<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>THE FIREMAN</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>I</h2>
<h3>WHEREIN WE SEE A SLEEPING VILLAGE SWEPT BY A RIVER OF FIRE AND THE BURNING OF A FAMOUS HOTEL</h3>
<div class='cap'>I WILL first tell a story, fresh in my memory, about
a New Jersey village lost in the hills back of Lake
Hopatcong, a charming, sleepy little village that
reaches along a stream fringed with butterball-trees
and looks contentedly out of its valley up the steep
wooded hill that rises before it. Nobody in Glen Gardner
cares much what there is in the world beyond that
hill.</div>
<p>The general attitude of Glen Gardner toward progress
is shown well enough by this, that the village could
never see the use of a fire department. They never
had one, and never proposed to; other people's houses
might get on fire; theirs never did. As a matter of
fact, nobody could remember when there had been a
fire in Glen Gardner, unless it was Aunt Ann Fritts,
who was eighty-eight years old, and remembered back
farther than was necessary.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="tanks" id="tanks"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus49.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="341" alt="BURNING OIL-TANKS." title="" /> <span class="caption">BURNING OIL-TANKS.</span></div>
<p>This was the case on a certain drizzling Sunday
in March of the new-century year, when, at 6.30 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>,
the world beyond the hill intruded itself upon Glen
Gardner's peacefulness in such strange and sudden
fashion that old Mrs. Bergstresser collapsed from the
shock. What made it worse was the fact that there had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></SPAN></span>
been a dance the night before at Farmer Apgar's, and
half-past six found most of the village dozing comfortably.
There was really nothing to do before church-time.
So they all thought, at least, little suspecting
that even now, as they slept, a long oil-train was puffing
up the steep grade from Easton, bringing sixty
cars loaded with crude petroleum and trouble.</p>
<p>On came the oil-train, its front engine panting as
the drivers slipped, and the "pusher" back of the
caboose shouldering up the load with snorts of impatience.
Ouf! The front of the train climbs over the
ridge at Hampton Junction, half a mile back of Glen
Gardner, where the Jersey Central tracks reach their
highest point. Now they are all right. There is a
long down grade ahead for three miles. The pusher
gives a final shove at the rear end, and cuts loose, glad
to be rid of the job. The men in the caboose wave
good-by to the fireman and engineer as they drop
away.</p>
<p>Hello! What's that jerk? They look out and see
the last oil-car just clearing the divide. It's nothing;
they're over now; they're running faster. Queer
place, this! There's a spring here with two streams
that part in the middle like a woman's hair; one goes
down the east side, the other down the west side.
What? Broken in two?</p>
<p>The caboose crew start to run forward; a brakeman
on the front half starts to run back. Thirty-seven
cars behind the engine a coupling has snapped, and
the train is taking the down grade in two sections:
twenty-three loaded oil-cars are running away, and a
million gallons of oil are chasing two million gallons
down a mountain-side!</p>
<p>Everything now depends upon the brakeman on the
forward section. He is the only man who can judge<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></SPAN></span>
the danger, and signal the engineer what to do. The
engineer does not even know that anything is wrong.
It is plainly the brakeman's business to keep the front
half of the train out of the way of the rear half. They
must go faster, faster as the runaway cars gain on
them. Any one can see that it is undesirable to have
two million gallons of oil struck by a million gallons
coming at forty miles an hour.</p>
<p>Yet the brakeman does the wrong thing (no man
can be sure how he will act in imminent peril); the
brakeman signals the engineer to stop. Perhaps he
planned a gradual slow-up to block the flying section
gently; perhaps he did not realize how fast the runaway
was coming. Most likely he lost his head entirely,
as better men have done in less serious crises.
At any rate, the front section presently drew up with
grinding brakes on the ledge of track that stretches
along the cheek of the mountain just over the slope
where the slumbering village lay, not five feet from
Carling's warehouse, beyond which were the coal-yards
and the wooden houses of Glen Gardner, the
post-office, the hardware store, and the main street.
