FDNY VANDALIA AVE FIRE 3 LODDs LT JOSEPH CAVALIERI FF JAMES BOHAN FF CHRISTOPHER BOPP L 170 12/18/1998

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FDNY Line of Duty Deaths


December 18, 1998 - 3 FDNY Firefighters Killed

On arrival, firefighters were notified of an apartment fire, with people trapped on the tenth floor of an occupied ten-story brick senior citizens building. The members of Ladder 170 raced to the top floor via the stairs. Where they proceeded to enter along narrow hallway leading to the apartment. Suddenly, the fire blew out the windows of the apartment and a 25mph gust of wind fanned the intense flames. This caused a massive fireball to roll out of the open apartment door and engulf the men in the hallway as they searched for trapped occupants. The members of the company were burned, and three who bore the brunt of the fireball, went into full arrest almost immediately. Other firefighters, hearing their "Mayday" over the department radio, were able to knock down the fire and rescue their trapped brothers. There were rushed to various area hospitals, where they all died shortly thereafter. Five other firefighters and four civilians were also injured in the three-alarm fire. The next day a controversy arose over why the sprinklers system had been turned off in the building.

Joseph P. Cavalieri, Lieutenant, Age 42

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• Appointed to FDNY Dec. 12, 1983
• Appointed Lieutenant Feb. 24, 1996; assigned to Battalion 39, working in Ladder 170



James F. Bohan, Firefighter, Age 25

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• Appointed to FDNY July 14, 1996
• Assigned to Ladder 170 Oct. 3, 1998


Christopher M. Bopp, Firefighter, Age 27

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• Appointed to FDNY Oct. 15, 1995
• Assigned to Ladder 170


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3 Firefighters Die Trying to Rescue a Woman in Brooklyn (Remembering the Vandalia Ave Fire-1998)​

December 19, 2017


Lt. Joseph Cavalieri – Age 42 – Ladder 170 – 15-year veteran
F/F James Bohan – Age 25 – Ladder 170 – 2-year veteran
F/F Christopher Bopp – Age 27 – Ladder 170 – 3-year veteran
At 0454 hours, on December 18, 1998 Brooklyn transmitted box 4080 for a top floor fire at 17
Vandalia Avenue.

The 10 story 50 x 200 fireproof building is used as a senior citizen’s residence. By the time companies arrived the fire already could be seen blowing through two windows. 2nd and 3rd alarms were quickly transmitted.

As the 1st due ladder company, L170’s defined task is to search the fire floor. Lieutenant Joseph Cavalieri, and Firefighters Christopher Bopp and James Bohan ascended 10 flights of stairs with extinguishers and forcible entry tools. Their mission was to rescue the resident of apartment 10-D who was believed trapped inside.

Fortunately for the elderly resident she escaped shortly before the forcible entry team arrived. Unfortunately for them, she left the apartment door wide open. The additional air from the hallway fed the inferno within and blew out the windows. The halls were equipped with sprinklers but they were deactivated.

As the Lieutenant and Firefighters arrived at the door, a sudden change in the wind direction forced an estimated 30 MPH wind gust into the apartment, and a 2,000 degree fireball into the hallway. The 3 men only had enough time to get a Mayday transmitted. The high heat asphyxiated them and burned their masks off. Despite the best efforts of the members (fire and EMS) all 3 were pronounced at the hospital. Also injured in the fire were 6 other fire fighters and 4 residents.

The cause of the fire was careless smoking.

This fire was a turning point in the way the fire service as a whole looks at wind driven fires.

