In the deadliest fire in the history of the Houston Fire Department, four firemen, three veterans and one rookie, were killed on Friday. A fifth fireman was hospitalized and is in critical condition.?
Houston firefighters embrace near the scene of a fatal five-alarm fire at a motel on the Southwest Freeway Friday, in Houston. Four firefighters searching for people they thought might be trapped in a blazing Houston motel and restaurant Friday were killed when the part of the structure collapsed and ensnared them, authorities said.
Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle/AP
EnlargeOne?Houston?firefighter remained hospitalized in critical condition Saturday, a day after a massive motel and restaurant fire killed four of his fellow firefighters.
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A total of 14 were hospitalized Friday afternoon.?Houston?Fire Department spokesman Jay Evans said Saturday that other injured firefighters had been released overnight, but he did not have a precise count.
Among the four killed were veterans of the department and a newcomer just a month out of the fire training academy.
The fire broke out at a restaurant connected to the Southwest Inn along a busy freeway, and was the deadliest in the 118-year history of the department. Three firefighters died at the scene, while the fourth died at a hospital, according to the mayor's office and a medical examiner.
One of the dead is 29-year-old Robert Garner. His father, Jerry Veuleman, told the?Houston?Chronicle that Garner was proud of his work and had set his sights on becoming a firefighter after leaving the military. He joined the department in 2010.
"'Use your training. Don't be a hero. God will look after you,' " Veuleman recalled telling him. "God chose it was time to take Robert and the other firefighters. We are sorry, but we are also blessed."
The others who died were: 35-year-old Capt. Matthew Renaud, an 11-year veteran of the department; 41-year-old Robert Bebee, who joined almost 12 years ago; and 24-year-old rookie firefighter Anne Sullivan. She had graduated from the training academy in April.
Fire officials said they took a high risk in aggressively fighting the fire because they believed people were inside the motel. When a portion of the building collapsed, the firefighters were trapped.
In 1953 and 2000, two?Houston?firefighters were killed in a single fire. Three firefighters died in 1929 when a train slammed broadside into their engine.
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