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Late Allentown fire chief’s name added to national firefighter Wall of Honor

Mass of Christian Burial for Christopher Kiskeravage
Donna S. Fisher
/
For LehighValleyNews.com
A Mass of Christian Burial was held at the Cathedral of S. Catharine of Siena for the late Allentown Fire Department Assistant Chief Christopher Kiskeravage on July 12, 2023.

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — Allentown’s former assistant fire chief who dedicated his life — and body — to making the job safer for his colleagues now is memorialized at the firefighter’s Wall of Honor in Colorado.

Christopher Kiskeravage died in June 2023 at 56 after a long bout with cancer. He helped launch the Allentown Fire Academy and led it for many years, turning it into a facility known for the intensity and detail of its training.

The academy now bears Kiskeravage’s name, and a stretch of Lehigh Street outside the academy was also renamed in his honor.

The International Association of Fire Fighters on Saturday added Kiskeravage’s name to its Fallen Fire Fighter Memorial in Colorado Springs, with members of his family and the Allentown Firefighters Local 302 watching on, according to the union.

The national memorial includes the names of more than 300 firefighters, including many who died from illnesses and cancers linked to their job, like Kiskeravage.

The names etched on the memorial’s walls “tell a bigger story: one of a century of sacrifice and a fire service that has given so much to keep families, businesses and communities safe,” the IAFF said in a news release.

“All the people that make up our academy were taught by Chris, shown by Chris and inspired by Chris,” Williams said. “We would not have the fire academy we have today without him."
Allentown Deputy Fire Chief Christian Williams

Kiskeravage served in the Allentown Fire Department from 1996 to 2019 before his death from occupational cancer last June. His service included 15 years as assistant chief of training.

He was “instrumental” in the development of the Allentown Fire Academy and did whatever it took to “train the next batch of recruits,” Allentown Deputy Fire Chief Christian Williams told council in May.

“He fought hard for equipment and resources to fulfill his mission. He was dealt repeated setbacks,” Williams said. “Yet he persevered. He never faltered.”

The new Allentown Fire Academy is “much more than a building,” he said.

“It is made up of people, instructors, firefighters and paramedics, all working and training together to be better public servants,” Williams said.

“All the people that make up our academy were taught by Chris, shown by Chris and inspired by Chris,” Williams said.

“We would not have the fire academy we have today without him."