The Columbus Dispatch

Man dies in house without smoke alarm

- By Beth Burger bburger@dispatch.com @bybethburg­er

FATAL FIRE

Michael E. Gwinn Sr. was known by residents of his Eastmoor neighborho­od for how well he kept up his property in the 100 block of South Weyant Avenue.

They said Gwinn, 54, took pride in his white frame house and his lush green lawn. He recently repaved the driveway.

But Gwinn didn’t have smoke detectors in the house, where fire broke out early Friday. Firefighte­rs say Gwinn probably awoke in bed to heavy smoke and collapsed while trying to escape.

Firefighte­rs were dispatched at 1:45 a.m. and arrived two minutes later. Gwinn was pulled out of the house and taken to Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead at 3 a.m. The fire was contained at 2:33 a.m.

Raymond Henry, 58, knew Gwinn for decades. Henry, who moved to another part of the city, stood in front of the charred house later Friday, expressing shock.

“He was the patriarch of the neighborho­od,” Henry said of Gwinn.

The patio table and chairs where Henry had attended Gwinn’s cookouts in years past were covered in soot and yellow tape.

“He was the kind of guy who would help you cut the grass,” Henry said.

Linda Tran, 26, got home from work at a convenienc­e store early Friday and watched the scene unfold from her house across the street. She said she watched firefighte­rs take Gwinn out of the residence and try to revive him.

Gwinn often crossed the street to offer help with her family’s garden or to give advice, Tran said.

“He was always very friendly. He had a good heart,” she said.

Gwinn knew tragedy in his life, too, Dispatch archives show.

Seven years ago, Gwinn’s son, Michael Jr., shot and killed his young wife and then turned the gun on himself. Gwinn believed his son was traumatize­d after serving in Iraq with the Army National Guard. After Michael Jr.’s death, Gwinn carried a key chain with his son’s picture and the words “my soul wherever he goes.”

The cause of the fire was unclear Friday, and the investigat­ion is expected to take a few days.

This is the ninth death caused by fire in Columbus this year, pending confirmati­on from the coroner’s office. The city had 11 fire deaths in all of 2016.

Columbus fire has a hotline for anyone who needs a smoke alarm. Firefighte­rs will install alarms in homes at no cost. For more informatio­n, call 614-724-0935.

 ?? [FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH] ?? Michael E. Gwinn Sr. is believed to have awakened and been overcome by heavy smoke in his burning house in the 100 block of South Weyant Avenue in the Eastmoor neighborho­od.
[FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH] Michael E. Gwinn Sr. is believed to have awakened and been overcome by heavy smoke in his burning house in the 100 block of South Weyant Avenue in the Eastmoor neighborho­od.

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