7/1/70 LODD

Joined
Jun 27, 2017
Messages
1,180
Stanley Schultz Captain Engine Company 42 Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire Killed in a flashover searching the top floor of a six alarm factory fire off East Ohio Street in the pre-dawn hours while his company was stretching a line. Buffing my last fire in the Steel City. Not Forgotten! Rest In Peace.
 
Joined
Feb 27, 2010
Messages
1,246
Entropychaser, what do you mean buffing your last Steel City fire? You moving? Giving up the chase?
 
Joined
Jun 27, 2017
Messages
1,180
I gotta laugh...It happened a half a century ago. At the time, I'd just finished college and was doing a temp job as a research engineer....and headed out of town. I used to ride with 25 Engine out of their 1896 firehouse at Penn Avenue and 34th St. Everybody in the house (with 25 Truck) was a WWII vet ( except for Jack Faas who also did time in Korea). It was a slow area in the Lawrenceville-Upper Strip District,., although when I started there, the truck (1947 Seagrave tiller) had just gotten back from the shops after having the pain burned off at a 4 alarm paint factory fire. The stories were endless (Oh yeah, I made the Wabash RR Terminal fire in1946). A lot of guys walked to work and not infrequently knew the family who lived at the box address. On that night, my guys were working. I woke up when the fire alarm office hit the 5th. I grabbed the Liberty Avenue bus . When we got to West Penn Hospital, i could see across the river. Absolutely spectacular daybreak...this 5 story factory looks like a Roman candle. I get off the bus at 31st St bridge and run across the Allegheny River. When I get there 25 truck is setting up their ladder pipe just as they are taking Captain Schultz's body out. Speechless..Unexpected. I found 25 Engine..Jack Faas gave me his turnout gear and went up to the roof of a setback and helped with the 21/2. Later, I found out the factory was a bakery making ice cream cones....and was moving to another location in the morning! Worse, earlier in the night, Captain Schultz's mother-in-law had passed away and his guys had told him to go home. Nah...I'm here....RIP!
 
Joined
Jun 27, 2017
Messages
1,180
Tempus Fugit

Psholtz, a member on this site, has provided necessary corrections to my post of this thread a year ago. I thank him. First, the correct spelling is Stanley Sholtz (the newspaper wrong, but the 1970 Pittsburgh Firefighters Yearbook correct). Secondly, it was his father-in-law, not his mother-in-law who passed away the night before (how could firehouse scuttlebutt be inaccurate?).

Regardless, Captain Stanley Sholtz of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire died in the line duty early on a beautiful morning fifty-one summers ago. Reside in peace.
 
Top