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10 Years Later, IAFF Remembers Fatal Worcester Cold Storage
Fire
December
3, 2009 – On the 10th Anniversary of the Worcester Cold Storage Warehouse fire,
which claimed the lives of six Worcester Local 1009 fire fighters, the IAFF pays
homage to Brothers Paul Brotherton, Jeremiah Lucey, Joseph McGuirk, Timothy
Jackson Sr., Thomas Spencer and James Lyons III.
“We will never forget the ultimate sacrifice made by six of our best that dark
day,” says IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger. “They served every day on
the job with dedication and professionalism and will not be forgotten.”
IAFF 3rd District Vice President Mike Mullane says, “We must also remember the
families of the fallen. Let us keep them in our thoughts and prayers.”
Worcester Local 1009, the Worcester Fire Department and the City of Worcester is
holding a memorial and remembrance event. Fire fighters will march to the
Franklin Street fire station, built on the former location of the cold storage
warehouse. Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts President Bob McCarthy
expects at least 3,000 to attend the tribute.
Click here for more information.
The 1999 fire started when two homeless people knocked over a candle. As the
blaze grew to five-alarm status, Worcester and neighboring fire companies were
called to respond. When fire fighters arrived, the homeless people were thought
to still be inside.
Complicating their efforts was the building’s structure: it was windowless with
thick walls designed to maintain cold temperatures. But, on the day of the fire,
the building held in the heat and smoke.
Fire fighters inside the warehouse made repeated mayday calls and activated
audible location alarms. However, Brotherton, Jackson, Lucey, Lyons, McGuirk and
Spencer perished. It took eight days to recover them.
Local
1009 President Ronald Armstrong, a 33-year veteran fire fighter, was serving as
PFFM 7th District Vice President at the time. “I was on duty that night and was
called to the union office while our local president, Frank Raffa, went to the
scene. The sense of loss was powerful. It was hard for everyone,” he says.
On December 9, 1999, an estimated 100,000 visiting fire fighters
from around the world, along with President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al
Gore, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA), Senator John Kerry (D-MA), Representative
McGovern (D-MA), Governor Paul Cellucci and thousands of mourners
participated in a memorial service for the six fallen fire fighters. Kennedy
delivered one of the more memorable
speeches in fire
fighter history. He closed his speech with the Firefighters Prayer/Poem, which
is now hanging in every firehouse in Massachusetts.
Click
here for a transcript of Kennedy's remarks.
Following the funerals, Steve MacDonald, then a member of the
Boston, MA Local 718 Executive Board who was on the ground from the start,
wrote about the fire and memorial
service, documenting the tragedy and the story of the IAFF response and the part
of this union in taking care of its members and their families.
Click here to read the story.
After the fire investigation was complete, the building was demolished and the
lot left vacant. After Worcester’s former central fire station was usurped for
development purposes, a new central fire station – dubbed the Franklin Street
station – was dedicated and became fully operational in November 2008. |