 

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Three Fire Fighters Die in a 10-Story High-Rise Apartment Building - New York



fflogoniosh78.jpgDeath in the Line of Duty…A summary of a NIOSH fire fighter fatality investigation​

F99-01 Date Released: August 2, 1999

SUMMARY​

On December 18, 1998, several fire companies and fire fighters responded at 0454 hours to a reported fire on the tenth floor of a 10-story high-rise apartment building for the elderly. The fire had been burning for 20 to 30 minutes before it was called in because the resident attempted to put the fire out with small pans of water. As the fire fighters approached the building from the rear, an orange glow was observed in the window of Apartment 10D. As the fire fighters were arriving in front of the high-rise, a call was received from Central Dispatch that a female resident in the apartment next door to the fire apartment was trapped in her apartment and needed help. Several fire fighters entered the lobby area, and some took the stairs to the ninth floor, while others took the elevator to the ninth floor. A Lieutenant and two fire fighters on Ladder 170 (the victims), along with the Lieutenant on Engine 290, took the B-stairs from the ninth floor to the tenth floor, and entered the hallway, in search of the fire, while 4 fire fighters on Engine 290 were flaking out the hose line on the ninth floor and in the stairwell between the ninth and tenth floor in preparation for hookup. During this same time period, other fire fighters had gone to the tenth floor A-stairwell landing to attempt a hose line hookup to the standpipe in the landing. Engine Company 257 fire fighters, who were attempting to make a hook-up on the fire floor landing, experienced trouble with the heat, heavy smoke, and heavy insulation on the standpipe and were forced to abandon this hook-up. The Lieutenant on Engine 290 and the victims, who were on the B-side, were approaching the center smoke doors (see diagram), when the Lieutenant radioed his driver on the outside, and asked, “Where is the fire?” The driver radioed back, the fire is in the rear, towards exposure 4. The Lieutenant on Engine 290 then left the tenth floor, descended the stairs to the ninth floor and helped his men drag the hose to the A-stairwell, where they met up with fire fighters on Engine 257, who assisted them in stretching their line and hook-up on the ninth floor. The victims proceeded through the center smoke doors in search of the fire. From the information obtained during this investigation, it is believed the victims found the fire apartment, with the door partially opened, allowing smoke and hot gases to enter the hallway. They then opened the door fully, the wind pushed the fire and extreme heat in the apartment into the hallway, and a flashover occurred, exposing the victims to extreme radiant heat that potentially elevated their body core temperature. The last radio transmission from the victims was a Mayday call. When the victims were found, all were unresponsive, they were treated at the scene and taken to the hospital where they were pronounced dead by the attending physician. NOTE: This building had sprinklers in the hallways, lobby, and basement, however, the valves on the first floor were closed, which shut off the water for the upper floors. NIOSH investigators concluded that to minimize similar occurrences, municipalities, city housing authorities, and building owners should:
  • ensure that buildings equipped with sprinkler systems are operational
  • consider early warning systems for timely notification of fire
NIOSH investigators also concluded that to minimize similar occurrences, fire departments should:
  • ensure communications on the fireground are utilized and recorded, especially between fire fighters in IDLH situations and Incident Command
  • ensure standpipe hookup is on the floor below the fire floor.

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INTRODUCTION​

On December 18, 1998, several fire fighters were involved in conducting an interior attack in a 10-story, Class 1, masonry high-rise for the elderly, when three fire fighters (the victims) on the tenth floor, who were trying to locate the fire, were subjected to extreme radiant heat from a flashover in the hallway in the vicinity of the fire apartment. A Lieutenant (Victim #1) and 2 fire fighters (Victims #2 and #3) from Ladder 170 had entered the tenth floor hallway from the B-stairwell (see diagram) and were proceeding down the hall, through the fire doors in an attempt to locate the fire, which was in Apartment 10D. Since all three fire fighters died and there were no witnesses, it is believed they located the fire apartment (10D) and when they opened the door, the apartment was fully involved in a flashover condition, subjecting all three fire fighters to an intensity of radiant heat that potentially elevated their body core temperature. During the time the victims were searching for the fire, the fire had vented itself out the apartment window, allowing the wind, 15 mph, gusting to 26 mph, to escalate the fire in the apartment. NOTE: Although this apartment building is owned and inspected by the city housing authority, has sprinklers in the hallways, basement, and lobby, and the yearly inspections conducted by the city indicate the system to be operative, the valves to the upper floors where concealed in the ceiling of the first floor hallway and had been shut off.

On January 13-15, 1999, and March 24, 1999, an investigation of this incident was conducted by the NIOSH Senior Fire Fighter Investigator and two Safety and Occupational Health Specialists. An opening conference was conducted with the Safety Operating Battalion, the Chief of Safety, the Occupational Safety and Health Coordinator, and the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) Uniformed Officers and fire fighter representatives. Interviews were conducted with the Battalion Chiefs who responded to the incident, several fire fighters that responded to the incident, and representatives (officers and fire fighters) of the IAFF. A site visit was conducted and photographs were taken of the fire apartment and the exterior of the building. Copies of photographs from the incident site were obtained from the fire department along with diagrams of the building. Diagrams and pictures used in this report were provided by the fire department.

The fire department involved in the incident serves a population of 7.9 million in a geographic area of 306 square miles. The fire department has 230 firehouses and is comprised of approximately 15,000 employees, including 11,000 fire fighters and officers, 3,000 emergency medical service (EMS personnel), and 1,000 civilians. The fire department provides all new fire fighters with a basic 13 weeks of training at their fire academy that meets or exceeds the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Fire Fighter Level I and Level II. After graduating from the fire academy, the recruit fire fighters go through a 3-year rotation in which they are assigned to an A (high activity level), B (moderate activity level), or C (light activity level) firehouse for 1 year. They are then rotated to a different activity and geographic location for the second year and rotated again for the third year. Refresher training continues on each shift and multi-unit drills are conducted continually to maintain hands-on proficiency. The fire department has extensive written standard operating procedures. The Lieutenant (Victim #1) had 14 years of fire fighting experience, and the fire fighters (Victims #2 and #3) had 6 years and 3 years of fire fighting experience respectively.

Although many fire companies were involved in this four-alarm incident, only those directly involved up to the time of the fatal incident are discussed in this report.

INVESTIGATION​

On December 18, 1998, at 0454 hours, a call came into Central Dispatch from a resident in Apartment 10G in a 10-story high-rise apartment building, stating she smelled smoke and observed fire in the apartment across the hall. The fire was also called in by the security guard for the apartment complex.

Responding to the first alarm at 0455 hours: Engine 257 (Lieutenant and four fire fighters), Engine 290 (Lieutenant and five fire fighters), Engine 283 (Lieutenant and five fire fighters), Ladder 170 (Lieutenant and five fire fighters [Lieutenant and two fire fighters were victims]), Ladder 103 (Captain and five fire fighters), Rescue 2 (Lieutenant and five fire fighters), and Battalion Chief (BC) 58 with aide, and Squad 252 (Captain and five fire fighters).

At 0458 hours, BC 58 and Engine 290 were approaching the apartment building from exposure 3 (rear of the building), and observed an orange glow in the window of an apartment on the tenth floor. At approximately the same time, Ladder 170, Engine 257, and Ladder 103 took positions on exposure 1 (front of the building). At approximately 0458 hours, a female in Apartment 10E called Central Dispatch and stated she was trapped in her apartment and needed help. Central Dispatch notified Ladder Company 103 and Ladder Company 170 that a woman was trapped in Apartment 10E. Both Companies acknowledged this transmission from the Dispatcher.

The Captain and two fire fighters on Ladder 103 were responding to the report that a woman was trapped in Apartment 10E. They took the A-stairwell to the tenth floor, which is the closest stairs to Apartment 10E. The Captain and one of the fire fighters on Ladder 103 removed the resident from Apartment 10E, and carried her with the assistance of the driver on Ladder 170, to the ninth floor.

