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Major blaze in
Thornton
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Ashland
fire sends boy to the hospital
» Mobile home
destroyed in Holderness
By MELANIE NELSON
Newfound Area Bureau
BRISTOL — A kerosene lamp and an improperly
installed wood stove were responsible for two house
fires over the weekend, which sent one woman to the
hospital with second degree burns on her hands and
feet.
Fire Chief Norm Skantze said Ruth Whittier, who
lives in a small cabin with her seven-year-old son,
had left a kerosene lantern on the kitchen table when
she went to bed Friday night. The cabin, which has no
electricity, is located a mile off Summer Street.
He said Whittier woke up in the middle of the night
to find her kitchen table on fire. She attempted to
put the fire out herself with a fire extinguisher,
water and towels. However, the water helped spread the
fire. She brought her son to a neighbor’s house and
then went back into the house to try to fully
extinguish the fire.
Skantze said they are unsure of how the table
caught on fire, whether the lamp had fallen over or
something combustible was left near the lantern and
caught on fire.
Firefighters had trouble getting to the house
because the tail end of a pickup truck that had slid
off the road and hit a tree earlier in the day was
blocking the driveway. He said he was able to get
around the truck with the Suburban, and then four
firefighters pushed the end of the truck out of the
way so they could pass through.
When firefighters reached the house, Skantze said
Whittier had been successful in extinguishing the fire
which did save her house, but in the process she
received burns to her hands and feet.
The house had no smoke detectors, he said, adding
that the incident should be a reminder for people to
install smoke detectors.
In addition, he said he would prefer that people
leave their house and call 911 if there is a fire
instead of attempting to extinguish it themselves.
About 11 a.m. on Saturday, Dan and Irene McCallum
safely made it out of the house at 986 North Main St.
after noticing a partition near their wood stove was
on fire.
Skantze said the fire was a result of the stove’s
having been incorrectly installed when the house was
built some years ago.
The flue was installed directly into the wall, he
said. There should have been masonry surrounding it
which is typically three times the diameter of the
pipe.
There was limited damage to the house, said Skantze,
explaining that firefighters just had to open the wall
where the fire had started.
"The owners’ quick action (of calling the fire
department immediately) stopped the fire right where
it was and kept it from extending."
New Hampton and Alexandria Fire Departments also
assisted with the two fires.