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Paul A. Brotherton
Timothy P Jackson Jeremiah M. Lucey Joseph T. McGuirk
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On December 3 1999, Worcester Massachusetts lost six firefighters in a catastrophic warehouse fire. These brave men in the line of their duty went into the flames to search for possible victims and were themselves, consumed by the fire.

A tragic scene...

On Thursday December 9th there was held a Memorial Service at Worcester Centrum Centre.  The heroes’ families as well as more than 40,000 firefighters from around the world attended a procession for the firefighters who lost their lives.  Thousands of grieving Worcester residents and dignitaries including President Clinton and Vice President Al Gore joined the grieving relatives and the firefighter brethren. Worcester Mayor Raymond V. Mariano was joined by Clinton and Gore in proclaimed December 9th a Day of Mourning.

Today, December 19, 1999 over 700 motorcycles and scores of cars and trucks converged on Worcester center to raise money for the families of the fallen heroes and to honor those 6 men who gave their lives in an effort to save others.  It was quite a sight to see over 700 motorcycles in the parking lot of Sh-Booms, a Worcester night club, when temp’s never really got much over 40 degrees.  The ride, sponsored by Bikers Break, began shortly after 11am and rolled through the city and back roads to Chooch’s Pub.  The riders were given an hour or so to thaw out before saddling up and heading off to the North End Pub.  An hour later a significantly thinner procession left for the short ride back to Sh-Booms, marking the end of the ride. Sh-Booms, Chooch’s and the NEP were overrun with cold, hungry bikers, and all three places were ready with food and drink.

This was a fitting tribute to the 6 fallen hero’s, many of whom rode in events like this themselves.  Each rider memorialized the firefighters in their own ways.  Some knew the guys personally, others like myself were touched by the fact that 6 men, anonymous otherwise, selflessly gave their own lives in an effort to save the lives of others.

On the way to the ride, I stopped for gas.  My hands were frozen.  I could barely move my face.  When I went inside to pay for the gas I noticed a can on the counter.  It was one of those collection cans to collect money for the firefighter families.  I said to the girl behind the counter “I’m riding for them today…” She took one look at me and said “Isn’t it freezing out there?”  I looked back at her and said “Do you suppose those firefighters said ‘Isn’t it too hot in there?’  before they did what they did?"  She looked down and said, “No, I suppose they didn’t.” 
She wished me luck and I rode on.

To read more about this tragic event go to http://www.telegram.com/special_sections/fire120399/

700 bikes... 32 degrees!
The meeting place...
Getting ready to ride...

Below is an article reprinted from the Worcester Telegram and Gazette


Six firefighters missing in blaze at vacant building
Fire engulfs Franklin St. warehouse

