Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Longtime city deputy fire chief was 109

- By Janice Crompton Janice Crompton:jcrompton@post-gazette.

In September 1912, William Howard Taft was president.

Just five months earlier, the Titanic had sunk in the North Atlantic.

That year, th Homestead Grays profession­al baseball team was officially formed and a loaf of bread cost about a nickel.

Frederick A. “Fred” Steinkirch­ner was around for all of it.

A World War II veteran and longtime deputy chief of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire, Mr. Steinkirch­ner died April 16 after a series of cardiac problems.

At 109 years old, he was one of the 10 oldest men in America.

“My father was also the fourth-oldest veteran in the U.S.,” said his son Paul Steinkirch­ner, of Windermere, Fla., where his father also lived the last two years of his life in a retirement home.

Though he was physically a bit frail, his father still had much joie de vivre and even drove his own car until recently, Paul Steinkirch­ner said.

“He was fully alert until the last day of his life,” he said. “We talked every day and he managed his own stock portfolio. He had an iPad that he used every day and he Facetimed everyone. He was connected and very involved in life. And, he still had a valid driver’s license.”

Mr. Steinkirch­ner lived in Pittsburgh for more than a century, including his hometown of Lawrencevi­lle and the Westwood neighborho­od of the city, where he and his wife lived until her passing in 2018.

In a memoir he compiled for the Veterans Health Administra­tion in 2020, Mr. Steinkirch­ner recalled what life was like early in the 20th century.

“My mother was a homemaker and my father worked in a mill for Jones and Laughlin. That was one of the biggest steel mills in Pittsburgh at that time,” Mr. Steinkirch­ner wrote in his story. “I was about 5 or 6 years old when

my father got injured. It was very, very sad.”

“He got crushed somehow in a machine. He was sent to the hospital and it went downhill from there. In those days, they didn’t take care of you. There was nothing. He deteriorat­ed at St. Francis Hospital. He ended up in Mayview for 15 years before he died. That was very hard on the family. We didn’t have too much on account of my father being sick.”

He attended St. Augustine’s, a Roman Catholic school, and remembered sunny days spent playing baseball at Arsenal Park.

Mr. Steinkirch­ner, along with his older brother and younger sister, had to get a job to help make ends meet.

He began working as a typist at Johns-Manville, an asbestos company, taking orders then running them across the street to the plant.

By 1935, Mr. Steinkirch­ner decided to test for acceptance into the Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire. He passed and started as a fireman first class, but what would turn out to be a long and illustriou­s career as a firefighte­r was interrupte­d by World War II.

He was drafted into the Army in 1942 and sent to Camp Bowie in Texas to join the 647th Tank Destroyer Battalion.

Mr. Steinkirch­ner was loath to leave behind Agnes Zaborowski, his next-door neighbor and girlfriend. But, it wasn’t for long.

“When I was in Texas, I got lonesome and I called Agnes and she came down on the next bus and we got married by a captain,” he recalled. “We had a very

good marriage. Agnes died in 2018. We were married for 76 years — 76 years of a love affair.”

Shortly after the wedding, Mr. Steinkirch­ner’s unit was sent to Germany.

After heavy losses among other tank des t r o y e r outfits, Mr. Steinkirch­ner’s unit was dissolved and he served instead as a mechanic.

“My father was very mechanical­ly oriented,” his son said. “He ended up as a tank, artillery and motor mechanic. He was behind the lines in a support role.”

Mr. Steinkirch­ner came home in 1946 and resumed his career in the fire service, where he rose to the rank of battalion chief, then deputy chief.

Before he retired in the mid-1980s, Mr. Steinkirch­ner received a number of commendati­ons for his bravery and lifesaving actions, including once reviving a patient with a new-fangled procedure called cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion — CPR.

“My father was kind of a Renaissanc­e man. He learned CPR when it was on the forefront of developmen­t,” his son said. “He was called to a residentia­l fire and on the way in, one of the firefighte­rs said, ‘We’re going to get a body bag.’

There was a lady laying on the floor, not breathing, and my father said, “Have you tried CPR?’ and they said, ‘What’s CPR?’ So, he tried CPR on this lady and one of the police officer’s said, ‘This lady has a pulse!’ He was always very proud of that.”

A devout Catholic throughout his life, Mr. Steinkirch­ner often led religious retreats for his fellow firefighte­rs at St. Paul of the Cross Monastery in the South Side.

One of the things few people knew about his father was his weekly visits to Pittsburgh and Florida hospitals to help buoy the spirits of lonesome patients.

“For 35 to 40 years, every Sunday, he would take a stack of Pittsburgh Catholics and he would visit hospitals. He would offer patients a copy of the Pittsburgh Catholic or offer them a prayer,” his son said. “You’d be surprised how lonely people are in the hospital. In the last five years, he probably gave out 10,000 to 15,000 [religious medals] with pamphlets. He was a very humble man and he never took any credit for it. He always turned down interviews.”

He might have outlived his many friends, but Mr. Steinkirch­ner survived long enough to enjoy not only his five grandchild­ren, but his six greatgrand­children as well, his son said.

“My father lived a great life and he was a very happy man. His biggest problem was he lived longer than most of the people he knew,” he said.

In recent years, Mr. Steinkirch­ner became friends with John Henson, a funeral director at William. Slater II Funeral Service in Scott, where funeral services were celebrated last weekend.

Along with his son, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren, Mr. Steinkirch­ner is survived by his children Gail Miller, of Murrieta, Calif., Teresa Steinkirch­nerAnderso­n, of Pleasant Hill, Calif., and Michael Steinkirch­ner, of Conneaut Lake,Crawford County.

He was preceded in death by his siblings Joseph and Bette.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations can be made to EWTN Global Catholic Network, https:// www.ewtn.com/ or 5817 Old Leeds Road, Irondale, Alabama 35210.

 ?? ?? Fred Steinkirch­ner receiving a commendati­on from the city of Pittsburgh.
Fred Steinkirch­ner receiving a commendati­on from the city of Pittsburgh.
 ?? ?? Frederick “Fred” Steinkirch­ner
Frederick “Fred” Steinkirch­ner

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