Md. Couple Perish In Early Morning Fire
Man, 88, May Have Been Trying to Save Wife, 84
Firefighters think Craig Reynolds might have been trying to rescue his wife, who used a wheelchair, from their Kensington home.
(By Marvin Joseph -- The Washington Post)
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Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Craig and Pat Reynolds died five feet apart, separated by the glass-paneled kitchen door of their burning home, a few weeks short of their 60th wedding anniversary.
Fire investigators believe a new refrigerator, three days out of the carton, might have sparked the blaze that claimed the Reynoldses' lives. They died early yesterday at the back door of their century-old Kensington home. She was 84 and used a wheelchair and walker to get around the house; he was 88.
"We think he was trying to get in to help her. We think she was trying to get out," said Pete Piringer, Montgomery County fire spokesman. "Their worlds collided right there, and they weren't able to make it."
They were the third and fourth fire fatalities this year in a county where 80 percent of recent fire deaths are seniors, Piringer said.
Osker Craig Reynolds and his wife, Patricia, bought the olive-shingled Victorian for $22,000 in 1960. Fire damage yesterday was estimated at $1.25 million.
The couple lived on a stretch of Baltimore Street called the Horseshoe in Old Kensington, west of Connecticut Avenue and north of the Beltway. He was a retired U.S. Commerce Department economist; she, a retired schoolteacher from the now-defunct Kensington Elementary School.
The fire broke out before 2 a.m. Crashing glass and Craig's cries for help awoke Keely Fraser in the 1898 Victorian next door.
"As soon as I opened my eyes, I could see the orange glow," she recalled.
Fraser and her housemate ran to the front door. Their pleas for help awoke Daniel O'Neill, 22, a senior at the U.S. Naval Academy who lives behind the Reynolds home. "One of them was banging on the door," O'Neill recalled. "So I pushed her aside, and I kicked it in."
O'Neill dived into a cloud of black smoke and felt his way along the wall, screaming, "Is anyone in there?" at the top of his lungs. No one replied. He kept making forays into the house until firefighters arrived.
The Reynoldses' son, Dave Reynolds, said he believes his father got out of the house through the back door and perished trying to return and rescue his wife, who had backed her wheelchair against the sink and was battling the fire as best she could.
His body was found just outside the back door, beneath the collapsed porch. Her body was recovered just inside the door, near her wheelchair and walker. The cause of death for both victims was unclear; Piringer said he was awaiting the results of an autopsy.







