The Pinter Hotel
April 30, 1982
Pinter Hotel, 1982, Bill Bayer for The Dispatch
That was not their first fire. It was my second fire and their third fire in Hoboken. I wasn't at the one in Madison Street, the one that happened during the day. It happened right before Easter. But until I saw for my self these news clippings and stuff, that's when I knew. I never knew about the gentrification until eight years ago.
Janet Ayala | Survivor, The Pinter Hotel
Certain smells, anytime we go to hotels, we don't wanna be above the 3rd floor. I can never live in anything above, like, you know...it just the effects of that tragedy. Knowing that we were in a fire 1 year and the next year, both tragic fires. That changed, altered our lives. Neighbors dying, the people, friends that we were hanging out with dying.That you just played with them yesterday and they're gone.
Carmen Tirado | Survivor, The Pinter Hotel Fire
How many times I called that police station in Hoboken, and they didn't wanna hear my mouth. I think I was probably 15, 16. Yo llamaba de cada semana, every 3 weeks I would call. You have anything yet for the Pinter Hotel fire? Who did that? Nothing. The case is closed.
Marisol Zenon | Family member of deceased, The Pinter Hotel Fire
The old Hoboken. It was so neighborly. Everybody said hi to everybody. We knew everybody. It was a large Hispanic community. Sometimes well, most of the time, I'll goto church on Willow because they give the Spanish Mass. The older ladies that are there, I know them well. My mom knows them well. And I feel that small community because that's all there is. I think they're all gone.
Nilda “Chicky” Figueroa | Witness, The Pinter Hotel Fire
We had no choice. We were affected by the fire. We didn't choose, but we can choose to keep going. We can choose to make a difference. We can choose not to let the decision of one miserable piece of shit make us ugly like that. I will always try to put my best foot forward no matter what I've gone through in life.
Maria Feliz | Victim, The Pinter Hotel Fire
Pinter Hotel, 1982, Bill Bayer for The Dispatch
“Who torched hotel, killing 12?” Jersey Journal, 5 May 1982, p. 4.
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Jon Tirado was the neighbor described in the article who had caught a child thrown from the window saving its life. In our meeting he describes the terror that haunts him as he witnessed another child fall to the street directly next to him.
Kahn, Roy. “The Fire.” Hoboken Dispatch, 1 May 1982, p. 5.
going to reach them as they were not
only too short, but were as well
mounted upside down. This was alleged
by an fireman at the scene.
Hoboken Dispatch, 1 May 1982, p. 6.
Retired Fireman’s Story
Recorded on February 15, 2023; Transcribed and edited by Christopher Lopez
Keywords:
unforgettable | fault | death | shock | disorientation | devastation | lack of support | trauma | concealment | fabrication | understaffed | cutbacks | integrity of civil service
View Transcript
Retired Fireman: [00:00:01] Two guys, a Spanish guy and one of the engine guys, prepared the ladder, brought it to the building the wrong direction, the heels. Just as they dropped it there, they were gonna put it up. They tipped the ladder because if somebody jumped. So they went to do something else. So I’m there, me and one firefighter, there’s a lady on the top floor. I’ll never forget this. She didn’t have a blouse on. She’s sitting on the window sill. Now that was a 28 foot ladder. We needed a 35. We didn’t have time to go back and get it. We went up. I really shouldn’t tell you this, but they extended the ladder upside down. So they they tied it with the lanyard, the only thing that could hold it in place. I’m calling direct in company. I need truck gear. I need an engine there. It’s really involved too much with the operation, but we were there. My fault too. Not paying enough attention. When we got there, it was up. I sent the guy up. I realized the ladder was upside down. He’s on the top. I said put a leg lock in, that girl’s gonna jump and knock you off the ladder. We missed the windowsill by that much because the ladder was a little short. We didn’t have time to go get another ladder. She could’ve slipped off, came down, Jerry could’ve got her, rolled off bounce off the awning on the street. The rest of the people in the building were there all perished. Eventually when we got in at the Top Floor, we started searching I’ll never forget this. Girl came to the Top Floor window, died right on the windowsill.
Retired Fireman: [00:01:48] Hung right over the sill and died. They went up and grabbed everybody, took them out. That was it. I thought one firefighter, he was in shock. Like, didn’t know what the hell and after it was over, he didn’t know what the hell was going on. I’ll be honest with you. It was really devastating. Devastating to the men there, and there was no critical incident debriefing at the time. You had to, like, suck it in. And the best thing you could do is go back to the firehouse and talk about it a little bit. Then the chief sends somebody down to us after we write all our reports up, what we did and why we did it. I really shouldn’t be telling you this, but I’m gonna tell you because it’s a fact. And one of the deputy to come and tell us, changed our reports. I said, I ain’t changing nothing. We were short on guys. That was the bottom line. The big thing back then was cut back because it would save money. But they cut back to a point where you can’t do your job, and they detail a guy without replacing him that made a devastating difference in the first ten minutes of that fire. So he wanted us to, like I said, I’m leaving my report the way it is. And if he doesn’t like it, tell him to come down here, and I’ll give him a lesson in firefighting. And that was my answer to the deputy, and he never came back to the house again. Did you ever That’s the real story. It’s a little it’s not Sorry. Nice, but that’s how it happened.