Tolton Catholic H.S. group helps Wooldridge begin recovery after fire

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Forty-five students, families, graduates, faculty and staff of Fr. Tolton Regional Catholic High School gave their strength to the fire-ravaged town of Wooldridge.

They spent their first afternoon of Thanksgiving Break carrying debris from burned-out buildings to the curb for pick-up.

“We could not have started on the clean-up without them,” stated Wooldridge Mayor Kelly Murphy.

She said that from the hill overlooking the devastation, the students and adults rushing into the job looked like “a colony of ants.”

“They participated with such joy and happiness that it gives us hope that soon we can get back to everyday life,” she said.

An Oct. 21 fire, believed to have started with harvesting equipment, quickly engulfed 23 buildings and about 3,500 acres of property in and around the small Cooper County town.

The wind-driven flames leapt 20 feet into the air.

Interstate 70, about five miles from the town, had to be shut down for several hours due to the dense smoke.

Tim Scherrer, Tolton Catholic’s dean of academics, was stunned by photos of the fire and its aftermath.

“I thought it would be good if we could do something to help,” he said. “And then I realized that we had the week of Thanksgiving off, so there was a perfect window of opportunity.”

He contacted the parent of a Tolton Catholic graduate, who put him in touch with the Wooldridge Legacy Association, a nonprofit group that was formed to help the town recover.

Thirty-two students, seven parents, three staff members and three alumni signed up for the “Toltonsgiving” project.

They met at noon on the Monday before Thanksgiving Day and formed a convoy from school to Wooldridge.

Joining them there were Mayor Murphy, state Rep. Timothy Taylor, and Brad Wooldridge, whose ancestors gave their name to the community.

Mr. Scherrer led the assembly in a prayer “for God to keep us safe and help us help these people in the best way we can.”

The students and adults quickly formed teams and headed to the eight properties they had permission to work on.

The weather cooperated beautifully.

Can’t go home

The volunteers breached the ghostly outlines of what had been people’s homes and workplaces.

“I was stunned,” said Mr. Scherrer. “There was almost nothing left of the houses except the metal roofing, appliances and some ceramic pieces.”

Freshman Katie Sutter was there with her mother, Connie, and her brother, Matthew, a Tolton Catholic graduate.

“It’s crazy to see how much the people lost,” said Katie. “There were hardly any walls or anything left. I can’t imagine losing everything like that.”

Her group got busy right away.

“We tried to clean up a bunch of things,” she said. “We picked up metal and dragged it to the side of the road so they could come by and pick it up. My group took down what was left of a shed and got it out of the way.”

Senior Luke McBee’s group helped pull the remains of a trailer home apart and drag them to where they could be picked up for recycling.

Entering the outline of one destroyed home, Luke’s group found a metal sink full of porcelain dishes that were being washed when the fire broke out.

“It’s hard to imagine how completely normal everything was, right up to when the fire hit and the people had to run for their lives,” he said.

In another sink, Luke saw how glassware had melted into the ceramic bowls and cups.

“The bowls were filled with solid glass in the shape of the bowl,” he said. “There must have been water in the sink, because the silverware was untouched by the fire.”

Lost and found

All were amazed to see a bathtub with water running out of the faucet. The utilities to that part of town had been shut off.

Katie saw what looked like a clump of jewelry that had been melted together.

She also found a dog bowl next to a cage that had melted.

“It was really sad to see,” she said. “I love dogs, and I wondered where this one had gone.”

Another group found a lone bowl intact in what used to be a kitchen.

“They gently set it out by the mailbox,” said Mr. Scherer, “because it was probably the only thing left of that house.”

“In a way,” said Luke, “imprints of their daily lives were preserved in the ashes.”

Firefighters had saved the post office, the community center and historical Wooldridge Baptist Church from the fire.

“The church is an all-wood building right next to a house that had burned completely down to the ground,” Luke noted.

“The church had some damage, but it’s amazing that it survived,” he said. “There should have been no way it was still standing the way it was.”

“It was like someone had put a wall up to keep the fire away from the church,” said Katie.

Mission-focused

Within a few hours, the ruined landscape looked very different.

“I was amazed at how much we could get done,” said Luke. “Pretty much any of the sheet metal was picked up and gone before we left.”

He was happy to see how fellow students — some who hardly knew each other — could unite so well for a good cause.

“There were people I had seen but never talked to,” he said. “And then here I was, standing side-by-side with them and cleaning up whatever we could.”

Mr. Scherer referred to it as “trial by ash.”

“The adults didn’t have to tell anyone what to do,” he noted. “No one was standing around. Everyone just found a purpose and got to it.”

Katie called it a good learning experience for everyone who took part.

“Working together as a team, we were able to clean something up that looked almost impossible to clean up,” she said.

State Rep. Taylor brought pizza for the hungry workers.

The volunteers then gathered for a group photo next to a gutted building that belongs to a branch of the Wooldridge family.

Perfect storms

Dr. Dan Everett, principal and president of Tolton Catholic, said he was proud of how members of the school community worked together to help people in need.

“We are truly blessed to have such caring and involved families,” he said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected by the Wooldridge fire.”

Mr. Scherrer noted that the students didn’t go into this project in search of accolades.

“It was just something that needed to be done, and we had the people to do it,” he said.

“Just as a perfect storm of unfortunate events led to all of this damage, another perfect storm in terms of timing and circumstances and heartfelt kindness from our students brought all of this together,” he stated.

State Rep. Taylor said that when things like the Wooldridge fire happen, “folks need to look to their faith, their friends, and their community.”

“The good people from Fr. Tolton Catholic High School covered all of those,” he said. “Though they may not be friends with anyone affected by the tragedy, they reached out to those in their time of need, and the people of Wooldridge will forever be indebted by the generosity shown.

“No one knows God’s plan,” Rep. Taylor noted, “and sometimes the journey is a struggle. But it’s obvious that God worked through all of those who came to assist their brothers and sisters in need.”

Mayor Murphy said thinking about what the students did warms her heart.

“They were amazing, stepping up for a town and people in need,” she said.

“Because of God,” she added, “all things are possible!”

 

To see a video of the students at work in Wooldridge, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gC71FU_iGP0

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