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All posts for the month October, 2014

I came across this burn down by the Crown Point (IN) Fire Department the other night (9-29-14) as I was driving along I65. It didn’t take me long to get to the site from the highway, but the structure had already collapsed. Nonetheless, I couldn’t pass a building on fire without stopping to take some photos.

They had just completed three days of training scenarios in this house.

fire engine at fire scene

Larry Shapiro photo

firemen with hose line and burning house

Larry Shapiro photo

house destroyed by flames

Larry Shapiro photo

fireman with hose line and burning house

Larry Shapiro photo

water spray from fire hose at night

Larry Shapiro photo

More images are at shapirophotography.net

I went digging through my files after Steve Redick posted an image from this fire. The fire was well under control when I arrived, companies had begun to pick up lines.

I apologize for composition and overall quality of these images I was just getting into photography.

 

vintage Chicago fire scene photo

John Tulipano photo

vintage Chicago fire scene photo

John Tulipano photo

vintage Chicago fire scene photo

John Tulipano photo

vintage Chicago fire scene photo

John Tulipano photo

I created a gallery of my images on my smugmug site.

http://tulipano-firephotos.smugmug.com/Other-1/1261986-3-11-111-W-Division

This image is from January 1986 … a dark day in the CFD. This was the Mark Twain Hotel, 111 W Division, and Lt Edmund Coglianese of 98 was killed here. The fire ocurred on Super Bowl Sunday, when the Bears played New England. The real scope of this tragedy was overshadowed by the super bowl victory … a terrible situation made so much worse by the hooplah of the victory. This was a dumpy SRO with tiny cubicle-like rooms. I believe the the Lt either had a mask malfunction and or ran out of air. They had an aweful time getting him out of the building.

I can only imagine how bad conditions were in this case … maze-like interior, zero visibility, severe fire conditions, difficult searches, and a tough time getting a line down what must have been a long nasty hallway. I had recently met Edmund when he brought his son’s Boyscout troop up to the office for a tour. A nice man who left behind a wonderful family. I will never forget the fact that he was the one who answered me on the amplifier when I gave him what turned out to be his last run … this still stays with me 30 years later. I can only imagine the pain his family must still feel every day.

Steve Redick

 tragic fire scene photo from Chicago