At 2356 hours on Saturday March 19, 2011, the Huntingtown Volunteer Fire Department was alerted for the reported Chimney Fire at 3380 Soper Road in Huntingtown. While en-route, firefighters received information that the owner was trying to extinguish the fire and believed it had spread to the attic. Units alerted were: Chief 6A (Montgomery), Chief 6C (Morris), Safety 6 (McKenny), Lieutenant 6 (Buckler), Engine 62 (Smith), Engine 61 (Gaylor), Squad 6 (Wallace), Tanker 6 (Robison), Brush 6 (Montgomery Jr), Ambulance 68 (Jeffery, M) and Ambulance 69 (Bevard).
Chief 6C arrived to find smoke showing from the second floor eves of a 10,000 square foot mega-mansion. Engine 62 arrived, laying a supply line, advancing the 400′ pre-connect and began pulling the ceiling, at which time; they found fire in the attic spreading rapidly. Within seconds, conditions deteriorated significantly resulting in zero visibility and intense heat. Command immediately ordered evacuation tones. Due to high winds off the river, water supply issues, distance from the fire house, and the size of the structure (10,000 square feet), fire spread rapidly.
Immediately thereafter, the second floor flashed over resulting in nine firefighters being injured, five from Huntingtown Volunteer Fire Department and four from Prince Frederick Volunteer Fire Department. As a result of the unbearable heat, several firefighters took extreme measures such as jumping out of windows and running through walls to evacuate the structure. Chief 6A immediately ordered a Full Second Alarm with two Tankers. Later in the incident, additional units were Special Alarmed to the scene. On scene were several ambulances and medics providing care to the injured firefighters.
Although units from Calvert, Charles, St. Mary’s, Anne Arundel, and Prince Georges were utilized, fire spread in such a rapid manner that the home is considered a total loss.
Two of the Huntingtown firefighters were seriously injured and transported by aviation to Washington Hospital Center. The other seven firefighters were transported to Calvert Memorial Hospital for evaluation and treatment. Subsequently, six of those initially transported to Calvert Memorial, two from Huntingtown and four from Prince Frederick, were transported to Baltimore Shock Trauma and Washington MedStar for follow-up evaluation and treatment for smoke inhalation. All seven firefighters have since been released.
The event narrative was issued through Chief Jonathan Riffe of the Huntington VFD, MD (HERE)
- Huntington VFD Web Page, HERE
- Photos courtesy of: www.DennisHook.smugmug.com
- More Videos and Narrative from STATter911, HERE
We’ll be posting more information on Extreme Fire Behavior, Vent Paths, Wind Driven Fire Considerations in the next few days.
Also on CommandSafety …
- Looking Back at One Meridian Plaza High Rise Fire: 1991 – February 24, 2012
- Residential Fire Injures Seven Firefighters: Wind Driven Conditions Suspected – February 25, 2012
- Still and Box for CFD: Near Miss Stairwell Collapse in Chicago – April 13, 2013
- Baltimore County (MD) Firefighter Falkenhan Line of Duty Death Report Issued – March 25, 2012



























residential sprinklers anyone? maybe when they rebuild it…
Might be a good cause for sprinklers in a building that size, regardless of use.
Good call to evac, rear was pretty well off when FD arrived. Goo incident to do PIA with everyone.
Large house, in MD they do not count basement as living area, Data from Real Property of Md:
Primary Structure Built 2006
Enclosed Area 6,453 SF
Property Land Area 2.2000 AC
Stories 1.500000
Basement YES
Type STANDARD
Exterior UNIT SIDING