Whitfield Wray Lipscombe

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Whitfield Wray Lipscombe

Birth
Virginia, USA
Death
4 Sep 1930 (aged 22)
Alexandria City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Lynchburg, Lynchburg City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Raised in Lynchburg and Alexandria, Whitfield W. Lipscombe became an Alexandria police officer on August 2, 1929.

On the afternoon of September 4, 1930, Private Lipscombe was at the fire station in Potomac (present-day Del Ray), when an alarm sounded. The firefighters were called to a car and brush fire along Four Mile Run. When they set off in a new engine truck, Private Lipscombe jumped on the back to assist with directing traffic at the fire scene.

Engine No. 2 traveled north on the Washington-Richmond Highway (now U.S. Route 1) and was just approaching Four Mile Run when a truck cut in front. The firefighter driving the apparatus swerved to avoid a collision but the large fire truck overturned, wrecking in a ditch.

Private Lipscombe was struck by the hose and thrown from the fire truck, suffering a broken neck and fractured skull. He was transported to Alexandria Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival around 2:30 p.m. Three firefighters on the truck were also injured, but all survived. The truck that cut in front of the fire engine was not identified.

Private Lipscombe, age 22, was survived by his parents Harry and Nellie, three sisters and one brother. Originally buried in Bethel Cemetery in Alexandria, he was reinterred in Lynchburg following his father's death a few years later.
Raised in Lynchburg and Alexandria, Whitfield W. Lipscombe became an Alexandria police officer on August 2, 1929.

On the afternoon of September 4, 1930, Private Lipscombe was at the fire station in Potomac (present-day Del Ray), when an alarm sounded. The firefighters were called to a car and brush fire along Four Mile Run. When they set off in a new engine truck, Private Lipscombe jumped on the back to assist with directing traffic at the fire scene.

Engine No. 2 traveled north on the Washington-Richmond Highway (now U.S. Route 1) and was just approaching Four Mile Run when a truck cut in front. The firefighter driving the apparatus swerved to avoid a collision but the large fire truck overturned, wrecking in a ditch.

Private Lipscombe was struck by the hose and thrown from the fire truck, suffering a broken neck and fractured skull. He was transported to Alexandria Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival around 2:30 p.m. Three firefighters on the truck were also injured, but all survived. The truck that cut in front of the fire engine was not identified.

Private Lipscombe, age 22, was survived by his parents Harry and Nellie, three sisters and one brother. Originally buried in Bethel Cemetery in Alexandria, he was reinterred in Lynchburg following his father's death a few years later.