New York Daily News

They haven’t forgotten

Descendant­s honor 3 Bravest killed by train a century ago

- BY THOMAS TRACY

Three city firefighte­rs killed in a devastatin­g Long Island Rail Road crash a century ago were remembered Sunday during a special plaque dedication at a Queens firehouse.

The firefighte­rs’ descendant­s, including great-grandchild­ren and great-great-grandchild­ren, were on hand to witness the ceremony at Engine 285/ Ladder 142 in Ozone Park.

“I just think it’s wonderful,” Jim Griffin, 84, said about the plaque dedication although he now lives in Florida and was unable to join other relatives for the ceremony.

“I just hope it raises the awareness of the difficult circumstan­ces these firefighte­rs work under and the brotherhoo­d that exists between them.”

Griffin’s grandfathe­r, Lt. James Griffin, and Firefighte­rs John Dunne and Michael Hanley were on their way to a fire during a snowstorm on Feb. 6, 1923, when their hook-and-ladder truck got stuck on the tracks, trapped between two falling railway gates, at Atlantic Ave. and Rockaway Blvd. at the border of Ozone Park and Woodhaven.

Seconds later an oncoming LIRR train slammed into the truck. The impact was so severe that Dunne, 36, was found dead three blocks away from the train tracks, the Daily News reported.

Hanley, who was driving the truck, died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital. Lt. Griffin died the next day, suffering from burns after contact with the third rail. Two other firefighte­rs in the truck also suffered serious injuries.

Prosecutor­s charged an LIRR policeman and the “gateman” who operated the gates that trapped the fire truck with criminally negligent homicide.

“A dense curtain of swirling snowflakes that obscured traffic” was partially responsibl­e for the crash, The News reported. Details of the case against the two LIRR employees could not be immediatel­y accessed by the Queens district attorney’s office, a spokeswoma­n said.

The crash spurred a push by legislator­s to remove street railroad crossings in Brooklyn and Queens. Many fatal accidents occurred at railroad crossings at the time.

After his death, Lt. Griffin’s 16-yearold twin sons, Arthur and Gerald, had to drop out of Richmond Hill High School and support their family. Arthur Griffin became an FDNY firefighte­r and retired a battalion chief.

In the Queens home where Jim Griffin grew up, a picture of Lt. Griffin hung in the hallway, the grandson said. But Arthur Griffin never spoke about his father’s death.

“He was in his uniform and he had a big black mustache,” Jim Griffin said, recalling his fallen grandfathe­r’s photo. “He was a very good-looking guy.”

Lt. Griffin was the patriarch of a large Irish-American family. Many of his descendant­s became city cops, firefighte­rs and other municipal employees, Jim Griffin said.

Erin Silvetti, the great-granddaugh­ter of Firefighte­r Dunne, didn’t know much about the century-old crash until Brian Fitzgerald, Jim Griffin’s nephew, reached out to her and her mother about the ceremony.

“I thought he was some kind of salesperso­n,” Silvetti, 44, said. “Then he asked if I had a family member who was in a fire truck that got hit by a train and I thought, if this was a phishing scam, it was one of the most intricate phishing scams ever. It blew me away.”

Word of the ceremony inspired Silvetti to learn more about her great-grandfathe­r and his death.

“It happened at an intersecti­on I drove near all the time,” she said. “My mom and I started talking about it, and she was really overwhelme­d by emotion. She didn’t know her grandfathe­r, but she felt close to him because he was the person who made her dad the kind and gentle spirit he was. She was really touched that there were people out there who are connected to us in this way.”

 ?? ?? From far left, fire Lt. James Griffin and Firefighte­rs John Dunne and Michael Hanley were killed by an LIRR train on Feb. 6, 1923. On Sunday, the grandchild­ren of Griffin — (below, from left) Michele Lapointe, Alfred Fries and Geraldine Griffin — attend a plaque dedication at a firehouse in Ozone Park, Queens.
From far left, fire Lt. James Griffin and Firefighte­rs John Dunne and Michael Hanley were killed by an LIRR train on Feb. 6, 1923. On Sunday, the grandchild­ren of Griffin — (below, from left) Michele Lapointe, Alfred Fries and Geraldine Griffin — attend a plaque dedication at a firehouse in Ozone Park, Queens.

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