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Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. fire

The Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. fire began on December 3, 1999, in a 93-year-old abandoned building at 266 Franklin Street, Worcester, Massachusetts.[1] The fire was started accidentally some time between 4:30–5:45 pm by two homeless people (Thomas Levesque and Julie Ann Barnes) who were squatting in the building and had knocked over a candle.[2][3] They left the scene without reporting the fire.[4] The 6-story building, previously used as a meat cold storage facility, had no windows above the ground floor and no fire detection or suppression systems.[2][5] The fire, which started on the second story, burned undetected for 30–90 minutes.[6]

Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. fire
DateDecember 3, 1999 (1999-12-03)
Time6:13 pm EST (UTC−05:00)
LocationWorcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co.,
266 Franklin Street,
Worcester,
Massachusetts
Coordinates42°15′36.23″N 71°47′34.17″W / 42.2600639°N 71.7928250°W / 42.2600639; -71.7928250
Also known asWorcester Cold Storage
CauseKnocked-over candle
Deaths6
AccusedThomas Levesque
Julie Ann Barnes
Charges6 counts of involuntary manslaughter
VerdictCharges dismissed; 5 years probation in lieu
Litigation6 wrongful death lawsuits pursued against building owners
Awards2 plaintiffs accepted $166,667 each in out of court settlements
4 plaintiffs accepted $250,000 each in out of court settlements

The structure was five blocks east of the Worcester central business district, near Union Station and adjacent to Interstate 290. An off-duty police officer called in the fire at 6:13 pm after noticing grey/white smoke coming from the roof of the building.[2] At around the same time an off-duty firefighter from neighboring Auburn passed the building on I-290 and radioed his Fire Control to report smoke coming from the roof. He told them to inform the Fire Chief "this is going to be a multiple-alarm fire."[2]

Firefighters were unfamiliar with the layout of the building, and most of the floors inside — each up to 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2) — were divided into a labyrinth of connecting meat lockers. The walls and many ceilings were covered with insulating layers of cork, tar, expanded polystyrene foam, and spray-applicated polyurethane foam.[7] There were no fire walls or fire doors, and only a single staircase extended from the basement to the roof.

The owner of a neighboring business informed a police officer at the scene that a homeless couple had been squatting in the building and firefighters initiated a search, believing they could still be trapped inside.[8] Conditions inside the building deteriorated rapidly. Worcester Fire Department District Chief Michael McNamee said: "There was a light smoke condition in the upper levels of the building to the point we didn't even have our face pieces on. Within four seconds it went from that condition to the building being filled completely with black, hot, boiling smoke."[9] The layout of the building and the absence of windows left firefighters without a secondary escape route and prevented ladder and rescue operations. Six firefighters were still unaccounted for in the building when the interior floors collapsed to the second story level.[2] They were the city's first firefighting deaths in 36 years.[5][10]

Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. edit

The Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. building was constructed in 1906 and covered an entire city block on Franklin Street.[2][11] The original structure measured 88 by 88 feet (27 m × 27 m), and stood 80 feet (24 m) high.[2] The warehouse was built to store western dressed beef from cattle slaughtered in the stock yards of Chicago, which could be shipped east in refrigerated rail cars at a lower cost than shipping livestock.[12] The interior consisted of six storage levels and a basement. The warehouse was served by a rail siding to the rear, operated by the Boston and Albany Railroad.[2]

To insulate the building, it was constructed with 18-inch-thick (46 cm) brick walls and had no windows above the first floor, except in the stairwell. The interior walls were covered with layers of cork impregnated with tar, polystyrene foam and polyurethane to improve insulation. The insulating layers were up to 18 inches (46 cm) thick.[6] Two elevator shafts ran alongside the stairwell. The first and second story floors were constructed of concrete, and those above were constructed of timber. In 1912, the building was extended on the west side. The extension almost doubled the floor space and included two further elevators serving all levels, a second stairwell which terminated at the 3rd floor, and some windows in an office space on the north-east corner of the 2nd floor.[2]

Between 1906 and 1983, the building was owned by the Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. In 1983, it was sold to Chicago Dressed Beef. It was purchased by CDB Realty Trust, controlled by Ding On "Tony" Kwan and his wife Shu May Kwan, in 1987.[13] The building was abandoned by 1989 and remained vacant until its destruction, though Kwan had proposed several re-use cases for the property.[14] During this period, it was frequently used by homeless persons, who built fires inside for warmth.[15][16]

Fire edit

Reports that homeless people were possibly inside the engulfed warehouse caused fire-rescue personnel to search the six-story building. The searchers' task was made extremely difficult by the large size of the building's interior, the layout, which was a maze of corridors and meat lockers, many with identical flush-handle doors, and the highly flammable composition of its insulation.[4] Nearly a century old, the interior walls had been progressively covered with various forms of insulating materials, including cork impregnated with tar, polystyrene foam, and polyurethane foam, to a thickness of 18 inches. Once ignited, the large amount of fuel, fed initially by the large volume of air in the building, became virtually inextinguishable.

