Retired
Firefighter Wlliam Wren
Ladder 166
Memorial
Service was held
on November 3, 2001.

Sharp-Dressed
Hero
Bill
Wren fought fires for 25 years, raised two sons and when they
began thinking about careers, said: "You want something that
you love, that you're waking up in the morning and looking forward
to." That is how Mr. Wren felt about being a firefighter in
Coney Island. His family shared good times - friendships with
firefighting families, barbecues where the men cooked. But they
never heard about the danger and exhaustion. After retiring,
he became the the World Trade Center's fire safety director.
When visiting firefighters saw him in a suit, "they'd rag on
him for dressing so sharp," said his son Christopher. Off duty,
he went to art museums and watched Sister Wendy's art lectures
on TV. He grew vegetables and cooked for himself and Pat, his
wife. A trip to Ireland got him interested in his forebears.
"He was understated," Christopher said. "But in control - the
voice of reason and calm. In a family emergency, we'd look to
him. Now we're asking: 'What are we going to do now?' " Profile
published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on October 5, 2001.
duty,
he went to art museums and watched Sister Wendy's art lectures
on TV. He grew vegetables and cooked for himself and Pat, his
wife. A trip to Ireland got him interested in his forebears.
"He was understated," Christopher said. "But in control - the
voice of reason and calm. In a family emergency, we'd look to
him. Now we're asking: 'What are we going to do now?' " Profile
published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on October 5, 2001.
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