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Fire burns house, not owner's spirits

House in Legend Oaks Plantation damaged

The Post and Courier
Wednesday, May 14, 2008


Video

Fire heavily damaged a house on the 9th hole of the golf course at Legend Oaks Plantation off S.C. Highway 61 on Wednesday. Firefighters arrived to see the back of the large home fully engulfed in  flames.

Fire heavily damaged a house on the 9th hole of the golf course at Legend Oaks Plantation off S.C. Highway 61 on Wednesday. Firefighters arrived to see the back of the large home fully engulfed in flames. Watch »

SUMMERVILLE — A 19-year-old sleeping inside a burning house in Legend Oaks Plantation this morning was lucky there was a golf course next door.

It's not the view of the ninth hole near Plantation Oaks Way that he should be grateful for, it's the golf course employee who noticed flames shooting from the house and roused him from bed, likely saving his life.

After escaping, the teen phoned his father, Robert Masten, who had gone out for a quick errand. Masten rushed back to see flames shooting 40 feet in the air.

"It was burning intensely," the father said later while watching firefighters hose down damaged portions of the house.

The Old Fort Fire Department received the first call about the blaze around 9 a.m. They didn't have an exact address, but columns of black smoke visible from miles away told them exactly where to go, Assistant Fire Chief Joe Medlock said.

"The whole second floor on the rear of the house was fully engulfed," Medlock said.

They put out the flames within 10-15 minutes, he said, but continued to tamp down hot spots more than an hour later. The assistant chief said the cause wasn't immediately apparent.

Masten said he lives at the nearly 6,600-square-foot home with his wife and three of their adult children. Parts of the house could probably be salvaged, he said, though the family would have to relocate. Until completing repairs, they planned to stay with relatives in Charleston.

Masten, a retired Navy captain, said the family would recover. He often tells his children not to worry when they find themselves feeling as though they are stuck in a swamp, being chased by alligators. What's important, he said, is "the grace with which you get yourself out of it."

Reach Noah Haglund at 937-5550 or nhaglund@postandcourier.com




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