The six-story building's exterior walls were constructed of approximately 18 inches of brick and mortar, with no windows above the second floor.[4] The lack of windows prevented firefighting personnel from making an accurate assessment of the fire. Breaching the lower-floor doors, combined with venting the building by smashing an elevator-shaft roof skylight, effectively turned the building into a huge chimney. With the fire accelerating out of control, rescue teams facing near-zero visibility became lost and air cylinders depleted. After repeated radio calls for help, along with activation of audible location alarms, six firefighters perished in the blaze.[2] It took eight days to find and recover the remains of the six men.[4]

Timeline edit

Time Incident
6:13 PM The first alarm is dispatched, fire alarm box 1438, Franklin and Arctic.[4]
6:16 PM Engine 1 arrives on location reporting they have heavy smoke showing.
6:17 PM Car 3 requests the 2nd alarm be struck.
6:20 PM Ladder 1 reports fire on the second floor, and has multiple 2+12-inch lines being put in service for the suppression efforts.
6:24 PM Fire Alarm tells command that they have a report that a nearby business owner told a police officer that there "may be two people that live in that building."
6:32 PM Car 3 asks Rescue 1 if they have checked on the rumor of the two homeless people. Rescue 1 reports they have made a preliminary search, and haven't found anyone.
6:40 PM Car 2 requests the 3rd alarm be struck.
6:46 PM Rescue 1 reports to command that they are lost on the fourth floor and they are running out of air.
6:47 PM Rescue 1 calls Fire Alarm asking them to clear the air and stating that they have an emergency.
6:47 PM The Fire Alarm dispatcher sounds the alert tones.
6:52 PM Car 2 requests the 4th alarm be struck and Chief Budd notified.
6:53 PM Car 3 directs Rescue 1 to activate their Personal Alert Safety Systems (PASS devices) to aid the other companies in locating them.
6:55 PM "They are activated," referring to the PASS devices. This is the last audible transmission from Rescue 1.
7:04 PM Ladder 2/Portable 2 asks Portable 1 his location. Portable 1 replies, "Good question." They are now lost with Engine 3 on the fifth floor.
7:08 PM Ladder 2 requests for the Chief to send a crew to the stairwell and yell, so they can find it. They also report they are running low on air.
7:15 PM "Ladder 2 to command: we're done..." This is the last transmission of the four man search team from Ladder 2/Engine 3.
7:26 PM Car 1 requests the 5th alarm be struck.
7:31 PM The Millbury Fire Department comes on mutual aid to the scene. They bring a thermal imaging camera with them, to be used to assist in locating the missing firefighters.
7:53 PM Car 4 reports the thermal imager has stopped working.
7:58 PM Car 3 signals for all companies to evacuate the building.

Deaths edit

Rank Name Age Hometown Company
Firefighter Paul Brotherton 41 Auburn, Massachusetts Rescue 1
Lieutenant* Timothy Jackson 51 Hopedale, Massachusetts Ladder 2
Firefighter Jeremiah Lucey 38 Leicester, Massachusetts Rescue 1
Lieutenant* James Lyons 34 Worcester, Massachusetts Engine 3
Firefighter Joseph McGuirk 38 Worcester, Massachusetts Engine 3
Lieutenant Thomas Spencer 42 Worcester, Massachusetts Ladder 2

These are known as the "Worcester Six".[17][18][19][20][21][22]

* Lyons and Jackson both received a posthumous promotion from Firefighter to Lieutenant.[23]

Criminal charges edit

Involuntary manslaughter charges against Levesque and Barnes were initially dismissed, reinstated on appeal, and finally dismissed in January 2010.[24] They received probation. Ding On "Tony" Kwan, the building's owner,[25] was not charged, but families of the deceased firefighters sued him for wrongful death for negligently failing to keep out squatters. The families received between $166,667 and $250,000 each from Kwan in out-of-court settlements.[26][27]

Memorials edit

 
Memorial at the Franklin Street Fire Station in Worcester

A memorial service and procession for the firefighters were held in Worcester's Centrum Centre on December 9, 1999. The service was broadcast on several national news networks and was attended by President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al Gore, Senator Ted Kennedy and Senator John Kerry (who flew non-stop from Burma, where he had been attending a diplomatic function).[28] Also in the procession were firefighters from around the United States, Canada, and from Dublin, Ireland.[29][30] The Boston Stock Exchange suspended business at 11:00 am during the memorial and observed a minute's silence while a bell was rung in tribute on the trading floor.[31]

City leaders planned to erect a memorial to the men in Institute Park, adjacent to the Worcester Fire Headquarters station on Grove Street.[32] The Franklin Street Fire Station, officially opened November 19, 2008,[33] sits on the land formerly occupied by the cold storage facility,[34] which was demolished immediately after the fire investigation. A memorial to the fallen firefighters, created by artist Brian P. Hanlon, is also located at this site.[33] Also, a banner hangs from the rafters in the DCU Center to commemorate the Worcester 6; it was raised by the Worcester Sharks AHL team on December 3, 2009.

