Fifty-five
years ago, on October 17, 1966 members of New York Fire Department (FDNY)
responded to a roaring blaze in the Flatiron District. Twelve of them didn’t get out alive. In the annals of the Department the 23rd
Street Fire was the deadliest day until the World Trade Center
Towers collapsed on September 11, 2001.
The fire was first reported
at 9:36 pm at the American Art Galleries in a four-story brownstone
at 7 East 22nd Street. When the firefighters
first pulled up the intensity of the smoke and heat made
it impossible to enter through the 22nd Street side of the building. Instead, they attacked the conflagration through
Wonder Drug located at 6 East 23rd Street which backed up on the art
store.
What
they did not know was the gallery, which also dealt in art supplies had
removed a load-bearing wall in its basement to expand its storage
area to 35 feet underneath the drug store.
Highly flammable lacquer, paint, and finished wood
frames were stored in the basement. The fire likely originated in the
basement, although a cause was never determined.
Several
firefighters, mostly from Engine Company 18 and Ladder Company 7 led
by two chiefs and Lieutenants from each company were battling
intense flames on the first floor of the drug store when the floor suddenly
collapsed under them. Ten plunged
into basement and two who clung to the floor were killed in a flash-over
fire. Twelve men perished almost
immediately.
Later
investigation showed that the fire in the basement had been roaring
for more than an hour charring and weakening the wood floor
beams which reduced their size and strength. A 15-by-35-foot section of the floor collapsed
at 10:39 pm, one hour and three minutes after the initial alarm was transmitted.
As firefighters
battled the blaze and attempted to rescue their comrades, it
became a five alarm box fires with scores of trucks and crews
responding. It still took 14 hours to
retrieve the remains.
Killed
were:
Deputy Chief Thomas A. Reilly, FDNY 3rd Division
Battalion Chief Walter J. Higgins, FDNY 7th
Battalion
Lt. John J. Finley, FDNY Ladder Co. 7
Lt. Joseph Priore, FDNY Engine Co. 18
Firefighter John G. Berry, FDNY Ladder Co.
7
Firefighter James V. Galanaugh, FDNY Engine
Co. 18
Firefighter Rudolph F. Kaminsky, FDNY
Ladder Co. 7
Firefighter Joseph Kelly, FDNY Engine Co.
18
Firefighter Carl Lee, FDNY Ladder Co. 7
Firefighter William F. McCarron, FDNY 3rd
Division
Firefighter Daniel L. Rey, FDNY Engine Co.
18
Firefighter Bernard A. Tepper, FDNY Engine
Co. 18
The
dead reflected the make-up of the Department—three of the officers
and four of the firefighters were ethnic Irish. One Lieutenant was Italian and one fireman
Polish. Three of the youngest,
including one still on probation, were Black who were just being
brought into the fire service to significant resistance under political
pressure and a Federal discrimination suit. Perhaps in death they finally achieved full
acceptance.
10,000
firefighters lined Fifth Avenue on October 21, 1966, as ten firetrucks
carried ten coffins to separate services at St. Thomas Protestant
Episcopal Church and at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Firefighters came from as far away as the United
Kingdom, Anchorage, Los Angeles and San Francisco, the
Northeast United States, and a group of 500 firefighters from Boston.
Regular
annual commemorations are still held at the firehouses of the victims
and sometimes at the fire site which is marked with a commemorative
plaque. Members of their families
are joined by current firefighters, none of whom after all these years now
personally remembers the dead.
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