Of all places for that train to stop, this was the
worst.</p>
<div class="figleft"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus50.jpg" width-obs="357" height-obs="500" alt=""SNYDER, WHITE AS A GHOST, RACED AHEAD OF THE FIRE."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"SNYDER, WHITE AS A GHOST, RACED AHEAD OF THE FIRE."</span></div>
<p>It was a matter of seconds now until the crash came,
and on this followed a shattering blast that shook the
valley and hill, and brought the village to its feet in
a daze of fear. Four oil-cars were smashed in the
wreck and hurled across the tracks for the rear cars
to pile up on. And straightway there was a gushing
oil-well here, out of which in the first ten seconds came
an explosion with the noise of cannon, that showered
burning oil over fields and trees and shingled housetops,
while a fire column shot up fifty feet in the air
and began its fierce feeding on the broken tanks. And<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></SPAN></span>
out of this fire fountain came a smoking fire river, that
rolled down the hill toward the village.</p>
<p>At this moment, Joe Snyder, who had not gone to
the dance the night before, and was doomed now to
the early worm's fate, had just put his key in the door
of the butcher-shop. He never turned the key, nor
saw it again, nor saw the butcher-shop again. What
he did see was a roaring torrent of oil sweeping down
the street and blazing fifteen feet high as it came.
And the picture next presented when Snyder, white
as a ghost, raced down the sidewalk ahead of the fire,
will stay long in the memory of those who saw it from
their windows.</p>
<p>But this was no time for looking at pictures out of
windows; there were other things to be done, and
done quickly. Never did fire descend so swiftly upon
a village. Even as the startled sleepers stared in
fright, houses all about them burst into flames like
candles on a Christmas tree. Now the warehouse is
burning, and the sheds across the tracks; and there
goes the hardware store; and there goes the carpenter's
shop; and now the fire-stream rolls through Main
Street, and licks up the Reeves house on one corner
and Vliet's store on the other. Then the drug-store
goes, and Carling's store and Rinehart's restaurant.
Trees are burning, fences are burning, the very streets
are burning, and men see fire rolling across their front
yards like drifting snow.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus51.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="333" alt=""THE VERY STREETS ARE BURNING."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"THE VERY STREETS ARE BURNING."</span></div>
<p>I do not purpose to follow the incidents of this fire
and the several explosions, nor show how the village
fought against it vainly, damming up fiery oil-streams
and turning their courses, toiling at bucket-lines, and
spreading blistering walls with soaked carpets. The
point is that these efforts alone would never have
availed, and Glen Gardner would speedily have lain<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></SPAN></span>
in ashes, had not fire-engines from Sommerville and
Washington been hurried to the spot. And even as it
was, a section of the village was wiped away in clean-licked
ruins, which stood for many a day as a grim reminder
that the only safety against fires in these times
lies in being able to fight fires well.</p>
<p>Which brings me, of course, to the modern fire department
and the men who risk their lives as a matter
of daily routine to protect their fellow-men. I will
begin with some incidents of one particular fire that
happened in New York on St. Patrick's Day, 1899.
It was a pleasant afternoon, and Fifth Avenue was
crowded with people gathered to watch the parade.
A gayer, pleasanter scene it would have been hard to
find at three o'clock, or a sadder one at four.</p>
<p>The Ancient Order of Hibernians, coming along
with bands and banners, were nearing Forty-sixth
Street, when suddenly there sounded hoarse shouts and
the angry clang of fire-gongs, and down Forty-seventh
Street came Hook and Ladder 4 on a dead run,
and swung into Fifth Avenue straight at the pompous
Hibernians, who immediately became badly scared
Irishmen and took to their heels. But the big ladders
went no farther. They were needed here, oh, so badly
needed; for the Windsor Hotel was on fire—the famous
Windsor Hotel at Fifth Avenue and Forty-seventh
Street. It was on fire, far gone with fire before
ever the engines were called; and the reason was that
everybody supposed that of course <i>somebody</i> had sent
the alarm. And so they all watched the fire, and
waited for the engines, ten, fifteen minutes, and by that
time a great column of flame was roaring up the elevator-shaft,
and people on the roof, in their madness,
were jumping down to the street. Then some sane
citizen went to a fire-box and rang the call, and within<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></SPAN></span>
ninety seconds Engine 65 was on the ground. And
after her came Engines 54 and 21. But there was no
making up that lost fifteen minutes. The fire had
things in its teeth now, and three, four, five alarms
went out in quick succession. Twenty-three engines
had their streams on that fire in almost as many minutes.
And the big fire-tower came from Thirty-sixth
Street and Ninth Avenue, and six hook-and-ladder
companies came.</p>
<p>Let us watch Hook and Ladder 21 for a moment.
She was the mate of the fire-tower, and the rush of her
galloping horses was echoing up the avenue just as
Battalion Chief John Binns made out a woman in a
seventh-story window on the Forty-sixth Street side,
where the fire was raging fiercely. The woman was
holding a little dog in her arms, and it looked as if she
was going to jump. The chief waved her to stay
where she was, and, running toward 21 as she plunged
along, motioned toward Forty-sixth Street. Whereupon
the tiller-man at his back wheel did a pretty piece
of steering, and even as they swung the long truck
in the turn the crew began hoisting the big ladder.
