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From our February 22, 2001,
edition.
Officials
suspect arson as cause of fire
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
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The
historic Saye house went up in flames February 13. Arson is
suspected.
Enterprise
Photo |
A
fire that destroyed a historic home here last week is under investigation
as a possible arson.
Clarendon
Fire Chief Delbert Robertson said the fire was suspicious because it
started in the middle of the floor in an upstairs room.
The
historic Saye House at the corner of Kearney and Sixth streets is probably
a total loss, the fire chief said.
Authorities
were alerted to the blaze at approximately 10:30 p.m. last Tuesday,
February 13, by local businessman Jeff Howard, who lives across the street
to the north. Sheriff Butch Blackburn said Howard’s daughter heard
something and alerted her father. He noticed the fire and called the
authorities.
The
trucks from the Clarendon Volunteer Fire Department responded to the
blaze. By midnight the top floor of the two-story house was engulfed, and
firefighters worked until 4 a.m. to extinguish the fire.
“It
got into the upper attic, and there was just no way to get to it,”
Robertson said. “The downstairs isn’t hurt except for water damage,
but I’m sure it’s pretty much a total loss.”
Texas
Fire Marshall Jeff Oldham of Amarillo investigated the scene on Thursday,
February 15. Blackburn said Oldham took samples of the floor. Robertson
said lab tests will determine if an accelerant was used in the fire.
Stacy
G. Seba, a private fire investigator hired by an insurance company, is
also looking into the case.
Officials
are “99.9 percent sure it’s an arson,” Blackburn said. The
investigation was still ongoing as of Monday morning.
The
exact age of the house is uncertain, but it was believed to have been
built in the early 1900s.
Tommie
C. Saye said he thinks his great-grandfather, T.M. Little, bought the home
some time in the early 1920s. Little moved here with his family in 1910
and established Little Mercantile, the forerunner of Saye’s western
store.
The
Saye family occupied the house for more than 60 years with five
generations living there over time. Tommie Saye was born in the house in
1927. A neighbor alerted him to the fire Tuesday night.
“We
sat in the park and watched it go until about 1:30 in the morning,” he
said. “It was history leaving.”
Saye
sold the house more than 20 years ago, and it eventually was sold to
Clifford Alexander. His family lived there about 20 years.
“We
watched our girls grow up there,” said Alexander’s wife Ann. Their
family also gathered across the street in City Park as their former home
burned.
The
Alexanders moved out of the house about three years ago and had reportedly
sold it to the family of Larry Wilson.
The
house was unoccupied at the time of the fire, Blackburn said.
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