On November 12, 2019, the then-new Triple-A affiliate of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox, the Worcester Red Sox, announced they would preemptively retire uniform number 6 in honor of the six men who died.[35] Additionally, the team sells jerseys featuring "Worcester 6" on the back, with portion of the proceeds going to a memorial care fund.[35]

Leary Firefighters Foundation edit

Actor and comedian Denis Leary's first cousin, Jerry Lucey, and his childhood friend and high school classmate, Lieutenant Tommy Spencer, were both victims of the fire. Leary established The Leary Firefighters Foundation in the spring of 2000. In October 2000, Leary held the first "Celebrity Hat Trick" fundraiser including a hockey game, a golf tournament and a dinner. The hockey game was played at Worcester Centrum between a "Hollywood" team, including Michael J. Fox, Kiefer Sutherland, Tim Robbins and Rick Moranis, and a Boston Bruins Alumni Team, coached by Bobby Orr and including Phil Esposito, Johnny Bucyk, Derek Sanderson and Cam Neely. The hockey game raised $350,000 and became an annual event. The proceeds went to Worcester and central Massachusetts fire departments to fund equipment, technology, and training, and to the families of firefighters who died or were injured in the line of duty.[36][37]

Film adaptation edit

In July 2000, journalist Sean Flynn's article about the fire, "The Perfect Fire", was published in Esquire magazine.[38] Flynn's subsequent book, 3000 Degrees: The True Story of a Deadly Fire and The Men Who Fought It, was published in 2002.[39]

Warner Bros. planned to use the book as the basis for a movie, with a screenplay written by Scott Silver,[40] a Worcester native. Director Michael Mann was attached to the project, but left in February 2003, possibly as a result of the "slow-moving pre-production process."[41] In September 2003, Warner Bros. hired director Danny Boyle to shoot the project, provisionally titled Worcester Cold Storage.[42][43] Filming was expected to begin in early 2004 with an autumn 2004 release date.[44]

Filming was scheduled to begin May 10, 2004, in Toronto, with Ed Harris and Woody Harrelson signed to star in the movie.[45] Firefighters across North America protested that it was insensitive to make a film about fallen firefighters while their children were still young,[46] and Worcester Fire Fighters IAFF Local 1009 wrote to other firefighters asking them not to participate in the movie's production. This resulted in the production company being unable to procure agreements in the United States or Canada to allow the use of firefighter insignia, while Canadian firefighters refused to act as extras and fire departments in the Toronto metropolitan area refused to lease firetrucks to the company.[46][47]

In late April 2004, Warner Bros. and Image Entertainment, the production company, issued a joint statement saying that the making of a film the size and scope of Worcester Cold Storage was "a complex process that needed the support of various groups and individuals, including firefighters. Due to circumstances beyond our control, we no longer have such support. We have therefore decided not to move ahead with this project at this time."[47] Frank Raffa, president of Local 1009, responded that firefighters "may one day drop their opposition" to the movie, "But we want to wait until the kids of our fallen comrades grow up."[46]

Ladder 49 edit

The 2004 movie Ladder 49, directed by Jay Russell, told the story of a fictional Baltimore firefighter who is trapped inside a warehouse fire, and his recollection of the events that got him to that point. The film, starring Joaquin Phoenix and John Travolta, was based on the events of the Worcester fire.[citation needed] The Boston Herald wrote:

