erard P. Dewan was
not a New Yorker, and he would have told you that. He was a
Bostonian, the son of a firefighter, who in turn was the son of a
firefighter. But there were no jobs going in the Boston Fire
Department, and so he took the southbound bus and began his career
in New York five years ago.
Gerry Dewan, 35, just wanted to be a firefighter, said his friend
and landlord, Sean Cummins, also a firefighter. He was one of the
first rescuers to enter the twin towers. Along with 11 others from
Ladder Company 3/Battalion 6 in Lower Manhattan, he never made it
out.
He is the first member of his family to die in the line of duty,
Mr. Cummins said. He was not married, but had always planned to have
children and move home to Boston. In the meantime, he found a family
in the Cummins household in Rockaway Park, Queens, where he rented a
basement apartment. Two nights before the calamity, he was helping
write the names of the Cummins children on their crayons for the
first day of school. "He finally found a home with us," Mr. Cummins
said.