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#1
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Comment: I've found this story repeated in several sermons. The account is
the same, but some may leave out details like the town name. No where can I find any confirmation of the story. With a death toll of 263, you'd think they'd be some web story somewhere. "Just before World War II in the town of Itasca, Texas, a school fire took the lives of 263 children. There was scarcely a family in town that was not touched by this horrifying tragedy. After the war, the town built a new school, which featured what was called "the finest sprinkler system in the world." The town was very proud of their new school. Honour students were selected to guide citizens and visitors on tours of the new facility to show them the finest, most advanced sprinkler system technology. Never again would a fire disaster happen. Many years later, the town made progress and grew. It was necessary to enlarge the school - and in adding the new wing, it was discovered that the sprinkler system had never been connected. .. Story told by Dr Howard Hendricks on 4 Mar 82 @ International Congress on Biblical Inerrancy in San Diego, California." |
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#2
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Huh? What is the point of that story?
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#3
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The moral is: "What a tragedy it is when we fail to hook up to the power of God available to us."
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#4
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Quote:
http://www.newlondonschool.org/index.html Quote:
Last edited by BrianB; 03 April 2012 at 05:07 PM. Reason: Fixed the quote. |
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#5
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So the number of students who were killed is wrong and the location is wrong (not even in the same country). Also, several of the stories talk about how the explosion prompted the adding of oderants to natural gas, but none of them talk about the new sprinkler system. They do talk about the newly built building being a standard for safety though.
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#6
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Eh? Both the OP and Brian's example take place in Texas.
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#7
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Oops. Not even in the same county, not country. Fingers not listening to brain.
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#8
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Yeah, I had a brief scud through 'school-based catastrophes' and considered New London, but that was an explosion rather than a simple fire. Usually if there is a subsequent fire which contributes greatly to a disaster it is specifically mentioned.
All accounts mention the catastrophic collapse of the building being the main event. Details like 'within seventeen hours all victims and debris had been taken from the site' and rescuers immediately digging through the rubble don't indicate a prolonged or serious fire; recollections and descriptions of the scene do not mention a fire. Would sprinklers have any limiting effect on a gas explosion, anyway, especially in a case like this where the ignition source was small and short-lived? ETA: and without any of that, it's unclear how someone reads 'addition of mercaptan' and gets 'sprinklers'. Last edited by Pudding Crawl; 03 April 2012 at 06:01 PM. |
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#9
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Actually, I was surprised by the fact that the real and OP versions both took place in Texas before World War II since I would have normally expected the glurge version to have mutated much more. It's also the reason it only took me seconds to find the real version.
(I searched "Texas school fire" and the New London School explosion accounted for over a third of the hits on the first page.)Yea, I think the author of the OP needs to go back glurge writing school. It needs a better hook and a moral of some kind. Brian |
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#10
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Maybe the implied moral is 'don't trust in technology, because it might be wrong and false and unconnected, but God is always there for you and prepared to sprinkle'... but they forgot the green-ink underlining.
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#11
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Hijack: IIRC, one of the reporters covering the New London story was a young Walter Cronkite.
ETA: Quote:
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#12
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To paraphrase Fernando: "It is better, my frien's, to feel saved, than to be saved."
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#13
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In a weird way it can work as a moral of focusing so much on the complexities of solving a problem, and bragging about how you solved it, that you can overlook a simple but critical step that renders all your work moot.
Sort of like spending forever trying to fix a mechanical problem only to find out the thing wasn't plugged in. That's how I took it, I cannot think of a quick and fancy way to write that up but yea. |
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#14
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As the product of a family that takes Catholicism and Glurge to an extreme level of ugh, I would assume that the moral of the story would be...
OMG! Can you believe how AMAZING our Father In the Heavens is!!!!1! Some ungodly cretin forgets to connect the sprinkler system but The Lord obviously had his angels watching over these dear children and educators because there WASN'T a fire and NO-ONE died!!! Even though they could have died without the sprinkler system. IF there had been a fire, but there WASN'T a fire... because God was protecting the poor souls when the sinners responsible for properly executing the fire safety system FAILED. AMEN!!!1!eleventy1!!! No-one died, well, at least not since the last fire(but those 298 sinners have nothing to do with this, so...) |
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#15
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As you seem to be missing your glurge, let me help.
The Church: Christ's Body to a Broken World Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Finally, Stopping to Refuel Quote:
But I'm tired of reading sermons, so I'm going to stop. |
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#16
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All right, so somewhat more helpfully, there was a fire at an orphanage in Itasca in the winter of 1939-1940. I doubt that Itasca could ever have had a school of the size indicated in the OP; so far as I know, it's a very small town and always has been. But in any case, I found the following in databases to which I have access:
"Funds Being Raised for Burned Orphanage," Dallas Morning News 26 January 1940: Quote:
ETA: Searches for the number of deaths mentioned and school fire returned nothing relevant. Last edited by Avril; 18 June 2012 at 05:08 AM. |
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#17
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Martin Luther said "Talk about feeling guilty!"?
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#18
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This story had the finest moral ever. Many years later, however, after telling and retelling, the story had to be further expanded and exaggerated beyond any shred of truth. It was discovered only then that the moral had never been connected.
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#19
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It's especially funny if you imagine Martin Luther with a Borscht Belt accent.
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#20
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Good one, ganzfeld.
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