WILLIAM J. MERRIGAN was born June 10, 1891 in Philadelphia to Richard and Annie Kennedy Merrigan. His father had come to America from England in 1885. The family was living in Philadelphia when the census was taken in 1900. William was the oldest child, followed by two brothers, Daniel and Francis. Three more children came in the 1900s, Richard, May, and Margaret. Sadly, the children were orphaned by 1910. William and Daniel went into the world and found work, Francis and Richard were in St. John's Orphan Asylum in Philadelphia, while the two girls were sent to live with their uncle, William Kennedy and grandmother Mary Kennedy. At some point after the 1910 Census William Merrigan enlisted in the United States Navy, where he worked as a fireman in a ship's engine room. A civilian again by 1918, William Merrigan had made his way to Atlantic City, New Jersey where he worked aboard a fishing boat to support his three youngest siblings. After serving in the military during World War I, William Merrigan married around 1921. He had joined the Camden Fire Department by April of 1922. On April 28, 1922, while serving with Engine Company 7, William Merrigan was taken to Cooper Hospital after being injured while attempting to rescue an 11 year-old boy from a burning building at 1009 Broadway. The 1924 City Directory reveals that William Merrigan and his wife Florence were living at 1432 South 10th Street. By 1929 the family, which included sons William Jr. and Kenneth P. Merrigan, had moved to 1610 Norris Street. Fire Department records from 1931 show William Merrigan still living at the Norris Street address. On October 4,
1935 Sergeant
George Lee of the New York Shipyard Police discovered a
fire in a 200 x 70 foot warehouse. As he
transmitted the initial alarm from the power house, other yard employees
also reported the blaze to security
at the main gate. Box 312 was pulled by the officer at the Broadway
gate at 12:45 A.M.
Chief Lennox ordered a third alarm on his arrival as
fire roared from large roof ventilators. Stored at the south end of the
warehouse were large quantities of benzene, gasoline and other
explosive cleaning solvents. Fire fighters pressed an all out attack and
prevented the blaze from spreading
to these inflammable stores. Fireman William Merrigan of
Engine Company 10 was buried under a falling partition wall. He was
rescued by other members of his unit, who had themselves narrowly
escaped the collapse. As
the wind shifted, acid fumes were carried to a large crowd
of spectators causing some panic. Under severe radiant heat, the
fronts of fifteen dwellings
on the east side of Broadway
between Lester and Gordon Terrace
became seriously
exposed. These properties were saved only through the tenacious efforts
of Camden's Bravest. Within forty-five minutes the spectacular blaze was
contained to the warehouse but not before imposing a $50,000 property
loss. While assigned to Engine Company 3, located at 1819 Broadway, Fire Fighter Merrigan died of a heart attack induced by heat exhaustion on July 30th, 1940, while fighting the fire at the Hollingshead factory at North 9th and Market Streets. William J. Merrigan was survived by his wife, Florence and sons William James Merrigan Jr. and Kenneth P. Merrigan. William J. Merrigan Jr. served as a member of the Hi Nella NJ fire department from 1960 to 1985. |
Philadelphia Inquirer - April 28, 1922 | |
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Samuel
M.
Price - John
Hunt - Irwin
Bishop - Charles Watkin - William
Merrigan -
William
Reynolds
Broadway - Broadway Trust Company - Harry Armbruster - Cooper Hospital - Lyric Theater Ladder Company 2 - Engine Company 7 - Engine Company 8 |
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The Hollingshead Fire -July 30, 1940
THE HOLLINGSHEAD FIRE - N.F.P.A. REPORT
Camden Fire Fighters Fallen in the Line of Duty
Camden
Fire Department -
Complete Roster of Uniformed Fire Personnel 1869-1994