- Joined
- Jan 15, 2025
- Messages
- 33
There is an old saying "no one saves a church with an advanced fire upon arrival" Sadly this is true in this case once again. Tower Ladders and Outside High Caliber Streams all too often are our only hope of control. Aiming a Tower Ladder stream into the round "Rose Window" often saves the exterior walls and helps control fire spread. An unmanned Blitz Monitor placed at the main entrance of the church can sweep the ceiling of the "Nave" = Main Body of the Church (Where the people sit) can sometime control some of the fire spread. The Nave which resembles the upside-down Hull of a wooden ship, "Nave comes from the same word root as Navy" is often very tall, covered with heavy plaster so interior fire operating in the nave are dangerous. The Collums are often hollow tubes allowing fire to travel to the upper part of the church. The Bell in the Bell Tower is very heavy and will crush anything including firefighters it it falls. The light fixtures/candlers are also very heavy and a real danger to firefighters during an interior attack on an advanced fire. Many older traditional Churches are built in the shape of a CROSS and have a heavy Timber Church Truss Roof and are often interconnected &/or surrounded by other buildings. Monitored Alarm Systems and better yet fully sprinkler systems can stop the fire from becoming advanced before Fire Dept. arrival. I wrote an W.N.W.F. Article in the early 1980 called "Unholy Smoke" on a major fire in the Episcopal Church pf the Holy Apostils and other church fires. Let us in the fire service be the ones in our church or synagogue or other place of worship be the one to advocates for fire safety before the fire starts. Captain Bob Rainey FDNY Engine 26 retired.