Ladder 49 isn't the movie that Hollywood threatened to make about the Worcester cold storage fire; opposition from the fallen firefighters' friends and family put the kibosh on "3,000 Degrees" last year. But those who were affected by the Worcester fire would do well to avoid this DVD anyway. It opens with firefighters attacking a large blaze in a tall, narrow, windowless structure. On a report that vagrants might be trapped in the otherwise deserted building, the firefighters search deep into its inner maze. As the fire grows more intense, one of them is trapped and apparently doomed. This is Baltimore, not Worcester, and the building is a grain elevator. But the parallels – including the immediate visual one – are creepy. The movie hardly justifies what pain it might cause.[48]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wedge, Dave; Hanchett, Doug; Martinez, Jose (December 5, 1999). "Fallen heroes – Firefighters' desperate final moments". The Boston Herald. Boston. p. 1.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Abandoned Cold Storage Warehouse Multi- Firefighter Fatality Fire" (PDF). U.S. Fire Administration/Technical Report Series. December 1999.
  3. ^ Hanchett, Doug (December 12, 2001). . The Boston Herald. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e Flynn, Sean (July 1, 2000). "The Perfect Fire". Esquire. Retrieved July 3, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Crittenden, Jules; Martinez, Jose (December 4, 1999). . The Boston Herald. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  6. ^ a b Farmer, Tom (December 3, 2000). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  7. ^ Ferdinand, Pamela (December 10, 1999). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  8. ^ Wedge, Dave (December 12, 1999). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  9. ^ Farmer, Tom; Lawrence, J.M. (December 7, 1999). "Chief recalls deadly night; Building became dark, boiling oven". The Boston Herald. p. 5.
  10. ^ Daniel, Mac; Latour, Francie (December 4, 1999). . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  11. ^ . The Boston Globe. December 13, 1999. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  12. ^ Kujovich, Mary Yeager (Winter 1970). "The Refrigerator Car and the Growth of the American Dressed Beef Industry". The Business History Review. 44 (4): 460–482. doi:10.2307/3112669. JSTOR 3112669. S2CID 155364210.
  13. ^ Hanchett, Doug; Lawrence, J. M. (May 26, 2000). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  14. ^ Lilyestrom, Betty (4 December 1999). "Warehouse was part of family meat-packing complex". Worcester Telegram. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  15. ^ . Charleston Daily Mail. Charleston. December 4, 1999. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  16. ^ Vaillancourt, Meg (December 5, 1999). . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  17. ^ Mercado S. Remembering The Worcester Six And The Cold Storage FireLocal and national leaders take to social media to remember the Worcester Patch.com: Six. Police & Fire. Dec 3, 2018 4:20 pm ET | Updated Dec 3, 2018 4:22 pm ET
  18. ^ Sutherland B. Worcester warehouse fire widow laments latest firefighter death. Boston Herald: News. December 9, 2018 at 10:14 pm | UPDATED: December 10, 2018 at 4:50 am
  19. ^ Hanson M. Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. fire, which claimed lives of 6 firefighters, remembered 19 years later. MassLive.com: Worcester. Posted Dec 4, 2018
  20. ^ Ballam E. A Fitting Tribute to the Worcester Six: Like thunder rolling through a valley, the heavy beat of the pipe and drum brigade reverberated off buildings in downtown Worcester, advancing to the site. December 4, 2009
  21. ^ Rodriguez E. Legacy of the Worcester 6 firefighters lives on 18 years after the deadly fire. Boston25.com. Updated: Dec 9, 2018 – 11:05 am
  22. ^ Gilman A. Worcester firefighter dies while battling huge blaze, the latest in a string of firefighter deaths in city. December 9, 2018.
  23. ^ Martinez, Jose (October 29, 2000). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  24. ^ Murray, Gary V. (January 22, 2010). "Charges dismissed in tragic blaze". Telegram & Gazette. Worcester. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  25. ^ Grillo, Thomas (December 6, 1999). "Owner of warehouse offers condolences". The Boston Globe. p. B4 – via newspapers.com.
  26. ^ Schweitzer, Sarah; Russell, Jenna (December 3, 2009). "Still Mourned in Worcester: 6 firefighters a presence at station". The Boston Globe. p. A1 – via newspapers.com.
  27. ^ Schweitzer, Sarah; Russell, Jenna (December 3, 2009). "Decade later, a city mourns 6 who fell (cont'd)". The Boston Globe. p. A18 – via newspapers.com.
  28. ^ Jarvey, Paul (December 9, 1999). . Telegram & Gazette. Worcester. Archived from the original on April 5, 2003.
  29. ^ Astell, Emilie; Sutner, Shaun (December 8, 1999). . Telegram & Gazette. Worcester. Archived from the original on July 30, 2007.
  30. ^ . The Boston Globe. December 10, 1999. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  31. ^ Lawrence, J.M. (December 9, 1999). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  32. ^ . fallen-heroes.org. Archived from the original on December 22, 2012.
  33. ^ a b . City of Worcester, Massachusetts. Archived from the original on January 4, 2014.
  34. ^ . WBZ-TV. November 19, 2008. Archived from the original on March 23, 2009.
  35. ^ a b Bonner, Michael (2019-11-13). "'We can't forget': Worcester Red Sox retire No. 6, will reserve seats to honor memory of city's fallen firefighters". masslive. Retrieved 2019-11-15.
  36. ^ Conroy, Steve (September 1, 2000). . The Boston Herald. Boston. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  37. ^ Pave, Martin (September 17, 2000). . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  38. ^ Flynn, Sean (July 2000). "The Perfect Fire". Esquire. Retrieved October 25, 2021 – via esquire.com.
  39. ^ Flynn, Sean (2002). 3000 Degrees: The True Story of a Deadly Fire and the Men Who Fought It. Warner Books. ISBN 978-0446528313.
  40. ^ "Stars sign for firefighting story". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Zap2it. March 26, 2004. p. W19. Retrieved October 25, 2021 – via newspaper.com.
  41. ^ Harris, Dana (February 24, 2003). . Daily Variety. Los Angeles. Archived from the original on July 9, 2015. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  42. ^ "Hollywood news: Danny's on the boil". Daily Mirror. London. September 26, 2003. p. 16.
  43. ^ "Prime time: Sir Hopkins is homeward bound". The Belfast News Letter. Belfast. September 20, 2003. p. 35.
  44. ^ "Danny's Fired Up". Daily Mirror. London. September 17, 2003. p. 16.
  45. ^ "Hot Film". Miami Herald. March 28, 2004. p. 8B. Retrieved October 25, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  46. ^ a b c Kush, Bronislaus B. (April 7, 2004). "Warehouse fire movie canceled: Firefighter union opposed project". Telegram and Gazette. Worcester. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  47. ^ a b Kit, Borys (April 28, 2004). "'Degrees' flames out amid protests". The Index-Journal. Greenwood, South Carolina. p. S6. Retrieved October 25, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  48. ^ . Boston Herald. March 4, 2005. Archived from the original on October 18, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Keogh, Jim (December 2, 2009). "The Fire that still Burns". Worcester Magazine. Retrieved December 28, 2018.

