FDNY FF HAROLD J. HOEY TL 17 LODD 6/14/1974 (W/"REPORT FROM L 17" - D. SMITH)

mack

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FDNY Line of Duty Death



June 13, 1974 - LODD
Firefighter Harold J. Hoey Jr., 34
Ladder 17
FDNY. Bronx, New York


L 17 Hoey LODD.jpg


Firefighter Hoey died shortly after midnight as a result of massive injuries sustained in a six-story fall two hours earlier. He had been catapulted from the bucket of a tower ladder after it became snagged on a roof coping as he attempted to rescue people trapped on the roof at a tenement fire.


RIP. Never forget.
 

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FF ALFRED BOLD FIREHOUSE EXPLOSION:​


New York Times Archives​

14 Are Hurt, 2 Seriously, In Queens Firehouse Blast​


By Lawrence Van Gelder
  • May 15, 1974

An explosion, rumbling out of the cellar of a crowded Queens firehouse as the day and night shifts changed, enveloped two firemen in flames yesterday and sent a dozen others reeling and pitching about the renovated 71. year‐old building.

The blast, believed to have been caused by vapor from a basement tank freshly filled with more than 200 gallons of gasoline, touched off a dramatic battle to save the lives of the two men most seriously injured.

With the exception of fireman Alfred Bold, who was rushed by Coast Guard helicopter from Jamaica Hospital, where he was first taken, to the burn, unit at Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx, and of Lieut. Walter Mischke, who was sped to Jacobi Hospital in a specially equipped medical van, the firemen reported injured in the explosion were treated at Jamaica Hospital and released.

Mayor Beame and Fire Commissioner John T. O'Hagan rushed to Jamaica Hospital after having been informed of the blast.

When the explosion jolted the two‐story brick building at 101.02 Jamaica Avenue in the Richmond Hill section, “a fireman's helmet came rolling out,” said Rocco Guarrici, an attendant at a nearby gasoline station. “And then I saw a fireman who seemed to be engulfed in flames. Two other men came out and rolled him on the ground to put the flames out.”

Wall Tiles Buckled
In the kitchen at the rear of the firehouse, erected in 1913, renovated in 1971 and housing Engine Company 294, Tower Ladder 143 and the 51st Battalion, flaming gasoline reddened the floors and tiles buckled from the walls before the eves of fireman Ted Schmitt.

Of the firemen officially listed as injured, six were burned, one suffered smoke inhalation, and the others reported injuries to the head, neck, shoulder, chest arm or back.

The effects of the explosion were confined to the firehouse, and some firemen expressed the belief that the force of the explosion had been lessened because the doors were opened and because of the presence of a basement‐to‐roof vent in which hoses are dried.

Commissioner O'Hagan, who had just finished meeting with Mayor Beame at the Fire Department's headquarters, 110 Church Street, when he received the initial report of the blast, said it seemed the explosion had been “in association with a gasoline delivery, and possibly caused by leaking gas or vapors.”

An immediate investigation was undertaken by the Fire Department's borough commander and the fire marshal's office, but no determination of the cause was expected for few days.

Yesterday's explosion and fire occurred at 9:07 A.M., and the situation was reported under control at 10:02.
O'Hagan in Communication

According to aides, when the gravity of the situation became clear, Commissioner O'Hagan began hurrying toward Queens by automobile, receiving continuing reports from the scene by radio telephone.

En route, he requested that Dr. John Stein, the head of the special burn unit at the Abrkham Jacobi Hospital of the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, be notified and put in touch with medical officers on emergency duty at Jamaica Hospital. The Commissioner finally concluded that fireman Bold, 39 years old, a former policeman appointed to the Fire Department 10 years ago, should be removed to Jacobi, where greater expertise was available.

He requested Coast Guard assistance, and a helicopter landed on the Van Wyck Expressway, carried away the fireman, and landed again on the lawn of Jacobi Hospital.

Lieutenant Mischke, 59 years old, a former state trooper who joined the department in 1941, made the journey from Queens to the Bronx in a vehicle called a Mervan, in effect an emergency room on wheels operated by the Emergency Medical Services Division of the city's Health and Hospitals Corporation.

Both men were in critical condition, Lieutenant Mischke with second‐ and third‐degree burns covering 45 per cent of his body and Fireman Bold with second‐ and third‐degree burns on 75 per cent of his body.


