Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
fire-York-Pepperidge-Road
Full Text:
Fire Destroys Pepperidge Road Home
(with photos)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Firefighters from five fire companies responded to an accidental house fire
which destroyed a contemporary home at 17-19 Pepperidge Road in Dodgingtown on
the afternoon of April 3.
Dodgingtown Fire Chief Greg White said Monday resident Jim York had been
melting some wax on the stove in his kitchen and then went outdoors.
Possibly as long as 90 minutes later, Mr York noticed smoke coming out of the
house and went back into it to check out the problem. He found a smoke-filled
house due to the fire, and then left quickly, said Deputy Fire Marshal Bill
Halstead, who investigated the fire. By the time Mr York discovered the blaze,
it was well underway, Mr Halstead said.
The wax, which had been melting on the stove, ignited and then spread to a
wall and the ceiling of the kitchen, Mr Halstead said. Mr York apparently had
forgotten that he had been melting wax on the stove, according to the deputy
fire marshal.
"The main floor was fully involved" in flames when firefighters arrived on the
scene, Chief White said.
There were no injuries in the blaze which caused about $330,000 in damage to
the house and its contents, Mr Halstead said. "The house is virtually
destroyed," he said, "a total loss."
Chief White said there hasn't been a fire in Dodgingtown that caused that much
damage in more than five years. Pepperidge Road is a side street off Birch
Hill Road.
"When we got there, all the doors were open," Chief White said.
Halstead theorizes the open doors allowed drafts to enter the building and fan
the flames, accelerating the fire's spread through the wood-frame house.
"It was stubborn. We had it under control in about 20 minutes," the chief
said, adding that it took about 90 minutes to extinguish the blaze.
The burning house didn't pose a fire threat to other houses in the
neighborhood, according to Mr Halstead.
Firefighters used water carried by tanker trucks to put out the fire.
There were no vehicles in the garage which is in the lower level of the York
house, Chief White said. The residence, which is built into a hillside, is
surrounded by a colorful garden filled with ornamental plants and sculpture.
The American Red Cross and Newtown Social Services were making living
arrangements for Mr York after the fire, Chief White said.
"Dodgingtown was there real quick," Mr Halstead said of the local fire
company's response to the blaze, which was reported at 1:36 pm. Dodgingtown
firefighters reportedly were in their Route 302 firehouse when the fire report
was received.
Besides Dodgingtown firefighters, firemen from Newtown Hook and Ladder,
Hawleyville, Sandy Hook, and Bethel went to the fire, as well as the Newtown
Volunteer Ambulance Corps. Southbury firefighters went to the Sandy Hook
firehouse to provide backup fire coverage.
"Everybody worked well. We worked with the other departments. Everybody teamed
up and did fine," Chief White said of the group effort to put out the house
fire. Firefighters spent more than three hours at the scene.
Mr Halstead said the house has been condemned and will be demolished. Mr York,
who is elderly, intends to live in a trailer on the site until a new house is
built there, Halstead said.