Lorenzo
and Marion Roberts, of Arizona, lost all but two bedrooms after
a fire in a fireplace re-ignited while the couple was away.
The Fire
Lorenzo: "It was a chilly morning, so I lit the fireplace.
On the couch I had a bunch of paper. We were getting ready to go
overseas to England, so I was checking my passport, birth certificate,
marriage certificate. I was going through the papers. A friend of
mine rang the doorbell and invited us to go to breakfast.
"I had a fire extinguisher that I always keep right by the
couch. I used it to extinguish the fire and went to wake my wife
up. I went back and checked the fireplace and sprayed a little more.
"When we were leaving, I slammed the fireplace door. It must
not have closed. While we were at the diner, I got a phone call.
A friend told me to hurry home because he saw smoke coming from
my roof.
"We lost everything but two bedrooms and clothing."
On Losing Their Possessions
Marion: "We lost jewelry, mementos things you can never
replace. A one-and-only picture we had of our daughter who died
three years ago. That's what hurts... the loss. Other things I can
replace or at least there is something to compensate.
"Everything burned up. Without a bank book, we couldn't even
get money out of the bank. We had no ID, so it was like not having
the money because we couldn't get to it."
On Fire Safety
Lorenzo: "I was always conscious of fire safety. We had the
alarms, the smoke detectors. We used fire retardant SheetRock®
when we built the home.
"When our granddaughter was staying with us, we had fire drills.
How to exit just in case. We talked about how to get out, and we
practiced how to unlock a window in case of an emergency.
"Since the fire, we now have four fire extinguishers in the
house.
"And we don't use the fireplace. We did everything we knew
to do. We still had a fire. It was God's will, and so therefore
we just don't use the fireplace. We can live without it."
Advice To Others
Marion: "After a fire, you become more aware of other fire
hazards. If you have an older house and it's not wired up to the
standards, have the electric checked. If it needs rewiring, don't
take the chances of leaving it there. We have a lot of people we've
helped through the years who have had electrical fires.
"Do everything you know how to do to be safe. If you're not
sure, ask somebody who knows about fire safety for the home. Take
precautions of all kinds. Don't take any chances. You cannot be
too composed and say, 'This will not happen to me.' "
| What You Can Learn From
The Roberts' Experience |
- Be sure to extinguish fires in fireplaces completely
before you leave your home.
- Consider storing important papers and copies of
essential documents in a fire-resistant home safe
or bank deposit box.
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