At 0501 hours, BC 58 entered the lobby and saw Engine 257 fire fighters waiting for the elevator. He then took the A-stairs to the ninth floor and entered apartment 9D, looked out the window and saw the fire had vented out of the tenth floor window above. During this time, Engine 257 crew had taken the elevator to the ninth floor and proceeded down the hallway and took the A-stairs to the tenth floor, whereby they attempted to hook-up their 2 ½ inch line to the standpipe on the tenth floor stairwell landing. However, the fire fighters were having trouble hooking-up the line because of the insulation on the standpipe. The Lieutenant on Engine 257 opened the door to the tenth floor hallway and intense heat forced the fire fighters at the standpipe to abandon further hook-up efforts at this standpipe.

At 0502 hours, the driver on Ladder 170 had entered the lobby and took the A-stairs to the tenth floor where he met the Roof Man from Ladder 103. They descended down the stairs to the ninth floor and crossed over to the B-stairwell, went up the B-stairs to open the roof access door. The Roof Man on Ladder 103 decided to try the roof access from the B-stairwell. He then proceeded to the B-stairwell (driver of Ladder 170 is no longer with him) and found the roof access door open, and the Ladder 170 Roof Man was already on the roof. Both fire fighters were having trouble on the roof because of the gusting 26 mile-per-hour winds.

During this same time period, the Lieutenant and 2 fire fighters (victims) from Ladder 170 entered the lobby with the Lieutenant, nozzleman, and controlman from Engine 290 and took the elevator to the ninth floor. Two fire fighters from Engine 290 took the B-stairway (see diagram) to the ninth floor where they met up with their Lieutenant and the victims. The victims along with the Lieutenant from Engine 290 took the B-stairs to the tenth floor, whereby, they entered the hallway on the tenth floor and observed only a light haze, and no fire. The four fire fighters from Engine 290 remained on the ninth floor, B-side landing, were flaking-out three, 50-foot lengths of 2 ½-inch hose lines in preparation for hooking up to the ninth floor standpipe outlet. At 0503 hours, the Lieutenant on Engine 290 radioed the driver of Engine 290 from the tenth floor B-side hallway, and asked, “Where is the fire?” The driver radioed back, “The fire is in the rear, towards exposure 4.” The Lieutenant on Engine 290 relayed this information to Victim #1 who was near the center smoke doors attempting to locate the fire. The Lieutenant on Engine 290 then left the tenth floor, went down the B-stairs to the ninth floor, and along with four of the fire fighters from Engine 290, pulled the hose line to the A-stairwell to hook up and advance the line to the tenth floor.

After assisting the fire fighters on Ladder 103 carry the woman to the ninth floor, the driver on Ladder 170 proceeded down the hall toward the B-stairwell. On his way, he radioed his Lieutenant (Victim #1) who was attempting to find the fire on the tenth floor and asked if everything was alright. The Lieutenant radioed back, “We are having trouble with the door.” The driver of Ladder 170 then proceeded to the B-stairwell where he met the Captain from Squad 252 and fire fighters from Rescue 2.

Engine 257 fire fighters were on the tenth floor, A-stairwell, attempting to make a hookup, which was not successful because of the insulation on the standpipe, difficulty with the valve, lack of a control wheel, and the high heat and heavy smoke pushing from the public hallway. Engine 290 had connected on the ninth floor, A-stairwell. The Lieutenant on 257 requested assistance from Engine 290 at the door on the tenth floor stairwell. Fire fighters on Engine 257 and Engine 290 with a charged line, opened the door to the tenth floor hallway and were driven back by intense heat.
At 0511 hours, the Lieutenant on Engine 290 heard a Mayday over his radio. BC 58 did not hear the first Mayday. BC 58 heard the second Mayday, but could not determine the location, and was told the Mayday came from the Ladder 170 Can Man (Victim #2) and he responded to the Mayday, but received no acknowledgment.
At 0512 hours, BC 58 ordered Engine 283 to pull a line from the eighth floor to the tenth floor in the A-stairwell. Fire fighters on Engine 283 pulled a line from the eighth floor standpipe to the tenth floor stairwell landing.
At 0513 hours, on a third attempt, fire fighters from Engines 290, 257, and 283, with two charged lines (2 1/2-inch and 1 3/4-inch), in full open position, entered the tenth floor A-hallway door, and moving very slowly because of the extreme heat and zero visibility, proceeded towards the fire apartment, 10D (approximately 40 feet inside the stairwell door). Fire fighters on Engines 290 and 283 were running low on air and were replaced by fire fighters on Rescue 2. As they were approaching the fire apartment, they observed flames leaping out across the hall. The Lieutenant on Rescue 2 heard a Personal Alert Safety System (PASS) alarm sounding beyond the fire apartment (all PASS devices used by this fire department are integrated with the self-contained breathing apparatus [SCBA], i.e, when a fire fighter turns on his air, the PASS device is activated) He went to investigate, and within 20 feet from the fire apartment found Victim #1 (Lieutenant on Ladder Company 170) down and unresponsive. The Lieutenant on Rescue 2 discovered Victim #1 at 0528 hours, moved him toward the A-stairwell, left him, went for help, and completed the removal toward the B-stairway.

