Class Memoriam
JULY 3, 1973
A 29-year-old
Lewiston man died and two other men were hospitalized with burns received in an
early morning fire that destroyed 10 units at Hillcrest Apartments, 501 Airway
Ave., yesterday. Dead is George S. Gustafson who lived in apartment 37.
Injured are William Gordon, 19,
and Paul Bartlett, 20, residents of apartment 33. Gordon received burns on his
hands and Bartlett received burns on his back and a separated left shoulder. He
received the shoulder injury when he fell downstairs while attempting to escape
the flames.
Damage to the apartments was estimated at $250,000
by Vernon Dimke, 2333 Florence Lane, Clarkston, owner and builder of the
apartments. Dimke said he based his estimate on the square footage of the
demolished units and added: “I think I’ve got adequate insurance.”
Besides the 10 units destroyed by fire, at least 10
more of the 40 apartments in the two-story complex received heavy smoke and
water damage. A recreation area on the ground floor of the complex was also
extensively damaged by smoke and water.
Assistant Fire Chief Charles Hyde said the alarm
was called in at 3:29 a.m. by Mike Fitzpatrick, who lived at the apartments.
Another call was received at 3:30 a.m. from Mrs. Perry Proctor, also a resident
of the apartments. Two engines were dispatched to the fire at first, but four
more were sent to the scene before the first two had arrived, Hyde said. When
firemen arrived the east end of the wood and cement structure was engulfed in
flames, Hyde said. Tenants of the apartment house were emptying into the
parking area in front of the building, firemen said, but a search of each
apartment was made prior to turning to fighting the fire. “The first thing a
fireman has to do at a fire scene is protect human life,” Hyde said. “If the
building is lost, but all the people are saved, firemen have done their job. If
the building is also saved, that is a hard-won bonus.”
While two of the first four firemen began
organizing searches of the 29 apartments directly endangered by the fire, a
second crew of two fire fighters began pumping high-pressure water into the
apartment occupied by Gustafson. Flames in the apartment had to be knocked down
before firemen could check it out. Gustafson’s body was found near a bedroom
door.
Fire investigators said the cause of the blaze is
not known, but the fire is believed to have started in or near Gustafson’s
apartment. Six pieces of fire-fighting equipment, including the 90-foot
platform truck were dispatched to the fire. Hyde said cars parked in front of
the apartment prevented use of the platform truck. The blaze was controlled by
5 a.m. by 22 regular
firemen and numerous volunteers. The fire was completely out by 6 a.m. Credit
was given by Hyde to several tenants of the building for their part in waking
other tenants and getting them out of the building. Several persons reported
other tenants breaking their doors in and helping them out just ahead of the
fast-moving fire. Firemen said that at the time fire in the area of Gustafson’s
apartment was knocked down, flames sprang out in the center of the complex
nearly 100 feet away. The fire had burned through one fire wall and had
progressed along a common attic-way, Hyde said. “When oxygen was supplied by
the fire burning through near the roof of the complex’s center, the fire broke
out all over.” Problems encountered by firemen included insufficient water
pressure from fire hydrants, keeping persons from returning to their apartments,
lack of access to the rear of the building and persons attempting to tell
firemen how to fight the fire.
Apartments destroyed were numbers 29 through 38.
Those apartments were occupied by 17 persons. Randy Schrader, Apt. 32, said he,
his wife and 14-month-old son were asleep when someone began breaking in the
front door of his apartment. “I woke up and knew there was a fire,” Schrader
said. “I ran to the front of the apartment and saw nothing but flames. We
escaped by going onto a deck shared by apartment 31 and leaving through the
front door of that apartment.”
Lewiston City Manager Armand Werle said at the
scene of the fire yesterday that the apartment met building standards at the
time it was constructed in August 1970. Werle said the building wouldn’t meet
current city code specifications because there are no fire walls between each
apartment unit.
Gustafson was the eighth Lewiston resident to die
in a fire in the past 12 months. The National Red Cross notified the
Lewis-Clark chapter of its organization yesterday that a field investigation
team will arrive here tomorrow to interview persons left homeless by the fire.
David G. Bellemere, executive director of that chapter, said interviews will be
conducted at the Hillcrest Apartments beginning about 9 a.m. Persons found to
qualify for assistance will be aided by the Red Cross, Bellemere said.
Gustafson was born Sept. 12, 1943 at Spokane, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ardie G. Gustafson, 1421 Prospect Ave. His father is a
former Lewiston mayor. After graduating from Lewiston High School in 1961, he
entered the army and was stationed with the 8th Medical Evacuation
Unit at Landstuhl, Germany, from 1962 to 1965. In 1963, Gustafson’s unit was
sent to Yugoslavia to provide medical assistance after a disastrous earthquake.
Also in 1963, he toured Europe with his parents while they were on a business
trip to the continent. After his discharge from the army, Gustafson attended
Kinman Business University at Spokane in 1966-67, and the University of Idaho in
1967-68.
Before joining Hahn Supply as a salesman two years
ago, he had been employed by B&C Meats and by Western Valley Seed Co., operated
by his father. Gustafson married the former Lorraine Roseborough Sept. 20,
1971. They were divorced this year. He was a communicant of the Church of the
Nativity (Episcopal) and a member of the Lewiston Elks Lodge.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by a
brother, Frans V. Gustafson, and a sister, Mrs. Laurel Sarbacher, both of
Lewiston.
The funeral will be Friday morning at 10 at the
Church of the Nativity with the Rev. F. Spaulding Howe, rector of St. Peter’s
Church of Pomeroy, as officiant. Burial will be at Normal Hill Cemetery with
Brower-Wann Funeral Home in charge. The family has suggested memorials to a
favorite charity.