Fire on Old Orange Road displaces family of seven

Fire on Old Orange Road displaces family of seven

Photo by Greg VanNostrand

Crews from Rapidan, Culpeper, Reva, Brandy Station and Salem responded to the fire at 20475 Old Orange Road, which started around 6 a.m. Sunday morning

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A fire destroyed a house Sunday morning at 20475 Old Orange Road, displacing a family of seven.

According to Lee Wilson, fire chief of Rapidan Co. 10, no one was injured in the blaze, which started around 6 a.m. on the second floor.

“It’s unknown what caused the fire,” said Wilson, who said his unit was first on location within eight to 10 minutes of the 911 call. “It would all be speculation at this time.”

Sgt. Jim Fox, spokesman for the Culpeper County Sheriff’s Office, said the blaze is not suspicious and is not being investigated by the CCSO.

Stacy Carpenter, chief of Culpeper Co. 1, was in charge at the scene but could not be reached for comment.

When Wilson arrived, flames were showing from the second floor. It took firefighters about 20 to 30 minutes to get the blaze under control.

“Unfortunately,” Wilson said, “with the winds we had, it grew rather quickly. … The flames spread quickly in a lot of hidden spaces.”

Wilson said the old farmhouse, built in the early 1900s, had balloon construction — beams that run from the foundation to the second floor. Such a configuration can cause a house to burn quickly and make it difficult for firefighters to detect flare-ups behind walls.

A spokesman for the American Red Cross said Tony Ochoa lived at the residence as head of household.

The Inskeep family owns the house under the name of Battlepark Farms.

Crews from Culpeper, Reva, Brandy Station and Salem also responded to the fire.

“It was a good team effort from everybody,” Wilson said, adding that firefighters stayed until about noon assisting family members with salvaging personal items. “They had quite a bit of things.”

Sunday’s blaze was the latest in a string of fires that have occurred in Culpeper over the past month.

“You seem to have a larger number of incidents during the holidays,” Wilson said, “because you have more time when people are home. There’s more outlets being used, more fireplaces being used, more cooking outlets being used. There’s more potential for things to go wrong.”

Landlord Jack Inskeep said the Ochoa family — five adults and two children — has lived in the house for three or four years.

“Definitely a tragedy,” he said. “Right now we haven’t had a chance to get together to see what we can do.”

Inskeep said the family is staying with friends, and the American Red Cross is providing short-term emergency assistance.

“We’re just now getting a Red Cross volunteer out there, but we’ll be getting help for them in the next few nights,” Jack Jones, of the Central Virginia chapter, said Sunday night.

The house has been in the Inskeep family since they purchased it from the Oswald Hudson family in the late 1970s. The Inskeeps farm corn and soybeans on the land, which is about half a mile south of U.S. 15.

Byrd Inskeep believes Ochoa worked for a right-of-way mowing company in the Inlet area.

Rob Humphreys can be reached at 825-0771 ext. 128 or

Editor’s note: In the original draft of this story, the Star-Exponent described the Ochoa family as Hispanic because their last name was not yet available. We felt this would give readers a better understanding of the situation and provide appropriate detail. Once we discovered the family’s last name, we inserted it into the story but forgot to remove the “Hispanic” designation. The story has now been edited correctly.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by cmmedic on December 31, 2008 at 9:48 pm

I would like to back up Willis’s comment. The important question we all need to ask ourselves does race/ethinticity really matter. The bottom line is a family is in need. Willis is right when he asked the question “What would Jesus do?“ I know what HE would do. Jesus would show them love and compassion and offer to help them not worry about what race or ethnic background they were. We all have our own heritage and different places where our ancestors came from but why should that seperate us from helping one another. That is the bottom line, HELPING A FAMILY IN NEED.

Flag Comment Posted by crystaltacza on December 30, 2008 at 6:02 pm

I use to live in this house when i was younger, and i remember having so many good memories there.  It has been such a long time since i have lived there but im sorry to see this happen, and yes my dad was hispanic so if thats an issue well sorry.

Flag Comment Posted by Hippie on December 30, 2008 at 10:12 am

sandalwood- no need to be snitty, its the holiday season & lots of families have company. And times are tough; I have 5 adults & 2 children living in my house. My ethnic origin is none of your business, assume what you want….families stick together. It’s just terribly sad for any one to lose their home and possessions, but thank goodness every one got out safe.

Flag Comment Posted by JoShmo on December 29, 2008 at 9:52 am

I know the house and it has always appeared to be old, dangerous, possibly migrant workers or otherwise fluctuating numbers of residents including at least one outside in a trailer.  One would expect it would need a fireplace and space heaters…. a fire hazard!

Flag Comment Posted by aintitgt on December 29, 2008 at 9:45 am

HAVE WE GOTTEN THAT “TRIVIAL” THAT IT MATTERS WHETHER THE ARTICLE MENTIONED THE ORIGIN OF THE FAMILY??? REGARDLESS OF RACE OR NATIONALITY A FAMILY LOSS THEIR HOME AND WE NEED TO NOT BE SO QUICK TO JUMP TO CONCLUSIONS ON THE WRITERS INTENT.

Flag Comment Posted by rogersk on December 29, 2008 at 9:13 am

Am I missing something???  I don’t see the word “Hispanic” anywhere with the exception of Ms. Ray’s comment.  Please correct me if I’m wrong.

Flag Comment Posted by xobxr on December 29, 2008 at 9:05 am

rjma, they have changed the article, the original article stated it was a hispanic family of seven

Flag Comment Posted by rjma on December 29, 2008 at 8:44 am

deb writes:  “Why was it deemed newsworthy to mention it was a “Hispanic” family?... I hope your editorial staff reads these comments and actually takes a moment to consider what they say.“

Where does the story say anything about Hispanic?

Flag Comment Posted by Sandalwood on December 29, 2008 at 8:16 am

They don’t have to be listed as a “Hispanic family”. “Five adults and two children” living with someone who has to be called the “head of household” pretty much tells you all you need to know.

I’m sorry the house burned right after Christmas but with that many adults there should be enough income for them to find other living arrangements. Right now Culpeper seems flooded with “For Rent” houses. It’s just sad the children lost all their Christmas presents.

Flag Comment Posted by Willis on December 29, 2008 at 7:06 am

Ms Ray you are absolutely right in what you stated above. However, we are in a social structure that views things in broken pieces. Some would ask, WWJD (What Would Jesus Do)? I would say that He would show compassion because He loves us dispite our flaws. Jesus (GOD) does not see us as a race (nationality) but He views us all as sheep in need of a good Shepard.
The media has and will continue to flip the story, because to them it is only a story (headline). To people that love the Lord, these are our brothers and sisters. Men sees color (race) and he divides based on color. However, GOD does not see color, He see potential.

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