 

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New York Times Archives​

LAST TRIBUTE PAID TO FIREMAN HOEY​


By Irving Spiegel Special to The New York Times
  • June 16, 1974


KINGS PARK, L. I., June 15 —New York City's Fire Department paid its final tribute today to Fireman Harold J. Hoey Jr., who died in the line of duty while trying to save two elderly persons from a burning fivestory tenement in the South Bronx.

Only little more than a week ago at New York's City Hall, Fireman Hoey had been decorated by Mayor Beame for having saved two lives.
The 34‐year‐old fireman had lived here with his wife, Doris, and three sons, Thomas, 12; David, 5, and Christopher, 3. He had worshipped at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church at 59 Church Street, where a solemn high requiem mass was offered by the Rev. Francis P. McCormack, pastor of the church.

One Thousand Firemen

One thousand blue‐coated firemen headed by Mayor Beame and high‐ranking officers of the Fire Department walked with measured steps to the church from the town firehouse, where the body had laid in state.

Flanking the coffin were members of Ladder Company 17, Fireman Hoey's company, which is at 341 East 143d Street in the South Bronx.
One of his colleagues, Fireman Ronald Sederio, who also was a close friend, shook his head and remarked:

“If God could produce couple of thousand more guys like Harold it would be a better world.”

Fireman Sederio and another close friend, Fireman Francis Duffy, also a member of the same company, recalled that only a little more than a week ago that Fireman Hoey had cooked five turkeys in the kitchen of the firehouse and had taken them to a dinner he had organized for the senior citizens' club at the Mott Haven Community Center.

Hours before the service began at noon, New York's firemen had arrived in buses and had gathered in front of the local firehouse on Main Street two blocks away from the church to pay final respects to Mr. Hoey who was in a coffin, covered by an American flag. Many openly wept.

From Brooklyn came Mr. and Mrs. Alfonse Bold, who are the parents of Fireman Alfred Bold, who had been critically burned in an explosion at the Richmond Hill, Queens, firehouse on May 14. A few minutes after Fireman Hoey died, his wife had given permission for her husband's skin to be used as a graft for Fireman Bold.

“What is there to say,” Mrs. Bold said, “We felt we had to come to pay tribute to a brave man.”

Fire Department officials here said that Mr. Bold's condition was improving. He is a patient at the burn center at Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx.

In his brief eulogy, Father McCormack said:

“Death is always a mystery —and it is deepened when a man with so much courage and love is taken from us. We really believe this is not the end of the courageous, loving man's life but the beginning of his eternal life.”


 

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New York Times Archives​

City Fireman Who Cared Aids An Injured Co‐Worker in Death​


By Laurie Johnston
  • June 14, 1974


A week ago today, three days after Fireman Harold J. Hoey Jr. was decorated by the Mayor for saving two lives, he cooked five turkeys in Ladder Company 17's South Bronx fire. house and took them to a dinner he had organized for the senior citizens' club at Mott Haven Community Center.

Wednesday night, the 34‐year‐old fireman was killed in a fall from a 75‐foot ladder while trying to rescue two elderly persons from the roof of a burning building.

The injured fire fighter, taken first to Lincoln Hospital, was moved to more specialized facilities but was dead on arrival at Jacobi Hospital.

Yesterday, in the hospital's burn unit, skin was taken from the dead fireman for a graft for a fireman woh was critically burned in the explosion that rocked the Richmond Hill, Queens, firehouse on May 14.


“Helping people out was his thing—he couldn't do enough for anybody in the neighborhood and he even took the kids fishing,” said Fireman William Cottrell who had worked with Mr. Hoey ever since he entered the Fire Department in 1968 and came to the firehouse on East 143d Street.

A former welder, Mr. Hoey received his bachelor's degree.

Mr. Hoey was a native of Oyster Bay, L.I., and lived in Kings Park, LI., with his wife, Doris, who was reported under sedation there yesterday, and their three sons, Thomas, 12, David, 5, and Christopher, 3.

Dr. John Stein, surgeon in charge of the Jacobi Hospital burn unit, said that Mrs. Hoey had readily assented to the skin graft — a temporary “homograft.” He said she asserted “that's the way he would want it.”

Before the late‐evening fire that brought death to Mr. Hoey, which was in a five‐story building at 412 East 148th Street, youths reportedly were seen on the fourth floor pouring liquid from a plastic bottle. The Fire Department was also investigating the whiplash action of the ladder that threw Mr. Hoey from its bucket.