Such a thing is never done, for the swaying of that
ten-ton mass might easily upset the truck; but every
second counted here, and they took the chance.</p>
<p>As they drew along the curb, Fireman McDermott
sprang up the slowly rising ladder, and two men came
behind with scaling-ladders, for they saw that the
main ladder would never reach the woman. Five
stories is what it did reach, and then McDermott,
standing on the top round, smashed one of the scaling-ladders
through a sixth-story window, and climbed on,
smashed the second scaling-ladder through a seventh-story
window, and five seconds later had the woman in
his arms.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus52.jpg" width-obs="246" height-obs="600" alt="USE OF THE SCALING LADDERS." title="" /> <span class="caption">USE OF THE SCALING LADDERS.</span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>To carry a woman down the front of a burning
building on scaling-ladders is a matter of regular routine
for a fireman, like jumping from a fourth story
down to a net, or making a bridge of his body. It is
part of the business. But to have one foot in the air
reaching for the lower rung of a swaying, flimsy thing,
and to feel another rung break under you and your
struggling burden, and to fall two feet and catch
safely, that is a thing not every fireman could do; but
McDermott did it, and he brought the woman unharmed
to the ground—and the dog, too.</p>
<p>Almost at the same moment, the crowd on Forty-seventh
Street thrilled in admiration of a rescue feat
even more perilous. On the roof, screaming in terror,
was Kate Flannigan, a servant, swaying over the
cornice, on the point of throwing herself down. Then
out of a top-floor window crept a little fireman, and
stood on the fire-escape, gasping for air. Then he
reached in and dragged out an unconscious woman
and lowered her to others, and was just starting down
himself when yells from the street made him look up,
and he saw Kate Flannigan. She was ten feet above
him, and he had no means of reaching her.</p>
<p>The crowd watched anxiously, and saw the little
fireman lean back over the fire-escape, saw him motion
and shout something to the woman. And then she
crept over the cornice edge, hung by her hands for a
second, and dropped into the fireman's arms. It isn't
every big strong man who could catch a sizable woman
in a fall like that and hold her, but this stripling did
it, because he had the nerve and knew how. And that
made another life saved.</p>
<p>By this time flames were breaking out of every
story from street to roof. It seemed impossible to go
on with the rescue work; yet the men persisted, even<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></SPAN></span>
on the Fifth Avenue front, bare of fire-escapes. They
used the long extension ladders as far as they could,
and then "scaled it" from window to window. Here
it was that William Clark of Hook and Ladder 7 made
the rescues that gave him the Bennett medal—took
three women out of seventh-story windows when it
was like climbing over furnace mouths to get there.
And one of these women he reached only by working
his way along narrow stone ledges for three windows,
and back the same way to his ladder with the woman
on his shoulders. Even so it is likely he would have
failed in this last effort had not Edward Ford come
part way along the ledges to meet and help him.</p>
<p>Meantime Fireman Kennedy of Engine 23 had rescued
an old lady from the sixth floor; and Joseph
Kratchovil of Hook and Ladder 2 had carried out
Mrs. Leland, wife of the proprietor, from deadly peril
on the fifth floor; and Frank Tissier of Hook and Ladder
4 had found a family named Wells—father,
mother, and daughter—in a blazing room, and borne
them out, with his own clothes burning, to the arms of
Brennan and Sweeney, who were waiting for him in
a fury of fire at the top of the eighty-five-foot extension
ladder.</p>
<p>And Andrew Fitzgerald, also of Hook and Ladder
4, but off on sick-leave with pneumonia, had shown
the true fireman spirit as he came from the doctors.
His instructions were to go home and stay there. He
was not on duty at all. He was scarcely strong enough
to be out of bed, but when he heard that there were
lives in peril down the avenue he forgot everything,
and ran to the place of danger. There was need of
him here, and, sick-leave or not, pneumonia or not, he
would do what he could. What he did was to carry
out the last ones taken alive from the ill-fated hotel—three<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></SPAN></span>
women whom he bore in his arms from the fourth
floor through roaring hallways, then up a fire-escape,
then back into the building, with the flames singeing
him, and a shattering blast of exploding gas pursuing
him, and finally out on a balcony whence, with the
help of Policeman Harrigan, he got them over safely
to an adjoining housetop. No wonder the Bonner
medal was awarded him later for conspicuous courage.</p>
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