James
Gordon Bennett Medal
Firefighter James F. Mills
Ladder Company 176
March 4, 2003, 2150 hours, Box 55-1658, 1636 Pitkin Avenue,
Brooklyn
Appointed to the FDNY on May 9, 1993. Brother is FF Richard
Mills, Jr., Engine 248; father is retired Captain Richard
Mills, Sr., Ladder 166; and uncle is retired Deputy Chief
Joseph Mills, Division 3. Member of the Emerald and Holy Name
Societies. Cited for bravery once previously.
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Medal winner FF James F. Mills (right) with his brother,
FF Richard Mills, Jr., Engine 248 (left), and father,
Captain Richard Mills, Sr., retired from Ladder 166. |
photo courtesy of FF James F. Mills |
Pitkin Avenue is a major shopping street in the Brownsville
section of Brooklyn. Among the renovations are alterations
to these nearly hundred-year-old buildings. With the turmoil
of the ‘60s and ‘70s, many of the building owners
took drastic measures to ensure security. Many of these modifications
have remained in place. Any veteran Firefighter who worked
in that area will say, A job on Pitkin Avenue is never easy.
At 2147 hours on March 4, 2003, Box 1658 was transmitted.
Within two and a half minutes, the first units arrived on
the scene and were met with a medium smoke condition emanating
from numerous occupancies. 1636 Pitkin Avenue was a two-story
taxpayer-type building, housing four separate stores. Lines
were stretched and forcible entry began.
FF James Mills, the chauffeur of Ladder 176, positioned
his apparatus and began assisting in opening roll-down gates.
Some 22 minutes into the operation, FF Robert Petrarca of
Ladder 120 transmitted a mayday.
FF Mills went down the stairs to the cellar, put his face
piece on and began following the line into the cellar. He
encountered Engine 227 members, who were operating their line
into a common hall that ran the length of the stores. There
were many radio transmissions from the units, but most alarming
was the transmission from the inside team of Ladder 120, stating
they were nearly out of air.
After communicating with Engine 227, FF Mills, knowing full
well that time was critical, proceeded to crawl toward the
front of the cellar. Due to the complexity of this occupancy,
most of the members were searching the cellar of the corner
occupancy (jewelry store) and not the cellar where FF Petrarca
was lost.
FF Mills began crawling into this cellar. This was not an
open, orderly area; this was a Brownsville cellar, filled
with many obstacles and countless debris, which had built
up over many years. The sprinklers were operating, so the
heat build-up was not intense, but a highly charged atmosphere
of dense smoke and carbon monoxide permeated the cellar.
This low-heat atmosphere allowed FF Petrarca to go further
into the cellar area. Insubstantial heat and the supply of
fresh air from his mask gave him a false sense of security.
It actually put him in grave danger since he quickly became
disoriented and crawled in the opposite direction of the only
stairway out of the cellar. The search rope of Ladder 120
ended at an unused staircase; ironically, the same point of
the breach made later in the incident.
FF Mills, alone and without the protection of a hand-line,
began his search. No one realized the wall of the common hall
did not go to the ceiling, which allowed the fire to cross
into the cellar area where FF Mills had crawled, searching
for the missing member. The only line (Engine 227) in the
cellar was back at the stair area.
After searching for nearly six minutes and covering a distance
of approximately 80 feet, FF Mills located FF Petrarca, who
was face down and unconscious in two to three inches of water.
FF Mills gave the Urgent, I got him message over his handie-talkie.
Due to the stress and physical effort it took to make it
to this point, the air in FF Mill’s SCBA was so low
his PASS alarm was going off, but he continued to transmit
his location, while trying to drag the unconscious member--who
weighed more than 200 pounds--toward the stair. The air in
FF Mill’s mask ran out and he was forced to remove his
face piece. He, too, began breathing the contaminated and
CO-heavy air.
Fortunately, members of Ladder 176 made a breach in the cellar
wall, not too far from FF Mill’s location. This allowed
members of Rescue 4 to enter, locate and assist FF Mills with
the downed member. Together, they dragged FF Petrarca to the
breach, which enabled them to remove him from the hostile
environment much sooner. (The breach was about half the distance
to the stair.)
Shortly after the removal of FF Petrarca from the cellar
area where FF Mills found him, there was a collapse. Both
Firefighters would have been buried under it. This operation
called upon a man to put his life on the line for another
and FF Mills did so without hesitation.
FF Mills’ act of bravery was accomplished alone and
under extremely hostile conditions. As Deputy Chief Daniel
Butler wrote in his endorsement, With all this going on, FF
Mills may have left and communicated FF Petrarca’s position
once safe outside himself. Instead, he decided he would leave
when they both left. This saved critical time for FF Petrarca
and prevented more severe damage from lack of oxygen and the
real possibility of his death. For his heroic actions, FF
James F. Mills is awarded the James Gordon Bennett Medal.--JTV
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