BY STEPHEN J. BRONNER
Wednesday,
August 6, 2008 12:27 PM EDT
|

PHOTO BY REBECCIA
BENEDUCE AND MICHELLE LUNDGREN
Fellow
firefighters load the casket of
Kevin Delano, 54, who served as
Chief of the West Hamilton Beach
Volunteer Fire Department (WHBVFD)
for 12 years, onto a fire truck
on Monday, August 4. Delano died
on Wednesday, July 30 from
leukemia, which friends and
family members believe resulted
from his exposure to the
wreckage of 9/11. |
More than 25 years ago, Kevin
Delano, 54, married the love of
his life, Rosann, at Our Lady of
Grace Church in Howard Beach. On
Monday, August 4, hundreds
filled the pews of the same
house of worship to bid a
tearful farewell to the hero
firefighter.
Delano, who served as Chief of
the West Hamilton Beach
Volunteer Fire Department (WHBVFD)
for 12 years, died on Wednesday,
July 30 from leukemia, which
friends and family members
believe resulted from his
exposure to the wreckage of the
World Trade Center on 9/11,
where he helped in rescue
efforts for more than 40
consecutive hours, according to
Mitchell Udowitch, Delano’s
friend and an ex-Captain of the
WHBVFD. “It was only 54 years,
but they were the best I could
have asked for,” Delano’s son,
Kevin, an FDNY dispatcher in
Brooklyn, said. “I can’t put
into words what my father meant
to me.”
While Delano served as a
volunteer, he was employed as a
member of the United States
Coast Guard, according to
Udowitch. After serving for four
years, he became a federal
firefighter stationed on
Governor’s Island, where he
remained for 11 years, when he
received the call to become a
New York City Transit police
officer, assigned to patrol the
subways in Brooklyn.
Less than two years later,
Delano joined the Fire
Department with Ladder 146 in
Brooklyn and was soon
transferred to Ladder 142 in
Ozone Park, so he could be
closer to home and his family. |
“He worried about friends and family
first, then himself,” said Kevin Jr.,
who recalled his father as selfless.
Men, women and children, who were either
attending the services or just passing
by, stood and watched as friends and
family members — some carrying flowers,
others sobbing and clutching each other
for support — were surrounded by a sea
of blue.
A few hundred people paid their respects
to the well-loved former cop, including
members of the Massapequa, Broad
Channel, Elmont and Babylon fire
departments.
“The definition of heroism is that
heroes run into buildings when others
run out,” said Father Anthony Rucando,
pastor of Our Lady of Grace, during the
funeral Mass. “They’re fools in some
aspects but heroic in others because
they don’t think of themselves. He
[Delano] gave his life for us when
others wouldn’t go near.”
Rucando added, as his voice filled with
emotion, “We honor you because you have
been foolish. For all of Kevin’s
dedication, heroism and his ability to
be foolish for other people, he comes to
God.”
Delano's brother, Gerard, spoke for the
members of his family. "My brother was a
lucky man, he was blessed with a life of
love," he said. "When the [fire] alarm
went off, he'd get up to help someone in
need. My brother Kevin had a full life,
even though it was cut short.” Gerard
added, “During our time in the hospital,
Kevin never complained.”
After the 9/11 rescue efforts, the FDNY
retired 35-year service member Delano.
He then moved out of Hamilton Beach to
the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania,
Udowitch said. But, within a few short
years of moving, Delano was rushed to
the hospital, where he was diagnosed
with leukemia.
He battled the disease into remission
until seven months ago, when his doctors
told him he needed a bone marrow
transplant. His sister, Patti Fogarty of
Howard Beach, was a perfect match.
Without hesitation she donated stem
cells to her brother, which his body
accepted.
“He fought a long, hard battle,” Kevin
Jr. said. “She [Fogarty] gave us seven
more months we wouldn’t have had with
him.”
Two weeks ago, Delano was rushed to the
hospital near his home, and then flown
by helicopter to Penn State Medical
Center, in Hershey, PA, where he was
listed in critical condition, Udowitch
said.
On Wednesday morning, July 30, with his
family by his bedside, Delano lost his
five-year battle with cancer.
Five days later, nine men picked up
Delano’s coffin and carried it out as
“Amazing Grace” was played. A large
American flag was placed over the coffin
before it was carried to the back of a
fire truck. The words “Never Forget”
were emblazoned on the windshield of the
truck as it carried Delano’s body on a
final drive-by of the West Hamilton
Beach Volunteer Fire Department, before
proceeding to St. Charles Cemetery in
Farmingdale.
“The outpouring of support from everyone
he touched has left a mark on my life,”
Kevin Jr. said. “I couldn’t have asked
for a better way to send him off.”
During a brief graveside service, the
United States Coast Guard presented
Delano’s widow with the American flag
that draped the coffin.
Kevin M. Delano, Sr. is survived by his
wife Rosann; his son Kevin Michael, Jr.;
two brothers, Raymond and Gerard; seven
sisters: Barbara Jean, Loretta, Patti,
Cathy, Maureen, Jeananne and Vicky; his
mother-in-law, Harriett Pannhorst, who
Kevin Jr. referred to as “the rock in
our family” while Delano was in the
fight for his life.
“I have nothing but pride in what my
father did,” the younger Delano said.
“He will never be forgotten.”
The West Hamilton Beach Volunteer Fire
Department will be accepting donations
to help the Delano family offset the
medical expenses, totaling more than a
million dollars. Donations can be made
to Rosann Delano and sent to the West
Hamilton Beach Volunteer Fire Department
and Ambulance Corps at Post Office Box
77, Howard Beach, New York 11414.
Additional reporting by
Tonia N. Cimino
|