At 0518 hours, the Captain on Squad 252 and a fire fighter on Rescue 2 were proceeding down the tenth floor hallway, from the B-side towards the fire doors, when they opened the doors (see diagram) and found a helmet just inside the doors, then they found Victim #3 (first victim to be removed from the tenth floor), who was unresponsive. Victim #3 was removed from the tenth floor and taken to the ninth floor where he was given CPR and then transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead by the attending physician.
At 0525 hours, Victim #2 was found unresponsive by the driver of Ladder 175 and a fire fighter on Ladder 103. Victim #2 was removed to the ninth floor at 0529 hours, where he was worked by EMS and then transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead by the attending physician.

At approximately 0530 hours, BC 58 had gone to the roof to check rescue lines that were being laid and check conditions, i.e., civilians or fire fighters hanging out of windows, position of lines, and fire and wind conditions. BC 58 stated flames were coming up over the roof and were being blown across in a horizontal pattern by the strong gusting winds.

Victim #1 was the last to be removed from the tenth floor. He was taken to the ninth floor where he was worked by the EMS and transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead by the attending physician.

NOTE: From all the interviews conducted, the fire fighters who found Victims #2 and #3 cannot recall hearing the alarms of the PASS devices. The PASS alarm was heard on Victim #1, the Lieutenant on Ladder 170. All three PASS devices were tested by the fire department and found to be functioning.

CAUSE OF DEATH​

According to the medical examiner, the preliminary cause of death listed for all three fire fighters was smoke inhalation and burns.

RECOMMENDATIONS/DISCUSSION​

Recommendation #1: Municipalities, city housing authorities, and building owners should ensure that buildings equipped with sprinkler systems are operational. [1-4]
Discussion: This 10-story apartment building for the elderly was equipped with sprinklers in the hallways, basement, and lobby. The sprinkler system was inspected annually, however, without proper drawings for the system, it would be difficult to determine the location of piping and shut off valves. Although the system was inspected annually, it was never disclosed or discovered that there were shut-off valves concealed in the ceiling of the first floor hallway. It was apparent from the concealment, the valves had not been inspected in some time, since they were shut off, thereby, shutting off the water to all the upper floors.

Recommendation #2: Municipalities, city housing authorities, and building owners should consider early warning systems for timely notification of fire. [5, 6]
Discussion: It is important that an early detection system for a timely notification of fire be implemented, especially in high-rise apartment buildings to decrease the potential for loss of life and property. This fire had been burning for approximately 30 minutes before it was called into Central Dispatch. If this fire had been detected in the early stages, the fire department may have been able to extinguish the fire before it had escalated.