External links edit

  • "Six Career Fire Fighters Killed in Cold-Storage and Warehouse Building Fire – Massachusetts". NIOSH. September 27, 2000.
  • "Worcester Firefighters IAFF Local 1009".
  • McNamee, Michael. "Never to Forget". The Moth.

worcester, cold, storage, warehouse, fire, began, december, 1999, year, abandoned, building, franklin, street, worcester, massachusetts, fire, started, accidentally, some, time, between, homeless, people, thomas, levesque, julie, barnes, were, squatting, build. The Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co fire began on December 3 1999 in a 93 year old abandoned building at 266 Franklin Street Worcester Massachusetts 1 The fire was started accidentally some time between 4 30 5 45 pm by two homeless people Thomas Levesque and Julie Ann Barnes who were squatting in the building and had knocked over a candle 2 3 They left the scene without reporting the fire 4 The 6 story building previously used as a meat cold storage facility had no windows above the ground floor and no fire detection or suppression systems 2 5 The fire which started on the second story burned undetected for 30 90 minutes 6 Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co fireDateDecember 3 1999 1999 12 03 Time6 13 pm EST UTC 05 00 LocationWorcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co 266 Franklin Street Worcester MassachusettsCoordinates42 15 36 23 N 71 47 34 17 W 42 2600639 N 71 7928250 W 42 2600639 71 7928250Also known asWorcester Cold StorageCauseKnocked over candleDeaths6AccusedThomas LevesqueJulie Ann BarnesCharges6 counts of involuntary manslaughterVerdictCharges dismissed 5 years probation in lieuLitigation6 wrongful death lawsuits pursued against building ownersAwards2 plaintiffs accepted 166 667 each in out of court settlements4 plaintiffs accepted 250 000 each in out of court settlements The structure was five blocks east of the Worcester central business district near Union Station and adjacent to Interstate 290 An off duty police officer called in the fire at 6 13 pm after noticing grey white smoke coming from the roof of the building 2 At around the same time an off duty firefighter from neighboring Auburn passed the building on I 290 and radioed his Fire Control to report smoke coming from the roof He told them to inform the Fire Chief this is going to be a multiple alarm fire 2 Firefighters were unfamiliar with the layout of the building and most of the floors inside each up to 15 000 square feet 1 400 m2 were divided into a labyrinth of connecting meat lockers The walls and many ceilings were covered with insulating layers of cork tar expanded polystyrene foam and spray applicated polyurethane foam 7 There were no fire walls or fire doors and only a single staircase extended from the basement to the roof The owner of a neighboring business informed a police officer at the scene that a homeless couple had been squatting in the building and firefighters initiated a search believing they could still be trapped inside 8 Conditions inside the building deteriorated rapidly Worcester Fire Department District Chief Michael McNamee said There was a light smoke condition in the upper levels of the building to the point we didn t even have our face pieces on Within four seconds it went from that condition to the building being filled completely with black hot boiling smoke 9 The layout of the building and the absence of windows left firefighters without a secondary escape route and prevented ladder and rescue operations Six firefighters were still unaccounted for in the building when the interior floors collapsed to the second story level 2 They were the city s first firefighting deaths in 36 years 5 10 Contents 1 Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co 2 Fire 2 1 Timeline 2 2 Deaths 3 Criminal charges 4 Memorials 5 Leary Firefighters Foundation 6 Film adaptation 6 1 Ladder 49 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksWorcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co editThe Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co building was constructed in 1906 and covered an entire city block on Franklin Street 2 11 The original structure measured 88 by 88 feet 27 m 27 m and stood 80 feet 24 m high 2 The warehouse was built to store western dressed beef from cattle slaughtered in the stock yards of Chicago which could be shipped east in refrigerated rail cars at a lower cost than shipping livestock 12 The interior consisted of six storage levels and a basement The warehouse was served by a rail siding to the rear operated by the Boston and Albany Railroad 2 To insulate the building it was constructed with 18 inch thick 46 cm brick walls and had no windows above the first floor except in the stairwell The interior walls were covered with layers of cork impregnated with tar polystyrene foam and polyurethane to improve insulation The insulating layers were up to 18 inches 46 cm thick 6 Two elevator shafts ran alongside the stairwell The first and second story floors were constructed of concrete and those above were constructed of timber In 1912 the building was extended on the west side The extension almost doubled the floor space and included two further elevators serving all levels a second stairwell which terminated at the 3rd floor and some windows in an office space on the north east corner of the 2nd floor 2 Between 1906 and 1983 the building was owned by the Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co In 1983 it was sold to Chicago Dressed Beef It was purchased by CDB Realty Trust controlled by Ding On Tony Kwan and his wife Shu May Kwan in 1987 13 The building was abandoned by 1989 and remained vacant until its destruction though Kwan had proposed several re use cases for the property 14 During this period it was frequently used by homeless persons who built fires inside for warmth 15 16 Fire editReports that