- Nov 26, 2003
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just a good story.....
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/homepage/20090518_First_the_smell_of_smoke__then_a_voice__a_door_kicked_in_-_a_rescue.html?cmpid=16339736
By DAFNEY TALES
Philadelphia Daily News
talesd@phillynews.com 215-854-5084
When Calvin Gamble kicked open the door to a burning house to save a man he heard screaming inside, he didn't think about what happened to his friend who died in a fire just last summer trying to save lives.
Instead, he thought of the elderly man who lay at the base of his staircase in the fire early yesterday in Tioga, growing weaker with each breath taken in the smoky house.
Gamble's mother, Brenda Sisco, was swelling with pride after the successful rescue and Executive Chief Daniel Williams of the Fire Department called his heroic acts "a job well done."
But Gamble said he sees it as simply having done the right thing.
"I saw that the house was on fire and I didn't want anyone to get killed," he said late yesterday from his job in a monitoring center for fire-detection systems, just hours after the daring rescue.
Fire officials said the blaze began about 4 a.m. on the second-floor of the home on 23rd Street near Tioga where the elderly man lived by himself. The fire spread to the third floor of the home.
Gamble, 29, who lives on the next block, was heading home from the movies with his friends when they saw smoke.
"I thought to myself, 'One of these houses must be on fire,' " he said. So he leaped out of his friend's car and saw people running out of a home adjacent to the burning property, he said.
They assured him no one was home at that property, but Gamble ran to the door anyway, banged on the door and rang the bell.
Amid the roar of the flames, he heard a voice come inside the home, he said.
The man inside said he couldn't get out. Gamble then kicked down the door and stumbled inside the smoke-filled living room, where he saw the man lying on the floor.
He grabbed the man's arms and carried him across the street, where the elderly man collapsed trying to catch his breath, he said.
Firefighers arrived and extinguished the flames almost 40 minutes later, Williams said. The victim was taken to Temple University Hospital where he was treated for smoke inhalation.
Gamble said that he wasn't without reservations.
Last summer, his friend, Ed Lane, died in a fire when he ran inside a Chester home to save his girlfriend and her daughter, he said. All three had died in the blaze.
"I knew it was risky," he said. "I felt like that if somebody is trapped in there, they couldn't get themselves out. And I figure I was in better condition to help them."
Sisco, a police corporal in the 16th District, said her son was at the right place at the right time.
"That's divine intervention," she said. "[God] puts us where he wants us to be and he wanted my son there." *
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/homepage/20090518_First_the_smell_of_smoke__then_a_voice__a_door_kicked_in_-_a_rescue.html?cmpid=16339736
By DAFNEY TALES
Philadelphia Daily News
talesd@phillynews.com 215-854-5084
When Calvin Gamble kicked open the door to a burning house to save a man he heard screaming inside, he didn't think about what happened to his friend who died in a fire just last summer trying to save lives.
Instead, he thought of the elderly man who lay at the base of his staircase in the fire early yesterday in Tioga, growing weaker with each breath taken in the smoky house.
Gamble's mother, Brenda Sisco, was swelling with pride after the successful rescue and Executive Chief Daniel Williams of the Fire Department called his heroic acts "a job well done."
But Gamble said he sees it as simply having done the right thing.
"I saw that the house was on fire and I didn't want anyone to get killed," he said late yesterday from his job in a monitoring center for fire-detection systems, just hours after the daring rescue.
Fire officials said the blaze began about 4 a.m. on the second-floor of the home on 23rd Street near Tioga where the elderly man lived by himself. The fire spread to the third floor of the home.
Gamble, 29, who lives on the next block, was heading home from the movies with his friends when they saw smoke.
"I thought to myself, 'One of these houses must be on fire,' " he said. So he leaped out of his friend's car and saw people running out of a home adjacent to the burning property, he said.
They assured him no one was home at that property, but Gamble ran to the door anyway, banged on the door and rang the bell.
Amid the roar of the flames, he heard a voice come inside the home, he said.
The man inside said he couldn't get out. Gamble then kicked down the door and stumbled inside the smoke-filled living room, where he saw the man lying on the floor.
He grabbed the man's arms and carried him across the street, where the elderly man collapsed trying to catch his breath, he said.
Firefighers arrived and extinguished the flames almost 40 minutes later, Williams said. The victim was taken to Temple University Hospital where he was treated for smoke inhalation.
Gamble said that he wasn't without reservations.
Last summer, his friend, Ed Lane, died in a fire when he ran inside a Chester home to save his girlfriend and her daughter, he said. All three had died in the blaze.
"I knew it was risky," he said. "I felt like that if somebody is trapped in there, they couldn't get themselves out. And I figure I was in better condition to help them."
Sisco, a police corporal in the 16th District, said her son was at the right place at the right time.
"That's divine intervention," she said. "[God] puts us where he wants us to be and he wanted my son there." *