Recommendation #3: Fire departments should ensure communications on the fireground are utilized and recorded, especially between fire fighters in IDLH situations and Incident Command.
Discussion: Communications on the fireground are essential and provide the vital link between the fire fighters on the interior and Incident Command. Command receives communications from different sectors, i.e., fire fighters on the roof, exterior exposure reports, interior operations, location and any escalation of the fire, etc., and must make risk assessment decisions on a continual flow of information. When attempting to establish a time-line on the fireground, it would be beneficial to have communications recorded with an auto-time line to determine exactly what and when specific events occurred.[7]

Recommendation #4: Fire departments should ensure that the standpipe hookup is on the floor below the fire. [2]
It is recommended that when fire fighters are fighting a fire in high-rise buildings, they make connection to the standpipe on the floor below the fire floor. Although there were specific problems with the insulation on the standpipe, tenth floor, A-stairwell, the fire fighter also encountered problems due to the intense heat and smoke that was introduced in the stairwell every time the stairwell door was open.

INVESTIGATOR INFORMATION​

This investigation was conducted by the following: Ted. A. Pettit, Senior Fire Fighter Investigator, Frank Washenitz and Kimberly Cortez, Safety and Occupational Health Specialist, NIOSH, Division of Safety Research.

REFERENCES​

1. National Fire Protection Association [1996]. NFPA 13: Standard for the installation of sprinkler systems. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
2. International Fire Service Training Association [1995]. Essentials of fire fighting 3rd ed. Stillwater, OK: Fire Protection Publications, Oklahoma State University.
3. National Fire Protection Association [1997]. NFPA: Fire protection handbook, 18 ed. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
4. National Fire Protection Association [1998]. NFPA 25: Standard for inspection, testing, and maintenance of water-based fire protection systems. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
5. National Fire Protection Association [1996]. NFPA 72: National fire alarm code. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
6. National Fire Protection Association [1997]. NFPA 101: Code for safety to life from fire in buildings and structures. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
7. Brunacini A. [1985] Fire command. Quincy, MA: National Fire Protection Association.

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New York Times

Grieving Comrades and Families Bury 2 Young Firefighters


By Jim Yardley and Barbara Stewart
Dec. 22, 1998


With thousands of their comrades bearing grim witness, two young New York City firefighters were eulogized and buried yesterday, each hailed as a hero lost too soon to the grave, each mourned by a grieving family only four days before Christmas.

The gray skies never lifted on a raw day that began in Middle Village, Queens, with the funeral of James F. Bohan, and ended in Midwood, Brooklyn, with the funeral of Christopher M. Bopp. For the blue-coated firefighters who rode chartered buses from Queens in the morning to Brooklyn in the afternoon, there is one more funeral to come: Lieut. Joseph P. Cavalieri is to be buried today in Malverne, N.Y.

''Just one in one day is tough,'' said John Ioveno, a 29-year veteran of Ladder Company 160 in Bayside, Queens, stunned at the thought of three firefighters dead in the line of duty.

The three members of Ladder Company 170 in Brooklyn died Friday, engulfed by a fireball as they tried to save a 67-year-old woman who had dropped a cigarette and sparked a three-alarm fire on the top floor of her Brooklyn apartment building. The deaths prompted a swift investigation after fire officials discovered that the sprinkler system in the building had been turned off and the fireproof door to the woman's apartment had been tampered with.

But the investigation and its unanswered questions were muted yesterday as families and friends, grieving at the loss of men young enough to be called ''kids'' by fire house veterans, groped for different kinds of answers.

John Bopp stood inside Our Lady Help of Christians Roman Catholic Church in Midwood, his voice trembling, as he remembered his 27-year-old ''little brother'' as someone who had graduated from high school, then college, married his grade-school sweetheart and, finally, joined the Fire Department that he loved.

''Christopher was an angel and God wanted him back up there,'' Mr. Bopp said as several people in the church began to sob.

Mr. Bopp told a congregation that included Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen and other city officials how he and Christopher had discussed how they would eventually care for their parents as they grew older. Now, Mr. Bopp pledged to help care for his dead brother's unborn child; Christopher Bopp's widow, Cori, is expecting the couple's first child in July.

