12-20-81 LODD L80 FF Makes Rescue - Dies - Dad FF L86 Responded to Same Fire

mack

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Firefighter died at SI fire following rescue - father firefighter worked at same fire:

FIREFIGHTER SAVES A MAN, THEN COLLAPSES AND DIES  By SHAWN G. KENNEDY December 20, 1981

"A 36-year-old Staten Island fireman who had received three commendations for valor suffered a fatal heart attack yesterday shortly after rescuing a young man from an early morning blaze.

The fireman, Dennis Michael Peterson of Ladder Company 80, was stricken while fighting the blaze alongside his father, Daniel Peterson, a fireman with Ladder Company 83.

Fireman Peterson was the first New York City firefighter this year to lose his life in the line of duty. The last city fireman to die while fighting a fire was Battalion Chief Frank Tutlemondo, who pushed a fellow fireman, Lieut. Michael Ramos, away from a collapsing wall during a Brooklyn fire in August 1980.

Witness Describes Blaze

The fire yesterday - in a two-story building at 176 Van Pelt Avenue in Mariner's Harbor, S.I. - broke out about 1:30 A.M. Members of Ladder Company 80 arrived to find the first and second floors in the small, two-family house ablaze.

''The first time I looked out my window I saw that the front door was in flames,'' said Irene Rudolph, who lives across the street from the frame house. ''The next time I looked, a few minutes later, the entire building was on fire. I don't know how the firemen got in there.''

Firefighters could not enter the building through the front door but Fahmy Saad, a resident of the building who was able to escape with his wife and the couple who lived on the first floor, told the firemen that his two sons were still trapped in the second-floor apartment.

The firefighters went to the back of the building and Fireman Peterson, who was the first man up the ladder, was able to bring one son, 22-year-old Mountier Saad, out.

Meanwhile, members of Ladder Company 86, which also responded to the alarm, rescued Mr. Saad's other son, 9-year-old Maher. The fire was brought under control just after 2 A.M. Fireman Peterson had returned to the building to assist in the cleanup operation when he began gasping for air. He struggled to a window and the company's chief, Lieut. George Harrison, grabbed him to keep him from falling.

Lieutenant Harrison gave him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and heart massage, but the fireman lost consciousness. He was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital on Staten Island, where he died at about 3:30 A.M.

Victim Flown to Manhattan

''We knew that someone else had been hurt or died when none of the firemen left even though the fire had been put out,'' Mrs. Rudolph said. ''It was cold but they just stayed. Finally we saw them back one of the engines up to the house and they brought the hurt fireman down.''

Maher Saad was taken first to St. Vincent's Hospital and then transported to New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center by a Coast Guard helicopter that landed in Central Park early this morning. Mountier Saad was taken to Staten Island Hospital and later transferred to the same Manhattan hospital. Both victims are listed in critical condition with severe burns.

The most recent of the three decorations received by Fireman Peterson, a 13-year member of the force, came last July for his assistance in foiling a robbery at a Staten Island bank. While stopped at a traffic light he noticed a man leaving a Chase Manhattan Bank branch on Forrest Avenue carrying what turned out to be a decoy money satchel trailing red smoke.

Mr. Peterson left his automobile and chased the suspect, who was able to jump into a waiting car. The police were able to find the suspects after the fireman gave them the license number of the vehicle.

In July 1979, Mr. Peterson rescued two children caught between two high-tension wires. In June 1971 he used mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in a futile effort to save a 73-year-old woman who had suffered a heart attack.

Mr. Peterson began his career with the department with Engine Company 279 in Brooklyn. In March 1980 he joined Ladder Company 80. Mr. Peterson's brother, John, is a firefighter with Ladder Company 105 in Brooklyn.

The fireman, who lived at 3 Stebbins Avenue in New West Brighton, S.I., is survived by his wife, Gail, and two daughters, Laura, 11, and Denise, 9.

A funeral mass will be offered at 11 A.M. Tuesday at Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church, at 981 Castleton Avenue in New West Brighton. Burial will follow at St. Peter's Cemetery."
NY Times
 

mack

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Medal Day 1982:


On what Fire Commissioner Charles J. Hynes called the most important day of the department's calendar, the heroic acts of 43 firefighters were commemorated yesterday in an awards ceremony.

The ceremony was conducted at the Battle of the Atlantic Monument in Battery Park, where the names of the war dead are inscribed on enormous tablets.

Acknowledging the heroism of those soldiers and sailors, Mayor Koch concluded that ''there are no more courageous human beings on the face of the earth than New York City firefighters.''

Hundreds of firefighters, who attended in dress uniform, reserved their greatest applause for the moment when the family of the late Dennis M. Peterson came to the platform to accept the posthumously awarded Thomas E. Crimmins Medal

Fireman Peterson, of Ladder Company 80 on Staten Island, collapsed and died last Dec. 19 after rescuing a man and a child from a fire at 176 Van Pelt Avenue, in Mariner's Harbor.

http://www.nytimes.com/1982/06/03/nyregion/the-city-city-pays-honor-to-43-firefighters.html
 
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mack

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Box 7-5-962  Mariners Harbor




FF Dennis Peterson L 80 - 1st due truck

FF Daniel Peterson L 83 (his father) - all hands truck


 
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