Fire Buffs promote the general welfare of the fire and rescue service and protect its heritage and history. Famous Fire Buffs through the years include New York Fire Surgeon Harry Archer, Boston Pops Conductor Arthur Fiedler, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and - legend has it - President George Washington.


Tuesday, April 29, 2014

CARDINAL LANES - 1967

UPDATED AUGUST 2019



Memorial at Ridgefield Volunteer Fire Dept.

"It happened within an instant," firefighter Harry Dengler Jr. told the New York Daily News.

Five members of the Ridgefield Volunteer Fire Department, on a mutual aid run to Cliffside Park, died when a wall collapsed at the Cardinal Lanes bowling alley fire on Oct 15, 1967.

The Ridgefield firefighters were advancing a hose line when the truss roof gave way. 


Truss construction is notorious for sudden failure in fires, such as a North Jersey blaze two decades later that killed five Hackensack firefighters on July 1, 1988.

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BLAZE LEAVES 14 FATHERLESS


5 FIREMEN DIE IN N. J. AS BOWLING ALLEY WALL COLLAPSES.

Cliffside Park, N. J. (AP) -- The deaths of five firemen trapped by a collapsing wall leaves 14 children under the age of 21 fatherless. The Ridgefield volunteer firemen also are survived by five widows.

A fire department spokesman said $8,000 had been pledged to a fund for the survivors sponsored by the Hudson Dispatch, a Union City newspaper.

Bergen County authorities say they are investigating the possibility of arson in the fire Sunday at Cardinal Lanes bowling alley in this town just across the Hudson River from New York City. The Ridgefield Fire Department scheduled memorial services for Wednesday.

One civilian and 10 other firemen also were injured when the cinder-block wall collapsed as about 130 firemen from eight communities tried to control the fire in the one-story building.

The civilian and one fireman remained in a hospital today, but their conditions were not serious.

JOSEPH LICATA, a volunteer fireman from Palisades Park, said, "The trapped firemen were just about to enter the building. Then, all of a sudden, the whole place just went 'whoosh' and the flames traveled right down the building from front to back, blowing out the roof and a side wall."

The sole survivor of the hose crew, HENRY DENGLER, JR., 22, said he was at the end of the hose and farthest from the wall.

"We were pumping water through the door to spray the roof from inside," he said. "All of a sudden I saw a big gush of smoke backfire and come out of the building." DENGLER said he heard a "huffing noise" and yelled to the others to cut the hose and "get out of there." The next thing he knew, it seemed as if the whole building had collapsed and he was hurled 25 feet.

He helped dig the bodies out of the rubble.

The dead firemen, all from Ridgefield, were GUSTAVE GENSCHOW, 43, a tavern owner and 27-year veteran of the department; DOMINICK ACQUAFREDDA, 31, an employe of Lever Bros. in Edgewater; HARRY A. BROWN, 26, an employe of the New York Daily News; JAMES EDWARDS, 35, manager of a trading stamp store, and JAMES LAURIA, Ridgefield's building inspector.

'TORN AND SCALDED' - 1910

 
  

PATERSON LEFT DARK BY BOILER EXPLOSION

Nine Terribly Torn and Scalded in and Around Edison Electric Plant.

PANIC IN FOUR THEATERS

Cars Stop, Mill and Stores Had to Close--Street Lights Out--Elevators Stuck 'Twixt Floors

Special to The New York Times.

PATERSON, N. J., Jan. 21.-- The explosion of four of the six big boilers in the Edison Electric Light Works on the Passaic River here at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon left this city and Passaic without electric light or power for three hours. The sudden cutting off of the light caused panics in several theatres, and women were hurt in the rush that was made for the doors.

One man was hurt mortally and eight others were badly injured at the scene of the explosion. The man who will die is Emil Van Houden of 52 North Main Street. He was scalded by escaping steam.

