apollos
14th October 2002, 21:19
ARSON ATTACK
LOUISE THOMAS
12:00 - 14 October 2002
http://62.189.74.93/shared/contentbinaries/publish/158047.jpg
Police were today hunting arsonists who set fire to a Plymouth school and destroyed a block of classrooms.
St Boniface's College, at Crownhill, was this morning counting the cost of the fire which tore through a block of four English teaching rooms last night.
Thousands of pounds of further damage was caused to the main school by offenders who ran on the roof, smashing skylights.
Devastated staff and pupils were today returning to the school to view the damage which is the culmination of a summer ofcostly vandalism attacks.
The destroyed classroom block was cordoned off by scenes of crime officers and fire investigators to enable lessons to continue in the main school.
Jim Murphy, deputy head of the school, which has just celebrated 21 years on the site, said there were fears that coursework produced by students had gone up in smoke during the blaze.
Mr Murphy, who attended the fire last night along with the school's headteacher David Kavanagh, said he felt 'sick to the stomach' as he watched the block become engulfed in flames.
"We are absolutely gutted," he said. "We are assessing whether GCSE coursework has been destroyed in the fire."
The fire is believed to have been started in a single classroom at the end of a temporary block of four teaching rooms which has stood on the site since the school was moved from Beacon Park to Crownhill in 1981.
Six fire crews battled flames which raced through the roof space carried by strong winds. Station officer Jim Willey, at Crownhill, said: "At one stage the fire looked like it threatened the whole school, but we were able to prevent this."
He said the blaze was a 'suspected arson'.
Mr Murphy said the school suffered vandal attacks during the summer. Windows and skylights were broken and windows of the school's minibus were vandalised twice.
In last night's incident, five skylights were broken in the dining hall, and glass panels on many doors smashed.
Police and fire investigators were today at the school.
Contact police on 08705 777444.
Why do people bother doing things like these?
What benefit do they get from it...
I really don't understand why people do these things..
there goes all my english coursework... :mad:
LOUISE THOMAS
12:00 - 14 October 2002
http://62.189.74.93/shared/contentbinaries/publish/158047.jpg
Police were today hunting arsonists who set fire to a Plymouth school and destroyed a block of classrooms.
St Boniface's College, at Crownhill, was this morning counting the cost of the fire which tore through a block of four English teaching rooms last night.
Thousands of pounds of further damage was caused to the main school by offenders who ran on the roof, smashing skylights.
Devastated staff and pupils were today returning to the school to view the damage which is the culmination of a summer ofcostly vandalism attacks.
The destroyed classroom block was cordoned off by scenes of crime officers and fire investigators to enable lessons to continue in the main school.
Jim Murphy, deputy head of the school, which has just celebrated 21 years on the site, said there were fears that coursework produced by students had gone up in smoke during the blaze.
Mr Murphy, who attended the fire last night along with the school's headteacher David Kavanagh, said he felt 'sick to the stomach' as he watched the block become engulfed in flames.
"We are absolutely gutted," he said. "We are assessing whether GCSE coursework has been destroyed in the fire."
The fire is believed to have been started in a single classroom at the end of a temporary block of four teaching rooms which has stood on the site since the school was moved from Beacon Park to Crownhill in 1981.
Six fire crews battled flames which raced through the roof space carried by strong winds. Station officer Jim Willey, at Crownhill, said: "At one stage the fire looked like it threatened the whole school, but we were able to prevent this."
He said the blaze was a 'suspected arson'.
Mr Murphy said the school suffered vandal attacks during the summer. Windows and skylights were broken and windows of the school's minibus were vandalised twice.
In last night's incident, five skylights were broken in the dining hall, and glass panels on many doors smashed.
Police and fire investigators were today at the school.
Contact police on 08705 777444.
Why do people bother doing things like these?
What benefit do they get from it...
I really don't understand why people do these things..
there goes all my english coursework... :mad: