Oldest FDNY retiree who died at 103 remembered for lifetime of heroics, including response to 1960 NYC plane crash

The oldest FDNY retiree who died at 103 Friday bravely raced toward the wreckage of the infamous 1960 mid-air plane collision over the Big Apple as part of a lifetime of service – but remained humble throughout his heroics, his son recalled Sunday. Anthony Aquaro — who died just short of his 104th birthday after battling dementia in hospice care — displayed unflappable courage dating back to his service in the Navy during World War II and throughout his nearly 30-year career as a firefighter responding to blazes with Engine Company 269 in Park Slope.“He loved the fire department,” his son, Anthony Aquaro Jr.

told The Post.“It was his second family.”Aquaro Jr.

said his father rose to the occasion along with his colleagues when a United Airlines flight collided with a smaller TWA Super Constellation, killing all 128 passengers and crew on both flights, as well as six people on the ground in the Brooklyn borough.Still, the deadliest aviation accident in the world at the time left him understandably shaken.“The plane that crashed in Brooklyn flew right over their firehouse, and then it crashed,” his son said.“He didn’t come home for three days, my father.He was in rescue and recovery.

He spent three days collecting body parts.It affected him somewhat, but it was all part of that job.

You saw a lot of things that regular citizens didn’t.” When he served in the Navy as a boatswain’s mate third-class, he was stationed in the North Atlantic on a destroyer escort that was involved in sinking German U-boats, the younger Aquaro said.“We would watch all the war pictures together and he would tell me about the war,” he said.After serving in the Navy between 1942 and 1945, Aquaro Sr.became a firefighter in 1953 at the age of 31, SILive reported.Aquaro was never one to boast about his lifetime of saving others’ lives though, his son said.“He was the calmest person you ever met,” he recalled.“He didn’t like to have the spotlight shin...

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Publisher: New York Post

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