homeless people were possibly inside the engulfed warehouse caused fire rescue personnel to search the six story building The searchers task was made extremely difficult by the large size of the building s interior the layout which was a maze of corridors and meat lockers many with identical flush handle doors and the highly flammable composition of its insulation 4 Nearly a century old the interior walls had been progressively covered with various forms of insulating materials including cork impregnated with tar polystyrene foam and polyurethane foam to a thickness of 18 inches Once ignited the large amount of fuel fed initially by the large volume of air in the building became virtually inextinguishable The six story building s exterior walls were constructed of approximately 18 inches of brick and mortar with no windows above the second floor 4 The lack of windows prevented firefighting personnel from making an accurate assessment of the fire Breaching the lower floor doors combined with venting the building by smashing an elevator shaft roof skylight effectively turned the building into a huge chimney With the fire accelerating out of control rescue teams facing near zero visibility became lost and air cylinders depleted After repeated radio calls for help along with activation of audible location alarms six firefighters perished in the blaze 2 It took eight days to find and recover the remains of the six men 4 Timeline edit Time Incident 6 13 PM The first alarm is dispatched fire alarm box 1438 Franklin and Arctic 4 6 16 PM Engine 1 arrives on location reporting they have heavy smoke showing 6 17 PM Car 3 requests the 2nd alarm be struck 6 20 PM Ladder 1 reports fire on the second floor and has multiple 2 1 2 inch lines being put in service for the suppression efforts 6 24 PM Fire Alarm tells command that they have a report that a nearby business owner told a police officer that there may be two people that live in that building 6 32 PM Car 3 asks Rescue 1 if they have checked on the rumor of the two homeless people Rescue 1 reports they have made a preliminary search and haven t found anyone 6 40 PM Car 2 requests the 3rd alarm be struck 6 46 PM Rescue 1 reports to command that they are lost on the fourth floor and they are running out of air 6 47 PM Rescue 1 calls Fire Alarm asking them to clear the air and stating that they have an emergency 6 47 PM The Fire Alarm dispatcher sounds the alert tones 6 52 PM Car 2 requests the 4th alarm be struck and Chief Budd notified 6 53 PM Car 3 directs Rescue 1 to activate their Personal Alert Safety Systems PASS devices to aid the other companies in locating them 6 55 PM They are activated referring to the PASS devices This is the last audible transmission from Rescue 1 7 04 PM Ladder 2 Portable 2 asks Portable 1 his location Portable 1 replies Good question They are now lost with Engine 3 on the fifth floor 7 08 PM Ladder 2 requests for the Chief to send a crew to the stairwell and yell so they can find it They also report they are running low on air 7 15 PM Ladder 2 to command we re done This is the last transmission of the four man search team from Ladder 2 Engine 3 7 26 PM Car 1 requests the 5th alarm be struck 7 31 PM The Millbury Fire Department comes on mutual aid to the scene They bring a thermal imaging camera with them to be used to assist in locating the missing firefighters 7 53 PM Car 4 reports the thermal imager has stopped working 7 58 PM Car 3 signals for all companies to evacuate the building Deaths edit Rank Name Age Hometown Company Firefighter Paul Brotherton 41 Auburn Massachusetts Rescue 1 Lieutenant Timothy Jackson 51 Hopedale Massachusetts Ladder 2 Firefighter Jeremiah Lucey 38 Leicester Massachusetts Rescue 1 Lieutenant James Lyons 34 Worcester Massachusetts Engine 3 Firefighter Joseph McGuirk 38 Worcester Massachusetts Engine 3 Lieutenant Thomas Spencer 42 Worcester Massachusetts Ladder 2 These are known as the Worcester Six 17 18 19 20 21 22 Lyons and Jackson both received a posthumous promotion from Firefighter to Lieutenant 23 Criminal charges editInvoluntary manslaughter charges against Levesque and Barnes were initially dismissed reinstated on appeal and finally dismissed in January 2010 24 They received probation Ding On Tony Kwan the building s owner 25 was not charged but families of the deceased firefighters sued him for wrongful death for negligently failing to keep out squatters The families received between 166 667 and 250 000 each from Kwan in out of court settlements 26 27 Memorials edit nbsp Memorial at the Franklin Street Fire Station in Worcester A memorial service and procession for the firefighters were held in Worcester s Centrum Centre on December 9 1999 The service was broadcast on several national news networks and was attended by President Bill Clinton Vice President Al Gore Senator Ted Kennedy and Senator John Kerry who flew non stop from Burma where he had been attending a diplomatic function 28 Also in the procession were firefighters from around the United States Canada and from Dublin Ireland 29 30 The Boston Stock Exchange suspended business at 11 00 am during the memorial and observed a minute s silence while a bell was rung in tribute on the trading floor 31 City leaders planned to erect a memorial to the men in Institute Park adjacent to the Worcester Fire Headquarters station on Grove Street 32 The Franklin Street Fire Station officially opened November 19 2008 33 sits on the land formerly occupied by the cold storage facility 34 which was demolished immediately after the fire investigation A memorial to the fallen firefighters created by artist Brian P Hanlon is also located at this site 33 Also a banner hangs from the rafters in the DCU Center to commemorate the Worcester 6 it was raised by the Worcester Sharks AHL team on December 3 2009 On November 12 2019 the then new Triple A affiliate of Major