Trending Topics

Firefighters from 11 Maine fire departments battle house fire

The Mechanic Falls fire chief said the time of the fire made it a struggle to get manpower on the scene

By Daniel Kool
Portland Press Herald

MECHANIC FALLS, Maine — The Mechanic Falls Fire Department and crews from 10 other departments worked to extinguish a house fire late Tuesday afternoon.

The first calls for a fire at 39 Pleasant St., near the Depot Square area, came at around 5 p.m. Minutes later smoke poured from the structure’s roof, crowned by orange flames.

Two people live in the home, and one was there when the fire started, Chief Fred Sturtevant said during a phone call late Tuesday.

“Everyone got out safely, no problem there,” Sturtevant said. “We just are glad no one got hurt.”

The fire appeared to have started near the back of the two-story structure, but its exact cause was unknown Tuesday night.

Investigators with the Office of the Maine State Fire Marshal were on the scene around 9:30 p.m., Sturtevant said. He declined to speculate on the potential cause while the investigation is ongoing.

Crews from Minot, Oxford, Auburn and beyond descended on the site to provide mutual aid, but the fire’s timing, right at the end of the workday and during rush hour, made it difficult to secure enough support, Sturtevant said.

“Everybody was getting out of work, so manpower was a real struggle for us,” he said.

© 2025 the Portland Press Herald (Portland, Maine).
Visit www.pressherald.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Trending
The new Quick Response Unit designation allows Ferndale firefighters to respond to medical calls and reduce long ambulance wait times in their rural community
The Cleveland Firefighters Hockey Fest honored five fallen Ohio firefighters, including EMT and recruit Symeon S. Williams Sr., who died during fire academy training in 2025
Therapy dogs from the nonprofit Go Team give first responders, dispatchers a chance to decompress from the emotional toll of emergency calls
The new free service notifies trained Danville community members when someone nearby is in cardiac arrest, helping start CPR and locate an AED