The others injured are:
CLAXTON, ISAAC, 19 John Street, skull fractured; General Hospital.
GALIGIO, TONY, 342 River Road, right leg torn off and head lacerated; St. Joseph's hospital.
HILZMAN, GUSTAV, 29 Cross Street, burned, head and body lacerated; General Hospital.
MALONE, TONY, 31 Cross Street, head and body lacerated; St. Joseph's Hospital.
McGOWAN, GEORGE, 83 Vine Street, arm broken, face and head cut; General Hospital.
PALLER, GUSTAV, 208 Fifth Avenue, head lacerated; General Hospital.
PARKE, FRANCIS, 331 Grand Street, ribs fractured, head and body severely bruised; General Hospital.
TROEVER, GEORGE, 30 Dewey Avenue, arms and legs broken and head badly lacerated; General Hospital.

Claxton, Malone, Parke and Treover were employed in the Edison Company's works. Van Houden, worst injured of all, worked in the Geering Silk Dyeing Company, across the river from the scene of the explosion. He was stunned by flying débris and for half an hour lay senseless on the river bank receiving the full blast of escaping steam, which was shot across the river and almost parboiled him.

The other injured men worked in the dyehouse of Formanns, Stumpf & Sharpe, which adjoins the Edison works. They were at work in the yard and were buried under a mass of bricks and débris, which overwhelmed them when the heavy roof and part of the brick wall of the dyehouse were smashed in by the heavy pieces of iron--parts of the Edison boilers-- which were hurled through the air as though they had been so much light cardboard.

The Edison employes{sic} were at work in the boiler house and were knocked unconscious by the explosion. They lay under a heap of débris, amid clouds of escaping steam, when rescuers reached them. In the dyehouse adjoining the victims of the explosion also lay unconscious amid the steam, which shot from the broken pipes in the boiler house through the aperture in the wall and roof made by the flying bits of metal.

The explosion shook surrounding buildings with a force which caused many to believe for an instant that there had been an earthquake. The Edison plant is situated in the heart of the mill district, and operatives in various silk mills were almost put in a panic by the noise, especially as it was followed instantly by the putting out of all lights, which had been turned on in most places because of the darkness caused by the rain-filled air and the heavy clouds which obscured the sky. Confusion and panic followed the sudden darkness in many places, and operatives were pushed about and trampled upon before cooler heads could restore order.

In the business section of the city the cutting off of all power caused discomfort to many. Elevators which depended upon electricity for power stopped in the office buildings, in many instances coming to a halt between floors. Hundreds of men and women throughout the city were trapped thus, and many of them had to remain in their cramped quarters until the power was turned on again about 7:30 o'clock.

In the Lyceum Theatre the going out of the lights was followed by a series of sharp reports like explosions, caused by the sudden stoppage of the electric current. In an audience composed mostly of women, there was an instant panic.

Screaming women ran frantically for the exits and in the excitement and hurry many of them fainted. Other women trampled over them in their terror, thinking only of reaching the doors. Quick work by the ushers quelled the panic before it had become widespread, however, and the audience finally left the theatre in a fairly orderly manner. No one was hurt. In three other theatres the audiences were alarmed, but serious stampedes were prevented.

The shutting off of light in the big department stores and factories caused them to close an hour of more before their usual time. Street lights, too, could not be turned on, and the city was left in complete darkness for several hours.

The trolley service was brought to a standstill, cars coming to a halt wherever they happened to be and remaining there while the employes{sic} of the Edison Company were working to repair the damage and get auxiliary boilers working. The result was that thousands of commuters returned from Manhattan to find their city in darkness and themselves compelled to walk home through the rain.

The area affected by the explosion included not only this city and Passaic, but all of the suburbs which depended for light and power on the big plant here. Nowhere did the cars run or was there light.

At the scene of the explosion a field hospital was established in the grounds of the Edison works.

Man after man was carried out of the Edison plant or the dyeworks next door by the rescuers and laid on the ground to be worked over by the surgeons from the General and the St. Joseph's Hospitals until the overworked ambulances could get then to these institutions. All of the victims were brought out unconscious, and many of the rescuers, who included other Edison employes{sic} and men from the dyehouse, were scorched and scalded by the live steam which played over everything and threatened some of the men who were trapped under piles of brick and iron.

At the General Hospital it was said that Van Houden could scarcely live through the night. All of the other injured were burned and scaled{sic}, and some were seriously injured, but it was said that these would recover in time.