League Baseball s Boston Red Sox the Worcester Red Sox announced they would preemptively retire uniform number 6 in honor of the six men who died 35 Additionally the team sells jerseys featuring Worcester 6 on the back with portion of the proceeds going to a memorial care fund 35 Leary Firefighters Foundation editActor and comedian Denis Leary s first cousin Jerry Lucey and his childhood friend and high school classmate Lieutenant Tommy Spencer were both victims of the fire Leary established The Leary Firefighters Foundation in the spring of 2000 In October 2000 Leary held the first Celebrity Hat Trick fundraiser including a hockey game a golf tournament and a dinner The hockey game was played at Worcester Centrum between a Hollywood team including Michael J Fox Kiefer Sutherland Tim Robbins and Rick Moranis and a Boston Bruins Alumni Team coached by Bobby Orr and including Phil Esposito Johnny Bucyk Derek Sanderson and Cam Neely The hockey game raised 350 000 and became an annual event The proceeds went to Worcester and central Massachusetts fire departments to fund equipment technology and training and to the families of firefighters who died or were injured in the line of duty 36 37 Film adaptation editIn July 2000 journalist Sean Flynn s article about the fire The Perfect Fire was published in Esquire magazine 38 Flynn s subsequent book 3000 Degrees The True Story of a Deadly Fire and The Men Who Fought It was published in 2002 39 Warner Bros planned to use the book as the basis for a movie with a screenplay written by Scott Silver 40 a Worcester native Director Michael Mann was attached to the project but left in February 2003 possibly as a result of the slow moving pre production process 41 In September 2003 Warner Bros hired director Danny Boyle to shoot the project provisionally titled Worcester Cold Storage 42 43 Filming was expected to begin in early 2004 with an autumn 2004 release date 44 Filming was scheduled to begin May 10 2004 in Toronto with Ed Harris and Woody Harrelson signed to star in the movie 45 Firefighters across North America protested that it was insensitive to make a film about fallen firefighters while their children were still young 46 and Worcester Fire Fighters IAFF Local 1009 wrote to other firefighters asking them not to participate in the movie s production This resulted in the production company being unable to procure agreements in the United States or Canada to allow the use of firefighter insignia while Canadian firefighters refused to act as extras and fire departments in the Toronto metropolitan area refused to lease firetrucks to the company 46 47 In late April 2004 Warner Bros and Image Entertainment the production company issued a joint statement saying that the making of a film the size and scope of Worcester Cold Storage was a complex process that needed the support of various groups and individuals including firefighters Due to circumstances beyond our control we no longer have such support We have therefore decided not to move ahead with this project at this time 47 Frank Raffa president of Local 1009 responded that firefighters may one day drop their opposition to the movie But we want to wait until the kids of our fallen comrades grow up 46 Ladder 49 edit The 2004 movie Ladder 49 directed by Jay Russell told the story of a fictional Baltimore firefighter who is trapped inside a warehouse fire and his recollection of the events that got him to that point The film starring Joaquin Phoenix and John Travolta was based on the events of the Worcester fire citation needed The Boston Herald wrote Ladder 49 isn t the movie that Hollywood threatened to make about the Worcester cold storage fire opposition from the fallen firefighters friends and family put the kibosh on 3 000 Degrees last year But those who were affected by the Worcester fire would do well to avoid this DVD anyway It opens with firefighters attacking a large blaze in a tall narrow windowless structure On a report that vagrants might be trapped in the otherwise deserted building the firefighters search deep into its inner maze As the fire grows more intense one of them is trapped and apparently doomed This is Baltimore not Worcester and the building is a grain elevator But the parallels including the immediate visual one are creepy The movie hardly justifies what pain it might cause 48 See also editList of the deadliest firefighter disasters in the United StatesReferences edit Wedge Dave Hanchett Doug Martinez Jose December 5 1999 Fallen heroes Firefighters desperate final moments The Boston Herald Boston p 1 a b c d e f g h i j Abandoned Cold Storage Warehouse Multi Firefighter Fatality Fire PDF U S Fire Administration Technical Report Series December 1999 Hanchett Doug December 12 2001 SJC to hear case of pair blamed in Worcester fire The Boston Herald Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 a b c d e Flynn Sean July 1 2000 The Perfect Fire Esquire Retrieved July 3 2012 a b Crittenden Jules Martinez Jose December 4 1999 Blaze kills 2 Worcester firefighters 4 others feared dead The Boston Herald Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 a b Farmer Tom December 3 2000 Worcester fights pain to honor spirit of sacrifice The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved April 2 2014 Ferdinand Pamela December 10 1999 6 Massachusetts Firefighters Honored 30 000 Mourners Led by Clinton Pay Tribute to Men Killed in Fire The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 Wedge Dave December 12 1999 Fatal inferno made time stand still in Worcester The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 Farmer Tom Lawrence J M December 7 1999 Chief recalls deadly night Building became dark boiling oven The Boston Herald p 5 Daniel Mac Latour Francie December 4 1999 2 firefighters dead 4 missing Six are trapped in Worcester warehouse fire The Boston