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Philadelphia
Inquirer Ralph
Burrows |
Camden
Post-Telegram Engine Company
2 -
Ladder Company
1 |
CAMDEN COURIER-POST - FEBRUARY 28, 1938 |
M.F.
Middleton Felled by Gas In House Here With gas flowing from a pipe detached from a gas range, former City Commissioner Melbourne F. Middleton, Jr., was found unconscious in the kitchen of his former home at 538 Cooper street early Saturday night. Middleton was reported last night to still be in a critical condition at West Jersey Hospital, where he was taken. The Camden Fire Department First Aid Squad worked over him for an hour at the house in a vain effort to revive him. Middleton, a former president of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and one time city councilman, was found by a son, C. Barry Middleton, and a friend, John Williams Rossell, who lives with the Middletons on Laurel road, Moorestown. Middleton was clad in overalls and two large pipe wrenches were lying on the kitchen floor near him. Young Middleton said his father told his family he intended to take up some linoleum in the kitchen of his former home. Middleton first went to his office Saturday and then to St. Paul's Episcopal Church to a service. From there he was traced to his former home, which is owned by him. When Middleton failed to return home for dinner at the usual time Saturday his son and Rossell decided to search for him. When young Middleton discovered his father's plight he notified police. Patrolmen Frank Cavallo, Henry Lutz, Walter Vecander and George Getley responded in radio cars and gave first aid until the fire department squad arrived. The firemen worked on the former commissioner one hour with an inhalator before ordering his removal to the hospital, where they continued to work on Middleton for another hour but were unable to revive him. Hospital physicians continued working on him without success. They said his condition was critical. Gas Man Called At
4 p. m. Saturday the family living next to Middlemen's home telephoned
Public Service that gas was coming from the house. Public Service sent a
man to investigate but he was unable to get into the house. Young
Middleton and Rossell said they reached the house at 6.17 p. m. While he was a member of the first city commission Middleton was director of finance but never missed responding to all alarms of fire. He was a member of the fire committee while serving in City Council as a member from the Second ward. In that capacity he also answered all alarms. Members of the Firemen's First Aid Squad responding to the call were Deputy Chief William R. Harring, Hosemen Christopher Moll, William Spencer, Harry Haines, Russell Anderson, William Harry Deitz and Nelson Andrews. City
Detectives Benjamin Simon, Joseph
Mardino and William Marter
are investigating the cause. |
July 7- 1940 Camden Fire Department 125th Anniversary 1869-1994 |
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Christopher
Moll
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Harry
Haines Jr. - William Van Pfefferle Click on Image to Enlarge |
Camden
Courier-Post William
Earl Toy Click On Images
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Camden Courier-Post - February 16, 1952 |
Woman Gas Victim Saved by Camden Rescue Squad
The hour-long effort of a fire department rescue squad Friday night saved a woman who tried to kill herself by gas. Police said Mrs. Florence Marshall,
46, of 330 North Tenth
Street, locked herself in the bathroom and turned on a gas jet.
They added she was despondent because her daughter, Eva, 22, was planning to marry and leave A son, William, 19, broke down
the bathroom door and dragged the mother from the room. Patrolmen John Voll
and Harrison Wilkinson were called and It took the squad an hour to revive Mrs. Marshall by artificial respiration. She was taken to Cooper hospital and later to police headquarters, where she was released for a hearing Monday on a charge of attempted suicide. Other members of Rescue Squad 1 are George Baxter, William Watkin, John Mogck, Edward Brendllnger, Arthur Ballinghoff, Christopher Moll, Edwin Decker, Carl Wirtz, Robert Olesiewicz, John Kolessar and Raymond Banford. |