 

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Continued Rest in Peace Firefighter Hoey. Comfort for your families at home and in the South Bronx.
 
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Nice post and tribute Mack. May God continue to watch over his family I remember the the 5-5-5-5 going out on that one. Tragic. It was a horrible year for 17 Truck. 4
Months later would lose Fr Williams and Fr Linnenball who died together when the ground ladder they were manipulating came in contact with the caternary wires in the Penn Central rail line while fighting a commercial fire.
 

mack

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Nice post and tribute Mack. May God continue to watch over his family I remember the the 5-5-5-5 going out on that one. Tragic. It was a horrible year for 17 Truck. 4
Months later would lose Fr Williams and Fr Linnenball who died together when the ground ladder they were manipulating came in contact with the caternary wires in the Penn Central rail line while fighting a commercial fire.

Every LODD deserves a remembrance, but unfortunately there is often not much to find as the years and decades pass. Everyone who serves and risks their life protecting others has a unique story - especially those who lose their lives performing their duty. It is fitting that there are now sites and memorials to honor and remember heroes, who sadly are quickly forgotten by the public. It is important that we never forget.
 

mack

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Nice post and tribute Mack. May God continue to watch over his family I remember the the 5-5-5-5 going out on that one. Tragic. It was a horrible year for 17 Truck. 4
Months later would lose Fr Williams and Fr Linnenball who died together when the ground ladder they were manipulating came in contact with the caternary wires in the Penn Central rail line while fighting a commercial fire.

New York Times Archives​

High‐Voltage Line Kills Two Firemen After Bronx Blaze​


By Robert Mcg. Thomas Jr.
  • Oct. 30, 1974

Two firemen were electrocuted last night when an aluminum ladder they were maneuvering brushed an 11,000‐volt power line at a Bronx freight yard where they had helped extinguish a three‐alarm warehouse blaze.

The firemen, who were apparently killed instantly, were identified as Russell T. Linneball, 23 years old, of 40‐15 Vernon Boulevard, Long Island City, Queens; and Johnnie Williams, 40, of 414 Morris Avenue, the Bronx.

They were the fifth and sixth members of the department killed in the line of duty this year. Both were attached to Ladder Company 17‐2. The unit was one of the first to respond to the fire, which broke out just before 5 P.M. at a warehouse at the Penn Central's Harlem River Yard, beneath the Bronx end of the Willis Avenue Bridge.

According to officials, the accident occurred at 9:20 P.M., more than two hours after the fire was declared under control.

The firemen had reportedly just lifted the 35‐foot portable extension ladder away from the two‐story warehouse when it touched the yard's power line that run along the front of the 1,500‐foot warehouse.

Both were pronounced dead at Lincoln Hospital.

Power in the overhead lines had been shut off during the fire, but was turned back on a few minutes after the blaze was declared under control, according to a department spokesman. He said it was normal procedure to restore power to lines in the vicinity of a department operation once the blaze had been extinguished.

At the quarters of Ladder Company 17‐2 at Willis Avenue and East 143d Street, Fireman Linneball, a bachelor who had joined the department this year, was praised by his captain as an aggressive and dedicated firefighter who had already received his fire science degree.

Fireman Williams, who was married and had two children, was described in similar language as one of the better members of the company, which has a high standing in the department.

 
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FDNY Line of Duty Death



June 13, 1974 - LODD
Firefighter Harold J. Hoey Jr., 34
Ladder 17
FDNY. Bronx, New York


View attachment 20399


Firefighter Hoey died shortly after midnight as a result of massive injuries sustained in a six-story fall two hours earlier. He had been catapulted from the bucket of a tower ladder after it became snagged on a roof coping as he attempted to rescue people trapped on the roof at a tenement fire.


RIP. Never forget.
Dreadful 😔
 
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My late friend Marty Lacey was working in 60 Engine that night.

On January 25, 2009 two members of the Kilgore, Texas Fire Department were killed when they were thrown from the bucket of a 95 foot E-One aerial platform. They were training on the brand new rig when it got hung up of the roof of an eight story college dormitory.
 

mack

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My late friend Marty Lacey was working in 60 Engine that night.

On January 25, 2009 two members of the Kilgore, Texas Fire Department were killed when they were thrown from the bucket of a 95 foot E-One aerial platform. They were training on the brand new rig when it got hung up of the roof of an eight story college dormitory.
1655788698076.png

 
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