Globe Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Workers Start Tearing Down Burned out Warehouse in Worester Tragedy that Hit Their City The Boston Globe December 13 1999 Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 4 2014 Kujovich Mary Yeager Winter 1970 The Refrigerator Car and the Growth of the American Dressed Beef Industry The Business History Review 44 4 460 482 doi 10 2307 3112669 JSTOR 3112669 S2CID 155364210 Hanchett Doug Lawrence J M May 26 2000 Firefighters widows sue warehouse owners The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 3 2014 Lilyestrom Betty 4 December 1999 Warehouse was part of family meat packing complex Worcester Telegram Retrieved 4 December 2019 Firefighters feared dead in Massachusetts blaze Six were trapped in burning building Charleston Daily Mail Charleston December 4 1999 Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 4 2014 Vaillancourt Meg December 5 1999 Warehouse Tentatively Eyed as Part of Proposed Bioscience Park The Boston Globe Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 4 2014 Mercado S Remembering The Worcester Six And The Cold Storage FireLocal and national leaders take to social media to remember the Worcester Patch com Six Police amp Fire Dec 3 2018 4 20 pm ET Updated Dec 3 2018 4 22 pm ET Sutherland B Worcester warehouse fire widow laments latest firefighter death Boston Herald News December 9 2018 at 10 14 pm UPDATED December 10 2018 at 4 50 am Hanson M Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co fire which claimed lives of 6 firefighters remembered 19 years later MassLive com Worcester Posted Dec 4 2018 Ballam E A Fitting Tribute to the Worcester Six Like thunder rolling through a valley the heavy beat of the pipe and drum brigade reverberated off buildings in downtown Worcester advancing to the site December 4 2009 Rodriguez E Legacy of the Worcester 6 firefighters lives on 18 years after the deadly fire Boston25 com Updated Dec 9 2018 11 05 am Gilman A Worcester firefighter dies while battling huge blaze the latest in a string of firefighter deaths in city December 9 2018 Martinez Jose October 29 2000 Worcester firefighters among Medal of Honor recipients The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 Murray Gary V January 22 2010 Charges dismissed in tragic blaze Telegram amp Gazette Worcester Retrieved March 30 2014 Grillo Thomas December 6 1999 Owner of warehouse offers condolences The Boston Globe p B4 via newspapers com Schweitzer Sarah Russell Jenna December 3 2009 Still Mourned in Worcester 6 firefighters a presence at station The Boston Globe p A1 via newspapers com Schweitzer Sarah Russell Jenna December 3 2009 Decade later a city mourns 6 who fell cont d The Boston Globe p A18 via newspapers com Jarvey Paul December 9 1999 Words are not enough Telegram amp Gazette Worcester Archived from the original on April 5 2003 Astell Emilie Sutner Shaun December 8 1999 From president to residents 25 000 expected at tribute Telegram amp Gazette Worcester Archived from the original on July 30 2007 My Own Brother Passed Away The Boston Globe December 10 1999 Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 1 2014 Lawrence J M December 9 1999 Thousands to pay tribute to fallen heroes Service honors sacrifice of brave jakes The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 1 2014 The Memorial fallen heroes org Archived from the original on December 22 2012 a b Fireman s Memorial Worcester Cold Storage Tragedy City of Worcester Massachusetts Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Worcester Opens Fire Station At Deadly Fire Site WBZ TV November 19 2008 Archived from the original on March 23 2009 a b Bonner Michael 2019 11 13 We can t forget Worcester Red Sox retire No 6 will reserve seats to honor memory of city s fallen firefighters masslive Retrieved 2019 11 15 Conroy Steve September 1 2000 Leary s Trick no joke The Boston Herald Boston Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 4 2014 Pave Martin September 17 2000 Stars Come Out for Fire Fighters The Boston Globe Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved April 4 2014 Flynn Sean July 2000 The Perfect Fire Esquire Retrieved October 25 2021 via esquire com Flynn Sean 2002 3000 Degrees The True Story of a Deadly Fire and the Men Who Fought It Warner Books ISBN 978 0446528313 Stars sign for firefighting story The Philadelphia Inquirer Zap2it March 26 2004 p W19 Retrieved October 25 2021 via newspaper com Harris Dana February 24 2003 Perfect Fire burns without director Daily Variety Los Angeles Archived from the original on July 9 2015 Retrieved March 31 2014 Hollywood news Danny s on the boil Daily Mirror London September 26 2003 p 16 Prime time Sir Hopkins is homeward bound The Belfast News Letter Belfast September 20 2003 p 35 Danny s Fired Up Daily Mirror London September 17 2003 p 16 Hot Film Miami Herald March 28 2004 p 8B Retrieved October 25 2021 via newspapers com a b c Kush Bronislaus B April 7 2004 Warehouse fire movie canceled Firefighter union opposed project Telegram and Gazette Worcester Retrieved March 31 2014 a b Kit Borys April 28 2004 Degrees flames out amid protests The Index Journal Greenwood South Carolina p S6 Retrieved October 25 2021 via newspapers com False alarm Ladder 49 cheesy take on firefighting Boston Herald March 4 2005 Archived from the original on October 18 2016 Retrieved March 31 2014 Further reading editKeogh Jim December 2 2009 The Fire that still Burns Worcester Magazine Retrieved December 28 2018 External links edit Six Career Fire Fighters Killed in Cold Storage and Warehouse Building Fire Massachusetts NIOSH September 27 2000 Worcester Firefighters IAFF Local 1009 McNamee Michael Never to Forget The Moth Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co fire amp oldid 1179260577, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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