By GORDON D. KING
Staff Writer
LACONIA — A one-alarm fire heavily damaged an
apartment building at the intersection of Union
Avenue and High Street Tuesday leaving seven
people homeless.
Officials said the fire at 141 Union Ave. was
discovered at around 1:30 p.m. It started in the
garage at the rear of the building and spread
rapidly to the second floor and attic area.
Fire Chief Ken Erickson called for a first
alarm because of the close proximity to another
building nearby. Intense heat from the fire melted
siding on the home next door, which is just 5 feet
away.
"The only thing which kept it from spreading to
that house was that the siding was made from a
non-combustible material. It was asbestos siding,"
the chief said.
Erickson estimated damages in excess of
$100,000. He said none of the tenants — nor the
building’s owners — had insurance.
The neighboring home did receive some damage.
Erickson, who was on Beacon Street East at the
time of the alarm, said heavy smoke and flames
were shooting out of the 2˝ story building when he
arrived. He helped man a hose until other
firefighters arrived.
Firefighters and equipment from the Belmont,
Winnisquam, Gilford, Meredith and
Tilton-Northfield fire departments were called to
the scene. Holderness covered the Weirs station
and Gilmanton covered Central Station.
The first attack by the firefighters was to the
garage area. They were in the process of knocking
the fire down when it flared up.
Erickson said a crew reached the second floor
and was able to knock down the fire before it
spread to the two apartments in the front of the
building.
The chief said materials that ignited in the
building’s garage and attic caused the fire to
spread and made it difficult to extinguish.
It took firefighters about 45 minutes to bring
the fire under control. They were on the scene
until 4:40 p.m.
Four of the occupants were in the home at the
time. They sat on the embankment of a nearby home
watching the firefighters. They declined to be
interviewed.
The building is owned by James McCloud of
Londonderry, according to city records.
The garage and a vehicle parked inside it were
destroyed. The second floor apartment was heavily
damaged. Firefighters who entered the building
said the two front apartments, one on each floor,
received some smoke and water damage.
Shortly after the fire started, Mark Penney and
Josh Mazzei of Public Service of New Hampshire
arrived on the scene to disconnect power to the
home. They were working on a line in the area at
the time.
Erickson said John Southwick, an investigator
with the state Fire Marshal’s Office, was
assisting in the investigation. The cause has yet
to be determined.
Representatives from the Greater White
Mountains Chapter of the American Red Cross
responded to provide assistance to the
firefighters and the occupants of the building.
The electrical system in the home was
destroyed.
"It will be a long time before anyone can move
back in there," the chief said.
Police shut down Union Avenue to all traffic
and diverted it around the fire scene but this did
not stop scores of spectators from lining the
streets to watch the fire and efforts to contain
it.