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  • Atlanta Fire Chief Dennis L. Rubin beginning a commemoration at The Spotted Dog, which used to house Fire Station 11, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_034.jpg
  • Atlanta Fire Chief Dennis L. Rubin walks off to applause after beginning a commemoration at The Spotted Dog, which used to house Fire Station 11, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_059.jpg
  • Atlanta Fire Chief Dennis L. Rubin walks off to applause after beginning a commemoration at The Spotted Dog, which used to house Fire Station 11, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_058.jpg
  • Atlanta Fire Chief Dennis L. Rubin beginning a commemoration at The Spotted Dog, which used to house Fire Station 11, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_044.jpg
  • Atlanta Fire Chief Dennis L. Rubin beginning a commemoration at The Spotted Dog, which used to house Fire Station 11, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_043.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_129.jpg
  • Margaret Foster (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Foster, with her husband and daughter, were staying at the hotel on the night of the fire. They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_109.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq)  at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_147.jpg
  • Margaret Foster (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Foster, with her husband and daughter, were staying at the hotel on the night of the fire. They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_120.jpg
  • Connie Broom (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Broom, 1 year old at the time, was staying at the hotel on the night of the fire with her parents, Margaret and Warren E. Foster (both cq). They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_077.jpg
  • Dennis Smith, retired from the New York Fire Dept., reads from a book at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_045.jpg
  • Warren Chou (cq) (right), of the Metropolitan Fire Association, speaks to members of The DeKalb County Fire Dept. color guard at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--before the start of a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_029.jpg
  • Arnold Hardy (cq) sits at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Hardy, who was a Georgia Tech student at the time, took a Pulizer Prize-winning photograph at the scene. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_107.jpg
  • Margaret Foster (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Foster, with her husband and daughter, were staying at the hotel on the night of the fire. They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_116.jpg
  • Arnold Hardy (cq) sits at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Hardy, who was a Georgia Tech student at the time, took a Pulizer Prize-winning photograph at the scene. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_145.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_122.jpg
  • Connie Broom (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Broom, 1 year old at the time, was staying at the hotel on the night of the fire with her parents, Margaret and Warren E. Foster (both cq). They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_076.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_072.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) (center) at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_069.jpg
  • Dennis Smith, retired from the New York Fire Dept., reads from a book at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_051.jpg
  • Members of The DeKalb County Fire Dept. color guard at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--before the start of a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_023.jpg
  • Margaret Foster (cq) speaks to people gathered at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Foster, with her husband and daughter, were staying at the hotel on the night of the fire. They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_117.jpg
  • Arnold Hardy (cq) sits at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Hardy, who was a Georgia Tech student at the time, took a Pulizer Prize-winning photograph at the scene. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_139.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) (left) and Connie Broom (cq) hug  at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. Broom, 1 year old at the time, survived the blaze with her parents. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their  safety codes.
    metfire1204_082.jpg
  • Dennis Smith, retired from the New York Fire Dept., reads from a book at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_048.jpg
  • Janet Cox, a daughter of a survivor, at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Foster, with her husband and daughter, were staying at the hotel on the night of the fire. They all survived. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_110.jpg
  • Rick Roberts (cq) at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. Roberts, a firefighter at the time who went on to become battalion chief, is credited with helping to save several of the survivors. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_121.jpg
  • Dennis Smith, retired from the New York Fire Dept., reads from a book at The Spotted Dog--which used to house Fire Station 11--during a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--at 119 deaths, the worst hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their safety codes.
    metfire1204_049.jpg
  • A fire truck at commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_155.jpg
  • Sam Heys, co-author of "The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America?s Deadliest Hotel Fire," signs books at a commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_149.jpg
  • A commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_033.jpg
  • A commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of the Winecoff Hotel fire in downtown Atlanta. The fire--the deadliest hotel fire in U.S. history--caused departments across the country to update their fire safety codes.
    metfire1204_031.jpg