Displaced residents and relatives also have told of substandard conditions, but they say it was a place where people from difficult circumstances found each other.
Some say Gabriel House was emblematic of Fall River — a fiercely proud city despite a yearslong downturn. The city of tight-knit neighborhoods has been shaped by immigrants, including a large population of Portuguese descent, who came to work in textile mills, many of which are long shuttered.
Fall River rallies around Gabriel House
A memorial of candles and balloons grew at the site Tuesday and Wednesday. People held a vigil there, and attendees talked about the importance of community. Krista Cormier, a Fall River resident, said the fire has been “heavy on my heart all week."
“Anytime something happens, people just come together just because of this,” Cormier said, beating on her heart. “This city is full of love and support.”
But there were notes of discord. Gabriel House owner Dennis Etzkorn has said he is cooperating with investigators, but Mayor Paul Coogan said he should have been at the memorial and has criticized him for being hard to reach in the aftermath of the fire.
“To me, he should be down here every day,” Coogan said.
A long history of tragedy
Fall River has endured tragedy and controversy, from officials accusing Lizzie Borden of killing her father and stepmother with an ax in 1892 to convicting wunderkind former Mayor Jasiel Correia of fraud in 2021.
The Gabriel House assisted living facility opened on Oliver Street nearly a century after the coastal city — nicknamed “Spindle City” — roared with roughly 100 textile mills and a population of 120,000. Most of those mills were silenced by the Great Depression, while the city declared bankruptcy in 1931.
These days, Fall River’s population is about 95,000, census figures show. The city’s median household income of nearly $53,000 is a little more than half the state’s median, while the 24% poverty rate is more than double that of Massachusetts state. The city is trying to revitalize its downtown and waterfront while local and state officials are working to bring in more affordable housing.
Gabriel House was home to beloved family members
Her granddaughter didn’t like the assisted-living center, but 86-year-old Eleanor Willett wanted something that left her money to play the slots at a casino. She earned too much to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to afford a higher-priced assisted-living facility, Holly Mallowes told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
“She said, ‘I don’t need much, but a roof over my head and someplace to put my sewing machine,’” Mallowes said.
A Massachusetts native, Willett spent more than 20 years as a secretary and even worked briefly as a cocktail waitress, her granddaughter said.
Her home was always a base for everyone in her family, Mallowes said.
“My mom worked a lot, and Grammy’s was always a place we called home,” said Mallowes, 45. “We lived with her often. She was very strong. She outlived two husbands and raised five children. She was absolutely a joy.”
Kim Mackin, 71, was a violist who performed in Boston-area orchestras, according to her nephew, Austin Mackin.
She was described in a statement from family members as “gifted beyond words.”
“We will all miss Kimmy,” the statement read. “Beyond being exceptionally kind, few knew that she was a brilliant musician.”
Mackin received a full scholarship to the Manhattan School of Music and after graduating, toured the world as first chair viola.
Breonna Cestodio described her 78-year-old uncle, Richard Rochon, as “a very quiet guy,” yet a “great guy.”
“He kept to himself,” she told reporters. “He was a sharpshooter in the Army. He loved getting visits from all of his nieces and nephews.”
Rochon moved into Gabriel House about a year ago. Cestodio had little good to say about the facility, remarking that it always seemed hot inside the building.
A history of hard times and fires
The city motto, “We’ll try,” dates to the Great Fire of 1843, which destroyed much of the center of town. Other large fires altered the city forever in the 1920s and 1940s.
The Gabriel House fire is the latest disaster for the city to navigate, and it will, said Frank Sousa, director of the Saab Center for Portuguese Studies at University of Massachusetts Lowell.
“These are people who had tough lives and in Fall River found new opportunities,” he said. “This 10 years from now, 20 years from now will just be one of the many things that have happened in the city that have required resilience.”
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Previous versions of this story misspelled the last name of former Mayor Jasiel Correia and the name of Oliver Street.
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Associated Press writer Mark Scolforo contributed.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP