Quantcast
Channel: Winecoff Hotel Fire
Viewing all 81 articles
Browse latest View live

George Goodwin Dies at 97

$
0
0
Winecoff fire eyewitness, Atlanta Journal reporter George Goodwin, died peacefully at his Atlanta home early this morning. At his side was his beloved grandson, Warren Goodwin. Biography here.

Dorothy Kiker Smith

$
0
0
This newly acquired photo shows Dorothy Smith of Fitzgerald, Georgia who perished along with her three children in the Winecoff Hotel fire. They were traveling in a party of seven of whom only one survived.


Jane Wallace Photos Acquired

$
0
0
Jane Wallace survived the 1946 Winecoff Hotel fire

Jane Wallace was 24, a nurse, and in Atlanta's Winecoff Hotel to meet her husband, Byron, for a last attempt to save their marriage. It must not have gone well, or at all, because he wasn't there when the fire broke out, though both of their names appeared on the guest list.

She was rescued via ladder across a ten foot alleyway on the hotel's West side - fifteen floors up. She was soon divorced and spoke little of Byron or the fire thereafter. She remarried in 1947 and died in 1984. More photos and full biography are here.

Winecoff Fire Now A Story of Atlanta

$
0
0
Filmmaker, Lance Russell, has created a series of brief videos called Stories of Atlanta for the SaportaReport, a business news website based in Atlanta. The Winecoff fire is the topic of a recent video. It tells the story of Pulitzer Prize winner, Arnold Hardy, and how good fortune found him despite calamity all around. Click here.

Sixty-Ninth Anniversary Article

$
0
0
Writing for the Rome News-Tribune, Blake Doss has written an article remembering the four boys from Rome, Georgia who perished in the 1946 Winecoff Hotel Fire. His article is here.

New Book To Honor Fire's Victims

$
0
0
Chet Wallace
Photo By Donna Thatch Goodrich
If you've appreciated Winecoff.Org's Remembrance Page, you'll love the new book now planned to honor the 119 victims of the Winecoff fire.

Since 2011, writer Chet Wallace has provided many hours of assistance to Winecoff Fire co-authors Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin in their ongoing study of the Atlanta tragedy. Wallace's long time goal has been to publish a book focused on the lives of those killed in the fire. He is scheduled to finish the book in a couple of weeks and recently announced a fundraising effort to finance its publication. "It will contain photos and biographical information on the victims as well as poignant stories of the fire's devastating effect on their families," said Wallace.

His Kickstarter website is here.

Broken Hero

$
0
0
A new Winecoff Fire Readers' Mail entry details the lifetime of struggles one Winecoff firefighter suffered after the morning's heroic work. Read Broken Herohere.

Winecoff Firefighter Raymond McGill

$
0
0
Retired Chief of Training Raymond McGill in 2011 - photo by Donna Bowman



One of two living Winecoff firefighters is Raymond McGill. He is ninety-nine years old.

On the Winecoff Hotel fire scene, McGill worked ladder rescues on the Ellis St. side of the burning hotel and later went into the building. "People that could come down those stair wells, they would run over you getting down out of there, with fireman trying to get up. That's the biggest thing, turmoil there. People were excited."

Recalling a harsh moment McGill said, "I was on that rescue truck. I stayed there until we hauled people down to the Grady Hospital until the Grady people said, 'don't bring any more down here.' Chief Styron said, 'you tell 'em this is City business and if they have to stack 'em in the hall, they're going to keep on coming.' That's about the instruction I got."

And a lighter moment: "The scene that sticks in my mind, there was some fireman he was crawling around the floor up there. He crawled and he thought he was coming back out into the hallway. There was a closet. He got himself into that closet and didn't know where he was at, it was so close. And when he finally got out on the side he said, this is the statement he made, 'I to myself, I ain't got no business in here!'"

Raymond McGill later became Chief of Training. "Raymond McGill was every Atlanta fireman's mentor. Everyone. He was the go-to person for strategy and tactics for fighting any fire," said former Atlanta firefighter Danny Bowman.

Seventieth Anniversary Commemoration Ahead

$
0
0
The non-profit group Heritage Sandy Springs will host a Winecoff Fire 70th Anniversary Commemoration on Tuesday December 6, 2016 at 6:30 p.m. as part of their Titles @ Twilight authors series. Everyone's invited. Admission is free.

Heritage Sandy Springs in located at 6110 Bluestone Rd. in Sandy Springs, Ga.

Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin will discuss their book, The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America's Deadliest Hotel Fire and Chet Wallace will speak about his own book to be released next year titled The Winecoff Fire Victims: A Dedication to the 119.

YMCA Youth Assembly Marks 70th Anniversary of The Winecoff Fire

$
0
0
Sue Broome, 16, perished in the Winecoff fire. Her great nephew and niece, Colton, 16, and Jarrett Broome, 14, attended the YMCA Youth Assembly luncheon November 14th.

Clear-eyed young people in their Sunday best gathered Monday at the historic Georgia Freight Depot for the annual YMCA Youth Assembly luncheon. The high school students from all across Georgia come to Atlanta each year to be delegates in a mock legislature.

To mark the 70th anniversary of the Winecoff fire, thirty Youth Assembly delegates and two faculty advisers, who were lost in the 1946 fire, were remembered with thirty-two white flowers and a moment of silence.

Nearly 800 delegates heard the story of the Winecoff fire from co-authors Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin. Their remarks are here.

Heys & Goodwin To Speak Decenber 6th

$
0
0
The non-profit group Heritage Sandy Springs will host a Winecoff Fire 70th Anniversary Commemoration on Tuesday December 6, 2016 at 6:30 p.m. as part of their Titles @ Twilight authors series. Everyone's invited. Admission is free.

Heritage Sandy Springs in located at 6110 Bluestone Rd. in Sandy Springs, Ga.

Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin will discuss their book, The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America's Deadliest Hotel Fire and Chet Wallace will speak about his own book to be released next year titled The Winecoff Fire Victims: A Dedication to the 119.  Details are here.

Winecoff Fire 70th Anniversary Commemoration

$
0
0
Against all odds, Dr. Robert Cox, 73, and Richard Hamil, 79,
 survived the Winecoff Hotel fire 70 years ago

Many whose lives were touched by the Winecoff fire gathered to commemorate the fire's 70th anniversary Tuesday at Heritage Sandy Springs in north Atlanta. Among the guests were two survivors of the fire and a host of people with family connections to the 1946 fire.

Dr. Robert Cox was three years old. His father, forced by heavy smoke and encroaching flames, took little Robert into his arms and leapt toward a fire net ten floors below. The net was manned by a mixture of firefighters and civilian volunteers. They all told the same story:

As they were falling, Robert's father realized they would not land in the center of the net. So he pushed his son away from himself and toward the middle of the net. An instant later the toddler landed safely but his father struck his head fatally on the net's metal rim. His final act in life saved his son.
 

Richard Hamil was on the alley side of the hotel on the fifteenth floor with his own father. They barely survived two terrifying hours of smoke and heat in the room. They were rescued by ladder across a ten foot alleyway into another building.
 

Other audience members also shared their stories about how their lives and families were effected by the fire. 

Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin discussed their book, The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America's Deadliest Hotel Fire and Chet Wallace spoke about his own book to be released next year titled The Winecoff Fire Victims: A Dedication to the 119.

Sandra Parish covered Tuesday's gathering for Atlanta's WSB radio here.
Doug Walker has written about Richard Hamil for today's Rome News-Tribune here.
Rescued alongside the Hamils was Jane Wallace.
Robert's parents are remembered here.

Luncheon Honors Winecoff Fire Victims

$
0
0
A commemorative luncheon was held at the Ellis Hotel Wednesday marking the 70th anniversary of the Winecoff fire. The Atlanta tragedy inspired the fire safety codes the world relies on.

