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Wednesday, December 3, 2003 E-mail This Article
Firefighters from many surrounding communities battled a two-alarm fire Tuesday night amid extremely cold temperatures at a three-story, single family home on Snow Wood Drive in Waterville Estates in Thornton. (Citizen Photo/Kevin Sperl)

Fires strike area homes

Major blaze in Thornton

» Ashland fire sends boy to the hospital
» Lamp, stove blamed for fires in Bristol
» Mobile home destroyed in Holderness

By BARRY W. WALKER

Plymouth Bureau

THORNTON — For the second night in a row, Pemi-Baker area fire departments were called out to fight a major fire when flames swept through a large, three-story home on Snow Wood Drive.

Campton-Thornton Fire Chief David Tobine said a passer-by spotted the fire about 7:30 p.m. and phoned it in to 911 on his cell phone.

Flames were already showing on the outside of the home’s rough-sawn pine planking when Tobine arrived with the first Campton-Thornton units.

The nearest hydrant is at the corner of Route 175 and Pond Road, about two miles away.

"That’s why I went to two alarms right away," Tobine said. "I knew we would need help to get water up to the site."

Units from Plymouth, Rumney, Ashland, Waterville Valley, Meredith, New Hampton and Bristol responded with tankers to ferry water to the site.

"It was definitely a nuisance," Tobine said, "but we didn’t run out of water."

"But it was a stubborn fire," the chief said. A burned-out staircase inside kept firefighters from getting to the second floor so they had to use ladders from the trucks to get through the second story windows outside.

"That’s always hazardous to firefighters," he said, "because you don’t always know what you’re going into."

Despite that, only one firefighter was transported to Speare Memorial Hospital, suffering from an unknown rash. Tobine did not know the firefighter’s name or department Tuesday night.

Temperatures approaching zero played havoc with nozzles, pumps, valves, and roads and walkways, making fighting the fire doubly difficult.

"There was ice everywhere," Tobine said.

The flames were out after an hour and a half, but firefighters spent the next four hours until after midnight looking for hotspots and embers.

Tobine said the home was furnished but not occupied and may be a vacation home. He said he would research the owner’s name through town tax records in the morning.

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Barry W. Walker can be reached at 536-4323, or by e-mail at: plybur@ncia.net 

© 2002 Geo. J. Foster Company
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