FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) — An uncle of four young children who died in an Indiana mobile home fire says survivors did “everything we could” to try to rescue the kids.
The children were ages 2, 3, 5 and 10. The Allen County Sheriff's Department says they died Thursday morning in the blaze in Fort Wayne.
Authorities have not released the names of the children, but an 18-year-old uncle who was among four people who survived the fire, Travis Garrison, spoke to The Journal Gazette. The children were his sister’s.
Garrison told the newspaper, “We tried our best to get the kids out.”
RELATED | Four children killed, four adults injured in fire at Fort Wayne mobile home
Adam O’Connor, a deputy fire chief in the northeastern Indiana city, says firefighters responded to the blaze at the Dupont Estates Mobile Home Park just before 8:30 a.m. and found the mobile home engulfed in flames.
O'Connor told WPTA that four children inside the mobile home were pronounced dead at the scene. Four adults were taken to the hospital, their conditions are not known at this time.
Firefighters say two pets also died in the fire.
-
Indy activist spends summer publishing books written by local children
Studdard, a published author himself, helped around 100 kids have their stories published into physical books this summer.Mounjaro, Zepbound pour money into Lilly, fueling a better-than-expected quarter
Mounjaro sales more than tripled in the quarter to nearly $3.1 billion. Zepbound, which is made from the same molecule, brought in $1.2 billion two quarters after regulators approved the drug.Dull's Tree Farm honors 'Peanuts' creator Charles M. Schulz with corn maze
Visitors to corn mazes across the country are finding a familiar figure in the winding labyrinth of tall stalksGrass is greener where you water it: but what if you're using too much water?
Summer heat means some Hoosiers think their grass may need a lot more water to stay green, but experts say that’s not the case.