Roseland Church Fire Triggers 2‑11 Alarm on Chicago’s South Side

Chicago’s Far South Side was jolted Tuesday when firefighters rushed to a church in the 10600 block of South Perry Avenue after a 2-11 alarm was struck, drawing a large response from across the city. Photos shared from the scene showed thick smoke pouring from the building and multiple companies working every side of the structure. Officials did not immediately report any injuries.

The Chicago Fire Department’s media account posted several images from the scene along with a brief dispatch note reading, “2-11 alarm in the 10600 block of south perry avenue (church),” according to Chicago Fire Media. The snapshot-style update offered a quick confirmation of what neighbors were already seeing from their front steps: a serious fire and a big CFD footprint.

What a 2-11 alarm means

A 2-11 alarm is an extra-alarm fire that triggers a significant bump in resources, bringing additional engine and truck companies, along with more chiefs and specialized units to the scene. According to Firehouse, a typical 2-11 adds four engines, two trucks, one tower ladder, and several command officers, which aligns with the crowded streets and rows of apparatus visible in CFD photos.

Roseland churches and past fires

Roseland’s churches have long served as neighborhood anchors, doubling as food pantries, outreach hubs, and informal community centers. When fires have hit local congregations in the past, residents have scrambled to fill the gaps. The Chicago Sun-Times previously reported on a 2020 Roseland church fire that left a ministry hustling to keep food distribution going while the congregation worked to rebuild, a reminder of how deeply the neighborhood relies on these institutions…

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