''I promise him today that I will,'' Mr. Bopp told the congregation as his tearful sister-in-law looked on from the first pew.

Earlier in the day in Middle Village, firefighters converged by the thousands, stretching for nearly a mile down 80th Street in the middle-class Queens neighborhood, coming from as far as Houston and Toronto and as near as down the street for Mr. Bohan's funeral. Crisp in dress navies and polished badges, they gathered in front of St. Margaret's Roman Catholic Church, some 8,000 or 10,000, packing the roads for the surrounding 15 blocks.

Mr. Bohan, 25, was the youngest of the three men who died. He had lived with his parents, John and Margaret Bohan, who work as a telephone company technician and a school board secretary, respectively. They live in a modest brick house in Middle Village that is a five-minute walk from the church where his funeral Mass was celebrated yesterday morning. He had been a New York firefighter for almost three years.

''That was what he wanted to be his whole life,'' Maurice Bohan, his brother, said in a telephone interview. ''That was always his goal. When he passed the test, he was ecstatic. He loved being a firefighter.''

Mr. Bohan had started in Engine Company 262 in Astoria, but had been temporarily assigned to Ladder Company 170 in Brooklyn when he was killed. ''He reignited my passion for firefighting,'' said Capt. Jack Corcoran of Rescue Company 4 in Queens, who was Mr. Bohan's mentor in the Fire Department.

''He loved it, he had a passion for it,'' he added.

Raw, gray and chilly as the morning was, the firefighters filled it with color and stately pageantry, beginning with bagpipers in kilts playing ''Amazing Grace'' and concluding with taps and a formation of helicopters overhead. Street by street, firefighters standing at attention snapped white-gloved salutes as the fire engine carrying the coffin drove slowly by.

''I know he would have loved the bagpipes,'' Maurice Bohan said. Their parents, he said, were from Ireland, and had taken the boys for many visits to their numerous relatives and to Irish music concerts. ''He was proud of being Irish.''

By all accounts, Mr. Bohan, sunny and mellow, loved to go snowboarding upstate and watch Jets games and just talk with neighborhood friends he had known most of his life. The other firefighters called him Curly, because of his buzz haircut.

''Curly never had a bad thing to say about anybody or anything -- unless the Jets lost,'' said Dean Nelligan, a firefighter at 262. ''He was never in a bad mood or irritated -- unless the Jets lost.''

Christopher Bopp never needed a nickname. Tony Lombardo, 37, laughed with tears in his eyes as he described how ''bop,'' coincidentally, is what veterans call rookie firefighters. But despite a name that made him an easy target for teasing, Christopher Bopp only smiled at the jokes, Mr. Lombardo said.

''Always had a smile on his face, this kid,'' said Mr. Lombardo, who was Mr. Bopp's ''big brother,'' or mentor, at Ladder Company 170.
Mr. Bopp was a four-year veteran of the Fire Department and a former city police officer. ''He was one of those guys who wanted to give, give, give,'' Mr. Lombardo said.
The full circle of Mr. Bopp's life was traced in Midwood, where his parents still live and where he and his wife lived only a few blocks from the church. His brother talked of how he loved to play ice hockey, and a cousin laughingly told of how Christopher, as the youngest, was always the one ''in prison'' when the kids played cops and robbers or cowboys and Indians or even, he joked, Monopoly.

Commissioner Von Essen told the congregation how Christopher ''reveled in his home and his family'' and he, too, pledged that the Fire Department would help support the Bopps' child. He promised that firefighters would one day tell the child how its father was a hero.

Mayor Giuliani, calling the deaths a ''terrible loss for the city,'' beseeched the Bopp family to find some solace during the holidays in the brave actions of their son. ''There are people alive today because of Chris's courage and the other two brave firefighters who died,'' the Mayor said.

