Published September 23, 2008 07:45 pm - A 2-year-old boy was killed in a basement fire Tuesday afternoon at home.
2-YEAR-OLD DIES IN FIRE
Ashtabula toddler gets trapped in burning basement
By SHELLEY TERRY - Staff Writer - sterry@starbeacon.com
Star Beacon
ASHTABULA — A 2-year-old boy was killed in a basement fire at home Tuesday afternoon.
Jorden Elliott, 2, of 3501 Hiawatha Ave., was playing in a toy room near the clothes dryer when the fire started and he became trapped, said his mother, Danette Elliott. The mother believes the dryer caused the fire. She tried to get to her child, but the intensity of the flames and the thick black smoke prevented her from doing so, she said.
An autopsy to be conducted by the Cuyahoga County Coroner’s Office could provide a tentative manner and cause of death, said James Baehr, Ashtabula County Coroner’s Office investigator. Preliminary results could be received today, he said.
“Right now, everything is in the preliminary stages,” Baehr said Tuesday night.
The Ashtabula Fire Department received the call at 3:30 p.m. and arrived on the scene three minutes later to find a well-developed fire in the basement and several reports of a child trapped inside, according to firefighter reports. Everyone else escaped without injury.
Three firefighters immediately entered the basement to conduct search and rescue operations and to extinguish the fire, according to the fire department’s report. Additional firefighters searched the first and second floors of the house, the report said.
Neighbors came out of their homes and watched from their porches and front lawns as firefighters worked. Teresa Pierce and other women from the neighborhood stood outside the house next door, held hands and prayed for Jorden’s safety. A neighbor man held Jorden’s twin brother, Jared, tightly in his arms as Elliott nervously waited for news.
Rescue workers gave Elliott’s grandmother, who also was on the scene, a cold compress for her head.
The fire was brought under control in five minutes, but the child trapped inside died, firefighters said.
When the news came of the child’s death, everyone took it very hard. Elliott, who was very distraught, was taken inside a nearby house for a short time.
Pierce leaned against the minivan parked in her driveway and wept. Other people shook their heads.
Neighbor William Abrams said it was a terrible tragedy.
“I love those kids,” he said. “They are like my nieces and nephews.”
Abrams said Elliott, a single mother, works hard as a nurse to take care of her seven children. Earlier in the day, Abrams helped her move some beds to make room upstairs for her grandmother to move in with them.
“It’s just an awful thing to have happen,” Abrams said.