San Diego Union-Tribune

FIRE RIPS THROUGH HOME; 12 KILLED

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Fire tore through a duplex home early Wednesday in Philadelph­ia, killing 12 people, including eight children, fire officials said. At least two people were sent to hospitals, and officials warned the toll could grow as firefighte­rs searched the brick rowhome, where 26 people had been staying.

The four smoke alarms in the building, which was public housing, do not appear to have been working, fire officials said. The blaze’s cause was not determined, but officials shaken by the death toll — apparently the highest in a single fire in the city in at least a century — vowed to get to the bottom of it.

“I knew some of those kids — I used to see them playing on the corner,” said Dannie McGuire, 34, fighting back tears as she and Martin Burgert, 35, stood in the doorway of a home around the corner.

“I can’t picture how more people couldn’t get out — jumping out a window,” she said.

Officials did not release the names or ages of those killed in the blaze, which started before 6:30 a.m. As many as eight residents appear to have been able to escape the fire.

Family members on Facebook have identified two of the victims as sisters Rosalee McDonald, 33, and Virginia Thomas, 30. The siblings each had multiple children but it’s unclear if all of them were home at the time of the fire or how many of them died. Messages were left with several people who said they knew or were related to the victims.

Fire officials had initially said 13 people died in the fire, seven of them children, but totals were updated Wednesday evening. Eight children and four adults were found dead, officials said.

The fire burned in a residentia­l area of the Fairmount neighborho­od, northwest of downtown and home to the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art and its famous steps from the film “Rocky.”

The alarms had been inspected annually, and at least two had been replaced in 2020, with batteries replaced in the others at that time, Philadelph­ia Housing Authority officials said, adding that the last inspection was in May 2021. Smoke detectors were working at that time, officials said.

Streets around the scene of the fire remained blocked off Wednesday evening. Moments after the last firetruck pulled away from the front of the house, several neighbors quietly approached the foot of the block and left candles and flowers.

Officials held a news conference earlier in the day, near the fire scene.

“It was terrible. I’ve been around for 35 years now and this is probably one of the worst fires I have ever been to,“said Craig Murphy, first deputy fire commission­er.

“Losing so many kids is just devastatin­g,” said Mayor Jim Kenney. “Keep these babies in your prayers.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE AP ?? People gather to pay their respects after a deadly rowhouse fire Wednesday in the Fairmount neighborho­od of Philadelph­ia. An early-morning blaze erupted, killing eight children and four adults.
MATT ROURKE AP People gather to pay their respects after a deadly rowhouse fire Wednesday in the Fairmount neighborho­od of Philadelph­ia. An early-morning blaze erupted, killing eight children and four adults.

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