I was planning on visiting Grant's Tomb when I came across the Daily News story of Black Sunday and the deaths of FDNY FF's in the Bronx back in 2005...
It inspired me to just take off with the camera and visit the Memorial...
SEE VIDEO: ( BEST THEATER VIEW OR FULL SCREEN)
https://youtu.be/ezUdC4R02hY
This was all unscripted, and I apologize for the video being a little rough... I didn't realize for instance that wind noise would drown out my narrative along the way at certain points.
Both "Black Sunday" and the Monument in itself are fascinating stories...
Here, by the way, is some more material on both the Monument and "Black Sunday"
Hamill: Retired FDNY chief, whose son was a Black Sunday Fire victim, is out to save firefighters
Joe DiBernardo Sr., a retired FDNY assistant deputy chief, created the Joseph P. DiBernardo Memorial Foundation in 2012 to raise money to provide life-saving equipment and training to fire departments across the country. The fund is named after his son, a firefighter who was badly injured in a 2005 blaze that claimed the lives of two other firefighters. His son died in 2011.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Wednesday, January 21, 2015, 11:07 PM
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This proud father refuses to let a decade of grief for his son go up in smoke.
On Friday, retired FDNY Assistant Deputy Chief Joe DiBernardo Sr. will mark the 10th anniversary of the infamous Black Sunday Fire that would claim the lives of three firefighters, including his son Joseph Jr.
This loving father tries not to dwell on the deaths and suffering of that day so much as tirelessly work full time in his retirement years to save the lives of other firefighters through a foundation set up in his son's honor.
On Friday night at the Hyatt Long Island, he will host an annual safety seminar/fundraiser for the Joseph P. DiBernardo Foundation.
A little background: On Jan 23, 2005, “a freight train of fire” engulfed an illegally subdivided E. 178th St. tenement, trapping Fire Lt. Curtis Meyran and Firefighter John Bellew, who had a grim choice of burning to death or jumping 50 feet down.
They leaped. They died.
In an ante-room of this raging hell, Firefighter Joseph DiBernardo Jr. had the heroic presence of mind to decide that because he was single and childless that he would lower his brother firefighter Jeffrey Cool, married with kids, four stories with their single safety rope. Thirty feet from the ground, Cool lost his grip and fell, but he survived.
Anyone who tells you that losing a son gets easier with time isn’t being honest. I miss my son every minute of every day.
Then DiBernardo tied off the same rope and lowered himself. The line snapped. He fell three stories, shattering every bone below his waist.
“Joseph almost died twice in the hospital from respiratory arrest and pneumonia,” says his father, who served 35 FDNY years. Joseph Jr. endured skin grafts, speech therapy, physical therapy and psychological counseling and was prescribed 10 medications. Six years after the fire, Joseph accidentally took his meds twice in one day, leading to an accidental overdose.
Joe Sr. fought the city through bureaucratic channels and in the press, including in this space, to have his son recognized as a hero who’d made the ultimate sacrifice for this city. Former Fire Commissioner Sal Cassano would eventually determine that Joseph DiBernardo Jr.’s passing was a line of duty death because it was directly related to the Black Sunday Fire. His name was added to the FDNY Wall of Honor.
If you thought that Joe Sr. would just go back to just coaching CYO basketball and enjoying his well-earned pension with his wife, Barbara, you had another lifelong alarm to answer.
“Anyone who tells you that losing a son gets easier with time isn’t being honest,” Joe Sr. says. “I miss my son every minute of every day. Joey suffered for six years but still traveled across the country instructing other firefighters on safety and the importance of proper equipment like fire ropes.”
Joe Sr. says the Black Sunday Fire led Mayor Mike Bloomberg to once again make safety ropes mandatory in the FDNY.
“Joey died in 2011,” says his father. “So in 2012, after he was recognized as the hero he was, I started the Lt. Joseph P. DiBernardo Memorial Foundation, which raises money to provide life-saving equipment and training to fire departments across the country.”
Looking back 10 years, he says the sadness and some anger lingers.
“The landlord who subdivided that tenement into a fire trap was convicted in court,” says Joe Sr. “But the judge set aside the verdict. No one was brought to justice. That hurts. But some good has come from the bad. FDNY has ropes now. Generous foundations like Denis Leary’s donate to us to help save more lives in honor of my son and the other firefighters who died or were injured on Black Sunday.”
He says the FDNY remembers infamous fires like the 23rd St. fire, Waldbaums, Black Sunday.
“But the names of the men who suffered and died heroically are often forgotten,” he says. “I want my son’s name to be remembered as a guy who kept saving other firefighters with equipment and training even after he died from the injuries he suffered on Black Sunday. That’s my way of keeping my son Joey alive.”
