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Daily Record
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Lanarkshire Live

Lanarkshire son of firefighter killed in warehouse blaze says fate decided by 'toss of coin'

The East Kilbride son of a firefighter killed in a massive warehouse blaze 50 years ago has said his dad was killed due to the toss of a coin.

Derek Hooper’s father William and six colleagues died while tackling a fire at Glasgow’s Kilbirnie Street on August 25, 1972.

The team had gone in to rescue their trapped ­colleague, James Rook, when the fire ignited the hardwood ceilings on the first floor, leading to a huge 'flash over', killing them all.

It is one of the highest losses of life for the UK fire service at a single incident in peacetime.

Derek, 61, revealed his dad had stepped in to cover a shift at the station before they were called out to the fire at Sher Brothers’ cash and carry store.

The shop fitter told our sister paper, the Daily Record: “My dad worked in the North West fire station in Maryhill but they needed someone in the South fire station that day so he and a ­colleague flipped a coin for the shift.

"My dad had won and went over to help them out for that one-off shift, thinking he would get finished earlier.

"It was on that shift they got called out to the warehouse fire and he died. I was 11 when he died and I had been at school on Scotland Street, not far from Kilbirnie Street that day.

“When I got home again after school, no one was in and my mum was always in for us coming home. I jumped on my bike and headed up to the fire. I was told by a few ­neighbours and friends to go home.

“When I got back, my mum was devastated and a neighbour came out and told me that my dad had been killed in the fire.

That day will never leave me.”

Andrew Quinn, Alistair Crofts, Iain Bermingham, Allan Finlay and ­Duncan McMillan died with James and William in the blaze.

A a red plaque was unveiled at the site of the fire on Kilbirnie Street last week to commemorate the seven ­firefighters who lost their lives.

William, 43, left behind his wife Cathie and children Matthew, Elaine, Derek, Raymond and Lorna.

Cathie, who died in 2016, aged 88, continued to support the fire service and was invited to speak with the families of US firefighters at the City Chambers in Glasgow after 9/11.

Derek, who joined the fire service as a mechanic at 16 and is dad to ­Carrie, 31, and Louise, 24, has very fond memories of his own father.

He added: “In the school ­holidays he would come off the night shift and bundle us all in the car and we’d go off to Ayr or to the beach for the day.

"We lived in the ­firehouse and my dad played piano.

"There were always firefighters nipping up from the ­canteen for a sing-song on their break.

"I’m proud to be his son and honoured to be able to call him my dad.”

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