
An 80-year-old woman and several other terrified elderly residents were plucked to safety by hero firefighters battling a ferocious blaze that left dozens homeless in Brooklyn yesterday.
“Thank God I'm here,” said Carrie Agard, 80, after being rescued from her fiery, second-floor Crown Heights apartment building.
“I was scared, but [the firefighter] said he was with me, and he kept me calm. You couldn't see for all the black smoke. It was hard for me to breathe.
”I was glad he had me," added the shaken woman, a retired postal worker who had lived in the four-story apartment building at 1440 Pacific St. for five decades.
raging blaze in Brooklyn
Our FireFighters, Our Heros
An 80-year-old woman and several other terrified elderly residents were plucked to safety by hero firefighters battling a ferocious blaze that left dozens homeless in Brooklyn yesterday.
“Thank God I’m here,” said Carrie Agard, 80, after being rescued from her fiery, second-floor Crown Heights apartment building.
“I was scared, but [the firefighter] said he was with me, and he kept me calm. You couldn’t see for all the black smoke. It was hard for me to breathe.
”I was glad he had me,” added the shaken woman, a retired postal worker who had lived in the four-story apartment building at 1440 Pacific St. for five decades.
“He said, ‘Don’t worry — I’ll get you down,’ and he took me down the ladder.”
The blaze began at 4:38 a.m. on the second floor of the brick building and quickly spread up to the roof before it was brought under control at 8:08 a.m., an FDNY spokesman said. The cause remains under investigation, he said.
“I woke up. I heard what I thought was water. I opened the door to go downstairs, and there was fire everywhere,” said resident Ruth Dunk, 62.
“I pushed the door closed, and I locked it.”
A fireman on a ladder later rescued her.
Jeannette Cotten, 59, of North Carolina, who had been staying at her mother’s first-floor apartment in the building, said she was tending to her granddaughter Daja, who had had an asthma attack, when she smelled smoke.
“I went to the door and saw the smoke in the hallway, and there was fire all around the door, and it was hot,” Cotten said.
“I got everybody’s clothes on, and we went back to the fire escape. The firefighters got us out of there.”
Her mother, 81-year-old Annie Johnson, had lived in the building for 60 years. “She lost just about everything, except her life,” Cotten said.
“I’m blessed,” Johnson said, standing next to her daughter.
A shaken Lisa Stoves, 45, said, “We couldn’t find the window — it was that dark.
”I was very frightened. I panicked. I couldn’t breathe. All I wanted was a way out.“
She said a firefighter plucked her and her 20-year-old daughter from their third-floor window.
”I was in the [ladder truck’s] bucket, and I used it to take two people out of the third floor,“ said Kenny DiTata, 52, a 20-year FDNY veteran who was on a Ladder Co. 111 truck.
”They were shaken up. They were scared. But they held on.
“We had people . . . hanging out the windows trying to get out because of the smoke.
”It was a serious fire. It was going pretty good.”
Despite the early hour, all 54 people who lived in the building miraculously escaped into the frigid air, with only two needing hospitalization for smoke inhalation.
Seven of the 140 firefighters who fought the blaze were injured, two of them with serious burns.
chrup!
wow!
Wondering
What is it with Crown heights and fires? there is one every two days!!!
havemeyer
at the same time as this fire the brooklyn fdny dispatcher rcvd a telephone alarm box for smoke in an apartment on eastern p’kwy and alabany 2 ladders and 2 engines were dispatched i did not hera what happened after that.
huh?
where is pacific street?
impressed
webby: was this article written by you? like is it your words? well who ever it is this article is very well written