For more information, visit www.joeydfoundation.org
Firemens' Memorial, Riverside Park at West 100th Street
Architect: Harold Van Buren Magonigle
Bas relief at the Firemens' Memorial. |
Firemen's Memorial (Manhattan)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Firemen's Memorial, three days after the observation of the thirteenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks
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Year | 1913 |
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Type | Fountain, sculpture, bas relief |
Material | Knoxville marble |
Dimensions | 3.8 m × 11 m × 3.0 m (12.5 ft × 37 ft × 10 ft)[1] |
Location | New York City, New York, United States |
40.798637°N 73.973335°W | |
Website | http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/riverside-park/monuments/482 |
The Firemen's Memorial is a 1913 monument on Riverside Drive at 100th Street in Manhattan, New York.
Context[edit]
Like other large cities, New York was devastated by fires in the 18th and 19th centuries. In 1776, in the midst of the American Revolutionary War, a great fire swept through the city, destroying 493 buildings. Two more great fires, in 1835 and 1845, together destroyed approximately 1000 buildings and killed 50 people, including a number of firefighters. Fire safety improved in the late 19th and early 20th century, but firefighting remained a dangerous task. Following the 1907 drowning death of Deputy Fire Chief Charles W. Kruger in a flooded Canal Street basement, Bishop Henry C. Potter proposed a memorial to firefighters who had died while performing their duties.[2]
Potter established a committee to build a monument, and was its first chairman, being succeeded by Isidor Strauss, co-owner of Macy's. The Board of Estimate and Apportionment granted $40,000 to the project on July 17, 1911, and an additional $50,500 was raised through a popular subscription.[1]
Although originally planned for Union Square, the memorial eventually ended up being built on the fashionable Riverside Drive, where Frederick Law Olmsted's English-style rustic Riverside Park had recently been completed. The monument was designed by architect Harold Van Buren Magonigle and its sculptures are by Attilio Piccirilli. The site consists of a grand staircase leading up from the west, a balustraded plaza, and the Knoxville marble monument. Above the fountain, which extends from the box-like structure of the monument, is a large bas-relief scene of a horse drawn engine rushing to a fire. The monument is flanked to the north and south with groups of sculptures representing "Duty" and "Sacrifice".[1]
Inscription[edit]
The inscription on the reverse of the monument reads:
Architects[edit]
A New Jersey native, Magonigle was a successful architect of monuments, including the McKinley Memorial Mausoleum in Ohio and the Liberty Memorial in Missouri. Piccirilli studied marble carving at his father's studio in Italy, before moving to the United States in 1888. Magonigle and Piccirilli had collaborated previously on the USS Maine National Monument in Central Park, and Piccirilli used the same model (Audrey Munson) for the female figures of both.[1] Piccirilli's independent fragment, Study of a Head, is derived from the Firemen's Memorial and is housed in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[3]
Dianne Durante compared Piccirilli's northern cluster of statues (a woman cradling the limp body of a firefighter) to Michalangelo's statue of a grieving Madonna. She also praised the southern cluster, the same woman holding a child (presumably the widow and child of the dead firefighter), a scene she describes as "wrenching." She attributes the power of the bas-relief to communicate the urgency and drama to the artist's decision to depict a horse-drawn engine, rather than an emotionless motorized engine, and she attributes the timelessness of the sculptures to the use of classical, simple drapery, rather than contemporary costume.[2]
Dedication and tablet[edit]
The monument was dedicated on September 5, 1913. Every autumn, a ceremony is held at the memorial to honor the memory of firefighters who have died protecting the city. Attended by the mayor, the fire commissioner and thousands of firefighters, the ceremony gained even greater significance after the September 11 attacks of 2001. 343 New York firefighters died responding to the attacks on the two towers of the World Trade Center. In the weeks that followed, the memorial became a shrine for those firefighters, and the annual ceremony at the memorial is now held on September 11 each year.[1]
In 1927 a bronze tablet was installed in the plaza beneath the memorial. The tablet, placed by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, is dedicated to the horses which, in earlier years, pulled the fire department's engines.[4]
References[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Firemen's Memorial (Manhattan). |
- ^ ab c d e f "Riverside Park Monuments - Firemen's Memorial : NYC Parks". Nycgovparks.org. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
- ^ ab Durante, Dianne L. (2007). Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide. New York University Press. pp. 222–224. ISBN 9780814719862.
- ^ Tolles, Thayer, ed. (1999). American Sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: A catalogue of works by artists born between 1865 and 1885 2. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 482. ISBN 9780870999239.
- ^ "Riverside Park Monuments - Firemen's Memorial Tablet Horses : NYC Parks". Nycgovparks.org. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
Sculptural grotesque from the Firemens' Memorial. |
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