And then, as Mr. Bohan's was a few hours earlier, Mr. Bopp's coffin was carried out of the church on the shoulders of firefighters. Members of the family trailing the coffin began to weep, then sob. The slow wail of the bagpipes began as did the tremble of the drums. The lines of firefighters snapped to attention, the bugler played taps and the helicopters, a formation of four, droned overhead.

Then the fire truck carrying the coffin started, and the slow trip to the cemetery began.

A woman, walking by with flowers and a bag of groceries, said to no one in particular, ''It's the saddest thing I've ever seen.''


 

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Official Website of the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation


Marine Park​

Firefighter Christopher Bopp Triangle​


What was here before?

This site was once in the pathway of Gerritsen Creek, a freshwater creek that used to extend inland twice as far as it does today and would have passed by this site. Around 1920, the portion of the creek that lay north of Avenue U was converted into an underground storm drain. Though it is no longer visible, it still supplies the marsh with freshwater from further inland.

How did this site become a triangle?

The City of New York purchased land for purposes of a public park, including for this parcel, in 1924. New land purchases increased the park’s area to 1822 acres by 1937 and that year, the Board of Aldermen named the site “Brooklyn Marine Park.”

Who is this triangle named for?

This site was dedicated to FDNY Firefighter Christopher Michael Bopp (1971-1998) in 2001 during a ceremony where a Red Bud tree was planted in his memory. Born in Queens, Bopp moved to Marine Park, Brooklyn as a child on nearby 31st Street. He attended Xaverian High School where he played ice hockey. He would later play hockey for Fire Company 170.

Bopp attended The College of Staten Island and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in English. In 1993, he became a police officer with the NYPD where he served for three years in the 61st Precinct. In 1995, he married his wife Cori and joined FDNY Ladder Company 170 in Canarsie, Brooklyn. He then went on to Engine 24 in Manhattan and finally Engine 224 in Brooklyn. After his last rotation in October 1998, Bopp returned to Ladder Company 170.

On December 18, 1998, Firefighter Bopp and two fellow firefighters lost their lives during a fire at the Vandalia Senior Housing complex while trying to rescue a resident who had already escaped from the burning building. The two other men who died were Firefighter James Bohan and Lieutenant Joseph Cavalieri. Firefighter Bohan is honored with the James Bohan Memorial Hockey Rink in Queens’ Juniper Valley Park. A vest pocket park honors the memory of Lieutenant Cavalieri in his hometown of Malverne, Long Island, where three trees were planted in memory of the three heroic firefighters. Firefighter Bopp was posthumously awarded the Medal of Supreme Sacrifice and the Medal of Valor.

 
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2023 VANDALIA AVE REMEMBRANCE MASS.....

25th ANNIVERSARY OF THE VANDALIA AVENUE FIRE MASS
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 1000 hours, E-257, L-170 and B-58 will host a Memorial Mass commemorating the 25th Anniversary of the Vandalia Avenue fire. The mass will take place at Shrine Church of Saint Jude located at 1677 Canarsie Road, Brooklyn, NY. The Mass will honor the memory of the following members who died in the line of duty: Lt. Joseph Cavalieri, FF James Bohan and FF Christopher Bopp. All off- duty members and their families are invited to attend. Members are requested to attend in dress uniform.
 
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May 28, 2020
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As a Fire Marshal that worked that day, our tour started at 0500 hours, I was in the kitchen in the base in Fort Totten, when a gust of wind hit some time between 5-6 AM. It was more severe than I was normally accustomed to. After the 4 5's were transmitted my Squad was ordered to the morgue in the City to safe guard the bodies and also while they were being transported to the Funeral home. The F.H was located in Ronkonkoma and were escorted by Queens PD, then by Nassau PD., and then by Suffolk PD. We rode the HOV lane that was still under construction at that time. In the early days of interchange around 1974, 170, was the first Co. we swapped with. So this tragedy had a pretty big impact on me.
 
Joined
Nov 2, 2022
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God Bless Those Who Serve; and Those Who Mourn.

Continued Rest In Peace for these Members of 'Canarsie's Bravest'.
 
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