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Fire In Severn

Friday, December 14, 2012

Fire Department Seeks Help in Investigating Severn Blaze

A fire department spokesman said a fire on Telegraph Road Thursday morning may have been caused by an incendiary object.

The Anne Arundel County Fire Department is seeking the public's help in determining the exact cause of a fire that struck a mobile home in Severn on Thursday morning. The county fire marshall has determined that a fire at 7733 Telegraph Rd. was caused by an incendiary object or device, according department spokesman Lt. Cliff Kooser. Kooser said the department would like to speak to anyone with information on the fire, which started at about 5 a.m. Thursday morning. Investigators were on the scene for several hours Thursday to try and find an exact cause. Anyone with information is asked to call 410-222-TIPS. No one was hurt in the fire. See Also:

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Firefighters Respond to Mobile Home Park

It took about 30 firefighters 20 minutes to get the fire under control Thursday morning.

Firefighters responded Thursday morning to a fire at a mobile home in Severn. Capt. Michael Pfaltzgraff of the Anne Arundel County Fire Department said units responded shortly before 5 a.m. to the fire at the 7700 block of Telegraph Road. It took about 30 firefighters 20 minutes to get the blaze under control. There were no reports of injuries, and the cause of the fire is under investigation.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Fire Severely Damages Severn Home

It took 75 firefighters nearly 90 minutes to get the blaze under control on Wild Willow Way.

A house in Severn sustained hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage from a fire early Monday morning.  Firefighters responded at 12:55 a.m. to a report of a fire at 315 Wild Willow Way, according to Capt. James Rostek of the Anne Arundel County Fire Department.  It took about 75 firefighters 90 minutes to get the blaze under control. Rostek said there were two adults and one child in the home at the time, and they were awakened by smoke alarms and immediately called the fire department. The family escaped without injury. Rostek said there was an estimated $350,000 in damage to the home and its contents. The cause of the fire is under investigation. Property records show the house was built in 2007. 

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Monday, February 6, 2012

Severn Home Heavily Damaged in Fire

Fire officials said the smoke detectors were not working in a house on Egret Court. No one was hurt in the blaze.

  A fire caused about $100,000 in damage to a mobile home in Severn on Sunday morning, and officials said there were no working smoke detectors in the unit. Capt. James Rostek of the Anne Arundel County Fire Department said crews responded at 4:18 a.m. Sunday to the 1000 block of Egret Court. They found a mobile home fully engulfed in flames. Rostek said all of the occupants of the house escaped and there were no injuries reported. He said the cause of the fire is believed to be accidental. He said an investigation revealed that none of the smoke detectors in the house were operational. Editor's Note: A previous version of this story had the incorrect street name for the fire. Patch regrets the error.

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7:30 am on Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Egret is in "new" mobile home community across Route 170 from Norcross Lane. This is about a 1/4 mile south of the Severn Fire Station on Route 170.   more ›

Friday, August 12, 2011

Fire on Jones Road Destroys More Than Home

One of 12 children, Michael Williams reflects on the loss of his childhood home and what it means for the community on Jones Road.

Michael Williams stood helplessly as he watched the house he grew up in burn from the inside out.    Purchased by Williams’ father more than 60 years ago, the home represents much more than a place of residence to the people of Jones Street. Watching firefighters saw through the house’s roof to ventilate smoke was almost too much to bear for Williams, knowing that his father’s home, and its memory, was gone. The saw’s aggressive tearing caused more than several neighbors to wince as the noise echoed through a previously calm Thursday morning. “That’s home,” Williams said in a daze. “That’s history now.” Smoke slowly filtered out of the home’s windows as paramedics took James L. Williams, 91, to the hospital due to an increase in blood …

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