Fire destroys historic farm, 2 houses, kills 23 farm animals | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Fire destroys historic farm, 2 houses, kills 23 farm animals

A firefighter on Monday, April 2, 2018, sprays water into a burned house on an historic family dairy farm in Waterbury, Vt., that was destroyed by fire Sunday evening. Twenty-three cows and calves were killed in the blaze that destroyed two homes and a barn. (AP Photo/Lisa Rathke)
Original Publication Date April 02, 2018 - 6:46 AM

WATERBURY, Vt. - A blaze that destroyed a historic family dairy farm, including two homes, and killed 23 cows and calves was an accident, Vermont fire officials said Monday.

The fire started in the Wallace farm's milking parlour, but investigators were not certain of its exact source, said Waterbury Fire Chief Gary Dillon.

Rosina Wallace, 71, ran the farm that her great-grandparents bought in 1866. Her brother, K. Alan Wallace, helped her run it. They both stood by Monday as an excavator tore down the farmhouse where they both grew up and where he currently lived.

Rosina Wallace's home on the property also was destroyed. Family and community members stopped by with food and to offer condolences and help throughout the morning.

"It's holding me up," Rosina Wallace said of the support.

"There's an awful lot of people who have to go through this, so I know I'm not the only one and it can't be any worse for me than it is for other people that have had to go through it," she said.

The barn and farmhouse were 152 years old, so the wood was extremely dry, said Fire Chief Gary Dillon. There also was a lot of hay, wood chips and sawdust.

High winds fed the fire, and a lack of water initially made it difficult to fight, he said.

No injuries were reported.

Rosina Wallace hosted numerous school groups at the farm over the years.

"This is just a different world," she said on the Cabot Creamery website. "Even for kids who grow up right next door, if they don't come visit the farm, they don't make the connections."

Wallace worked hard and long to keep the farm going after her father died, said former neighbour Bob Severidt, of Duxbury.

"The cows were her kids," he said. "And so she lost them and it's going to be a real heartbreaker."

News from © The Associated Press, 2018
The Associated Press

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