HOOVERSVILLE — Fire destroyed a vacant hotel in Hooversville early Friday, forcing a man and child to flee a neighboring apartment building.
No one was injured in the fire that erupted at 100 Main St., sending crews from five fire companies to the scene.
The inferno destroyed what was once the marquee Grand Central Hotel, which housed travelers in the early 1900s.
A state police fire marshal is searching for the cause of the 4:30 a.m. blaze that shot flames high into the night sky.
The sound of the fire alarm awoke neighbors, who watched as 40 to 50 firefighters battled the flames.
“When I looked out my bedroom window, I couldn’t believe it was burning that quick,” said neighbor DeWayne “Bum” Berkebile.
“When I looked out, the flames were about 60 to 70 feet in the air.”
The building had been condemned, but the owner, Lorraine Bodziak, was unable to pay for demolition, Hooversville Borough Council President Kenneth Karashowsky said.
“They’ve been warned to take it down,” he said. “It’s unfortunate it came down in this fashion.
“No. 1, it was an eyesore,” he said. “No. 2, we’re concerned about safety. We still have concerns about the cleanup.”
Later on, a PennDOT crew arrived to remove debris from the street as borough firefighters hosed hot spots.
“Within 30 minutes of my call, they were here with a huge payloader to clear debris from the roadway,” Karashowsky said. “We have no such equipment to handle the task.”
A man and 4-year old child were evacuated from the apartment building across the street that once was the Community National Bank.
A family dog was saved but a cat died in the fire.
A Hollsopple firefighter was treated for heat exhaustion.
The fast-moving blaze, which started in the first-floor rear, collapsed the building, said Hooversville fire Chief Jim Karashowsky, Ken’s brother.
“Within 45 minutes from when we got the call, the structure burned to the ground,” he said. “It burned quickly, it collapsed quickly.”
The intense heat melted a white fence and peeled the blue paint from the house next door.
Neighbors said the owner bought the property just a few months ago.
Borough officials are asking residents to conserve water through the weekend because 165,000 gallons of water were used to douse the flames.
“We’re at a critical low level in our storage tank,” Kenneth Karashowsky said. “The water plant will have to treat and pump water continually at least until Sunday to get us back to the normal level.”
Fire crews from Stoystown, Hollsopple, Boswell and Richland Township also responded.
“Without their help, we wouldn’t have been able to take care of it on our own,” he said.
Homepage
Landmark burns: Hooversville hotel had been vacant for years
- Tribune-Democrat News Slideshow
- Latest News
-
-
DA: Cardinal's death in Pa. probed amid odd timing
A suburban Philadelphia prosecutor said Friday she suggested that the coroner's office investigate the recent death of a Roman Catholic cardinal because of what she called "odd" timing, saying she wanted to put to rest any speculation since he died a day after a judge had found him competent to testify at the child-endangerment trial of his longtime aide.
-
Obama budget predicts $1.3T deficit for 2012
President Barack Obama's new budget predicts a $1.3 trillion deficit for the ongoing fiscal year but that would drop to $575 billion in 2018 if the president gets his wish to raise taxes and if policymakers can live within tight restraints on the Pentagon and other Cabinet agency budgets, the White House said Friday.
-
Girlfriend charged in escape
The girlfriend of a Johnstown man who is in jail with two bullet wounds has been charged with helping him escape from authorities. Richland Township police charged Erica Eillen Emmel, 21, of South Fork, with hindering apprehension, retail theft and receiving stolen property.
-
- Local News
-
-
Boswell-based summer camp adding 130 acres
A Boswell-based summer camp is expanding again, with an additional 130 acres of Ligonier-area land expected to provide more space for a growing program for inner-city youth.
-
City not seeking grant for firemen
Six weeks after a second round of layoffs, Johnstown firefighters believe they have found a way to restore their depleted manpower.
-
Six awarded Allegany College scholarships
Six Somerset County residents recently were awarded the Lucas Popernack Memorial Scholarships for study at Allegany College of Maryland in the current 2011-12 academic year.
-
Blogging with heart
Although it was probably high school English classes that propelled by career, I always liked science and history – with some notable, teacher-personality-or-competence-related exceptions.
-
Commissioners appoint three to arena board
The Cambria County commissioners, looking for new input for the county-owned War Memorial Arena, have appointed three new members to the seven-member War Memorial Authority board.
-
Boswell-based summer camp adding 130 acres
- Sports
-
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/11/12
Sports editor Chris Morelli and staffer Shawn Curtis bounce across the Pittsburgh sports landscape as they discuss reports that the Pittsburgh Steelers won’t be bringing back Hines Ward, Jordan Staal’s return to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ lineup and the ongoing battle of wills in a prospective trade that would bring pitcher A.J. Burnett to the Pittsburgh Pirates.
-
Boiling over: Boiling Springs hands Bedford a defeat in Class AA semis
Friday started well for Bedford’s wrestling team.
-
Ferndale captures win in Jess Ambroe Classic
The listed opponent for Northern Cambria in Friday night’s Laurel Mountain varsity hockey game at Cambria County War Memorial was Ferndale.
What the Reapers encountered was an emotional and purple-clad Jess’ Army.
The Yellow Jackets were able to cultivate the emotion and high spirits to a 7-1 win in the second Jess Ambroe Classic. -
[VIDEO] Muha hits milestone in Shade's loss
As the lone senior on a Shade girls basketball squad that also doesn’t have any juniors, Becca Muha has learned to lead by example.
-
Rams roll past Blue Jays
It had been a while since the Richland Rams had played a varsity hockey game. Though the Rams’ last action came on Jan. 12, Richland showed little rust as it trounced Conemaugh Valley 12-1 Friday evening at Cambria County War Memorial.
Richland (7-3-2) posted four goals in the game’s first 4:33 as it buried the Blue Jays (1-14) early.
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/11/12
- Features
-
-
Religion in brief | St. Paul's participating in national Preach-In
St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, 145 Ohio St. in the Moxham section of Johnstown, will participate in the Interfaith Power & Light’s annual National Preach-In on Global Warming today and Sunday.
- Auxiliary staging murder-mystery dinner
- A's GM Beane proud of the 'Moneyball' legacy
-
Religion in brief | St. Paul's participating in national Preach-In
- Lifestyles
-
-
Review: Netflix and Hulu's new scripted originals
Within just over a week, Netflix and Hulu are both debuting their first stabs at original scripted programming.
The shows amount to a milestone in Internet television, an early sign of the leveling between broadcasting and streaming. Programming options between TV and the Web are increasingly separated by little more than the "video source" button on your remote.
- [VIDEO] A Stroke of Genius: Van Gogh exhibit opens at Art Museum
- What was your favorite ad?
-
- Multimedia
-
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/11/12
Sports editor Chris Morelli and staffer Shawn Curtis bounce across the Pittsburgh sports landscape as they discuss reports that the Pittsburgh Steelers won’t be bringing back Hines Ward, Jordan Staal’s return to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ lineup and the ongoing battle of wills in a prospective trade that would bring pitcher A.J. Burnett to the Pittsburgh Pirates.
- [VIDEO] A Stroke of Genius: Van Gogh exhibit opens at Art Museum
- Video: Young bear, wolf play together
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/11/12









