词条 | John T. O'Hagan |
释义 |
John T. O'Hagan (April 7, 1925 – January 2, 1991) was appointed the 22nd Fire Commissioner of the City of New York by Mayor John V. Lindsay on October 11, 1973 and served in that position throughout the Administration of Mayor Abraham D. Beame until he was replaced by incoming Mayor Edward I. Koch on January 17, 1978. BiographyO'Hagan joined the New York City Fire Department in 1947 at the age of 22, and quickly rose up the ranks. Appointed Chief of Department on December 16, 1964 at the age of 39, he was the youngest Fire Chief in FDNY history.[1] Chief O'Hagan led the department through some of its most harrowing years, those dominated by the arson{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}} that plagued the city in the 1960s and 70s, a time when the city's bankruptcy forced the layoff of hundreds of firefighters. He earned a reputation as a brilliant fire officer and a tough manager, despite his initial lack of knowledge of how to work the levers of city government. Even Chief O'Hagan, commanding a leader as he was, could not thwart a 1968 revision of the building code, drafted in large part by the real estate industry, that he thought thinned the margin of fire safety. Still, Chief O'Hagan did not give up. He returned in 1973 with safety measures added to the code. But they did not apply to the World Trade Center, which, being owned by another government agency, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, was exempt from city codes — and fire inspections. On October 11, 1973 at the age of 48, he was appointed Fire Commissioner by Mayor Lindsay. He retained his position as Chief of Department while serving as Fire Commissioner. O'Hagan was the recipient of the inaugural Sloan Public Service Award in 1973.[1] He was the author of High Rise/Fire & Life Safety in 1977 and was an international authority on fire administration and fire safety. He officially retired from the FDNY on July 18, 1978, after 31 years of service. He died on January 2, 1991 in Brooklyn, New York of cardiopulmonary arrest from cancer.[2] FamilyO'Hagan was married to Kaye Tully, had three children (Catherine, Susan and Michael) and ten grandchildren (Clare, Molly, Cecilia, Emily, Elizabeth, John, Daniel, Maggie, Joseph, and Michael). References1. ^{{cite web |url= https://www.fcny.org/fcny/core/sloan/winners/?year=3079&agency=-&name=&mode=Search |title= Past Winners |website= FCNY |accessdate= May 18, 2018}} 2. ^1 {{cite news |author= |coauthors= |title=John T. O'Hagan Is Dead at 65; Fire Commissioner in the 1970's |url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20616FB3A5E0C708CDDA80894D9494D81 |quote=John T. O'Hagan, who served simultaneously as chief of the New York City Fire Department and as Fire Commissioner in the mid-70's, died on Wednesday at his home in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn. He was 65 years old. He died of cardiopulmonary arrest because of widespread cancer, which he had been fighting since July 1989, said his son, Michael. |work=New York Times |date=January 4, 1991 |accessdate=2010-03-25 | first=George | last=James}} Publications
4 : 1925 births|1991 deaths|Commissioners of the New York City Fire Department|American people of Irish descent |
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