/20/1994 around 3:41 p.m. a series of accidental explosions in a 139,000-square foot Lenoir, North Carolina furniture manufacturing facility occurred in the particle board manufacturing portion of the plant that took “raw dust” and refined it into finished sheets of particle board used in the construction of furniture. After the initiating event, four subsequent explosions occurred throughout the facility, caused by dust placed in suspension by the prior explosion.  Observations suggested that there were large amounts of dust throughout the facility with minimal efforts to control ignition sources. Two employees died and four were injured.  Production was interrupted for over nine months.

11/20/1992 a fire broke out in Windsor Castle in county of Berkshire, the second largest inhabited castle in the world and one of the official residences of Queen Elizabeth II. The castle suffered extensive damage and was fully repaired within the next few years at a cost of £36.5 million. The fire began in the Queen’s Private Chapel at 11:15 a.m. when a curtain was ignited by a spotlight. By 12:20, the fire had spread to St George’s Hall, a banqueting hall and the largest of the State Apartments. The number of fire appliances totaled 39 and 225 firefighters were in attendance. Hoses were directed at all levels of the building surrounding the fire. By 11:00mp.m., the main fire was extinguished, and by 2:30, the last secondary fires were extinguished. Pockets of fire remained until the early hours of the morning, some 15 hours after it began. Sixty firefighters with eight appliances remained on duty for several more days. The fire had spread rapidly due to the large cavities and voids in the roof. 1.5 million gallons (7 million liters) of water from the mains water supply, a reservoir-fed hydrant, a swimming pool, a pond, and the nearby River Thames had been used to fight the fire. The major loss was to the fabric of the castle. The false ceiling in St George’s Hall and the void for coal trucks beneath the floor had allowed the fire to spread. It burned as far as the Chester Tower. Several ceilings collapsed. Apartments burnt included the Crimson Drawing Room (completely gutted), the Green Drawing Room (badly damaged, though only partially destroyed by smoke and water) and the Queen’s Private Chapel (including the double-sided 19th century Henry Willis organ in the gallery between St George’s Hall and Private Chapel, oak paneling, glass and the altar). St George’s Hall survived with the walls largely intact, but the ceiling had collapsed. The State Dining Room in the Prince of Wales Tower and the Grand Reception Room were also devastated. In total, 100 rooms were affected by the fire. Smaller apartments damaged or destroyed included the Star Chamber, Octagon Room, Brunswick Tower (covered in 12 feet (3.5 m) of debris), Cornwall Tower, Prince of Wales Tower, Chester Tower, Holbein Room and the Great Kitchen, which lost its plaster coving and most of the medieval timber. The external wall above the bay window of the Crimson Drawing Room (between the Prince of Wales and Chester Towers) was seriously calcified.”

11/20/1968 a methane explosion ripped through the Consolidation Coal Company’s No. 9 mine in Farmington, West Virginia that killed seventy-eight miners; damage was so sever the mine was sealed. “Seventy-eight miners died—some in the explosion and fire, some days after the incident occurred, entombed in the earth after rescue efforts failed and the mine was closed off. Nine days after the fire had started it was still burning out of control. The cause of the explosion remains unknown. Miners had long complained about ventilation issues inside the No. 9 mine, leading to theories that the blast resulted from excess coal dust along with high concentrations of gas in the air. Two weeks before the explosion, a large fire occurred in the mine but was never reported to authorities. The disaster prompted laws designed to improve safety for miners throughout the United States.”

11/20/1959 Wichita Falls, TX an apartment fire killed two including a former University of Texas football star.

11/20/1936 Atlanta, GA the five story Cable Piano Company fire killed three and injured dozens when fire rapidly extended up the elevator shaft after an explosion in the basement.

11/20/1850 Detroit, MI the Michigan Central Freight Building and contents were destroyed by an incendiary fire.

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