Winecoff Hotel Photo 1918

$
0
0
Peachtree Street 1918 (click to enlarge)
The Atlanta History Center has shared on Facebook and Instagram this 1918 photo of Atlanta's Peachtree Street. It shows the Winecoff Hotel's south side and rooftop sign. The concrete, brick and steel monolith was built in 1913 and operates today as the Ellis Hotel.

And Then There Was One

$
0
0
A hero has passed. The Atlanta Fire Rescue Department's retired Chief of Training Raymond McGill passed away today. A hero of the Winecoff fire and a mentor to hundreds of Atlanta firefighters, Raymond McGill was one hundred years old. More here. Retired Atlanta Fire Department Chief R.B. Sprayberry is now the last living Winecoff firefighter.

 See Final Honor.

Youth Assembly Ribbon Discovered

$
0
0
YMCA Advisor's Ribbon

Carlos Hamil

Winecoff fire survivor Richard Hamil recently discovered his father's YMCA advisor's ribbon. Carlos Hamil was the faculty advisor for the eight member 1946 YMCA Youth Assembly delegation from Rome, Ga.

Carlos Hamil kept the ribbon all his life, as he did a sense of guilt that four of his charges died on the tenth floor, even though there was nothing he could have possibly done to help them. The Hamils were trapped on the fifteenth floor until they were rescued by ladder across the alley on the hotel's west side.

Celebrating Ten Years of Usefulness

$
0
0
The Ellis Hotel Opened In 2007
Abandoned for twenty-six years, the old Winecoff Hotel building was a silent stain of urban blight on Atlanta's most famous street. And then at last, the sun rose on a new era of usefulness. The Winecoff Hotel building was re-opened as The Ellis on Peachtree Hotel in the fall of 2007. Relive the Ellis Hotel opening here.

And Then There Were None

$
0
0
Chief R. B. Sprayberry, Chet Wallace & Allen B. Goodwin in 2015
The last living Winecoff fire firefighter has died: R. B. Sprayberry, 95. A career Atlanta firefighter, he rose to become chief of the department 34 years after fighting the Winecoff Hotel Fire.

On December 7, 1946 Sprayberry was dispatched from Fire Station 12 on the second of four alarms. He was sent to work the back side of the hotel but eventually found himself on the Peachtree Street side and then into the building. Many were rescued.

In 2011 he was among four living Winecoff firefighters honored at a luncheon commemorating the fire's 65th anniversary. Now the last of the Winecoff fire heroes are gone.

He told an interviewer in 2011, "When you get my age (89) you remember some and you don't remember some but I'll remember the Winecoff. I was just a fireman at that time but I'll go to my grave knowing about it."

Stories of the Winecoff Fire

$
0
0
Winecoff Fire co-authors Sam Heys and Allen B. Goodwin are pleased to commend to readers a new book by Chet Wallace: Stories of the Winecoff Fire.

First inspired by The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America's Deadliest Hotel Fire, Wallace's book brings new width and depth to the saga. 119 people died, but who were they? Wallace's labor of love and respect for the fire's victims brings us the answers. Wallace examines the back stories of 119 ordinary people who's deaths inspired the fire safety standards the world now relies on. We see the first half of the 20th century through their eyes and learn how their paths converged at the Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta December 7, 1946.

 “Chet Wallace first came to us in 2010,” said Winecoff fire co-author, Sam Heys. “It was clear to us he was as interested in the story as we were.”

“He reinvigorated our research and began turning up new witnesses and family members of the victims. He located many of the victims' photos now on Winecoff.org's Remembrance Page,” added Allen B. Goodwin.

Thanks to Wallace's reverent study, mostly forgotten victims of a tragic fire long ago emerge as a lovable collective still guarding the safely of millions the world over.

WABE-FM Radio Segment Ahead

$
0
0
WABE-FM 90.1 radio has rescheduled its story on the 1946 Winecoff Hotel fire to air tomorrow, Wednesday December 12th, at 5:44 p.m.
Viewing all 81 articles
Browse latest View live