Thursday, December 4, 1999
By Edward J. Canty
Telegram & Gazette Staff

WORCESTER-- Six firefighters were missing last night -- and at least some of them were presumed dead -- as a suspicious fire raged through an aging brick warehouse near Interstate 290, sending thick black smoke across the city and drawing an army of emergency crews downtown.
The blaze in the former Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. building broke out about 6:15 p.m, roared to life and spread rapidly as alarm after alarm was called. By just after 8, when an urgent evacuation order was sounded, the five-story warehouse was fully engulfed, with flames shooting more than 100 feet into the air and visible for miles.
There was immediate fear for the fate of the first firefighters who entered the building, and the radio traffic reached a fever pitch as those going in rushed to find them, and companies scrambled to account for their members.
“It's been fifteen minutes,” a worried fire official said early on. “This is not good. This is not good at all.”
Later, Deputy Fire Chief Gerard Dio said the effort to find the men was complicated and heartbreaking.
“There are six individuals in there who are confirmed missing, but the sections in the building are divided pretty good,” he said, adding that the families of the firefighters had been notified of the situation.
“We never give up hope,” Deputy Chief Dio said. “We just never give up hope.”
He confirmed that some of the missing men's portable packs had run out of air, and that they used a radio to sound a “mayday.”
He also said the fire is thought to have started in distinct locations, and therefore may have been set.
“There were two areas,” Deputy Chief Dio said. “Yes,” he replied when asked whether the cause of the fire was considered suspicious.
When they first entered the building on Franklin Street, the firefighters were met with extreme heat and oppressive smoke.
Deputy Fire Chief John Fenton said there was heavy fire on the second floor, and firefighters heard “crackling over their heads.” The blaze apparently started in an elevator shaft on the second floor, he said.
Initially, fire officials were concerned homeless people using the building as a shelter might have been trapped inside.
The grim-faced firefighters had little to say about their missing comrades.
“It doesn't get any worse than this,” said one, carrying an empty air tank at his side.
“You can't see in there with the heavy smoke,” said a soot-covered firefighter who left the building to get a fresh air pack. “You really have to watch out that you don't get lost.”
“It's a nightmare in there,” said another fatigued firefighter, leaning on the side of a truck to catch his breath and wipe a filthy hand across his sweat-covered forehead.
Officials said two firefighters initially entered the building, concerned that people might be inside. They got into trouble, and four additional firefighters went inside.
“We sent in a team of four with safety lines to try to rescue the initial crew,” Deputy Chief Dio said.
Things got progressively worse as the evening wore on.
State police were called in to close the interstate and direct traffic, while members of the firefighters' families were brought together at St. Stephen's Church on Hamilton Street. Officials would provide no names and few details about who was missing, or the nature of any injuries.
The state fire marshal was quickly asked to begin an investigation. The medical examiner's office in Boston was called, and body bags were brought to the area, which came to resemble a disaster scene. Agents of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms arrived, as did representatives of the American Red Cross.
Firefighters emerging from the huge warehouse -- which had few windows and thick steel doors that had to be cut up the middle with circular power saws -- described the smoke as impenetrable. They were unable to even see the stairwells, some said.
As they mounted their search, the crews made frantic efforts to keep air packs filled. They began replacing spent ones at 7:30 p.m.
A half hour later, the cry was: “All companies, evacuate the building immediately.”
After a short time, the dense smoke grew even thicker. Flames poured out of the few windows, and it was feared that parts of the building would collapse.
Early on, the building had little outward appearance of the raging fire that would later hit five alarms and send flames leaping into the night sky. Smoke drifted from the roof and from a few windows on the first floor.
Aerial scopes positioned on Franklin and Arctic streets poured steady streams into windows and onto the rooftop. As the volume of fire increased inside, flames broke out the front windows on Franklin Street and burst through the roof. Some trucks were placed on the highway to battle the flames.
The Worcester Cold Storage building, on Franklin Street just behind the Kenmore Diner, is a Worcester landmark of sorts that dates back at least to the turn of the century.
It was used as part of a meat-packing and slaughterhouse operation beginning around 1905. More recently, it was one of a number of properties in an area bounded by Interstate 290 and Franklin, Grafton and Suffolk streets to be acquired by Framingham businessman Ding On “Tony” Kwan.
Kwan walked along the periphery of the fire lines last night, grim-faced and silent. He was not willing to speak with reporters.
In June, the Worcester Redevelopment Authority awarded an $89,000 contract for a feasibility study on developing a bioscience park in the area.
All hopes for use of the building now appear to be dashed.
But the fears are for people, not for the loss of property.
Early this morning, a state police captain said authorities were extremely concerned for the safety of the missing firefighters.
“It doesn't look good,” he said.
State Fire Marshal Stephen D. Coan noted that the tragedy's toll was visible on the faces of the firefighters who continued battling the inferno while they waited for another chance to search for the men missing inside.
“I've never been through anything like this before,” the fire marshal said as towering balls of flame and cinder continued to mushroom out of the roof. He said the only tragedy he could think of that could compare was the Vendome Hotel fire in Boston in June of 1972, in which nine firefighters died.
The last time a firefighter died in Worcester was in the early 1960s.
Fire Marshal Coan said Gov. Paul Cellucci had offered any equipment or resources needed at the fire scene, and that a stress control team, including clergy members, had been called in to counsel grieving families and firefighters.
At 10:50 p.m., rescuers still weren't able to get inside the burning building, and the fears continued to grow.
Still, police, firefighters and others were holding on, waiting for definite word.
“At this time, six firefighters are missing inside the building,” was all that Sgt. Donald E. Cummings, the Police Department's public information officer, would say.
Sgt. Cummings said firefighters would have to go into the building to make any further determination, and that the fire was still too active for them to enter.
City Manager Thomas R. Hoover, who went to the area immediately after being notified of the fire, praised those who had to cope with the ordeal that was unfolding.
“You never can deal well with something like this,” Mr. Hoover said. “You have to deal with all the firefighters' families. Every citizen of the city should have a heavy heart right now.
“They are doing the best they can,” Mr. Hoover said of those fighting the blaze. “You've got to let professional firefighters do their job.
Firefighters are trained to do things like that. Unfortunately, they find themselves in harm's way every day. This is a tragedy beyond belief.”

Linda Bock, Nick Kotsopoulos, Betty Lilyestrom, Carol McDonald, John J. Monahan, Richard Nangle, James P. Sacks, Kathleen A. Shaw, Shaun Sutner and Jay F. Whearley of the Telegram & Gazette Staff contributed to this story.
© 1999 Worcester Telegram & Gazette

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