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Campus Alert Archive
UC Berkeley

A Couch, a Butane Lighter, and Three Dead at a Berkeley Fraternity

CAfireemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Early on September 8, 1990, a fire tore through the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity house at UC Berkeley, killing three students and injuring two. The blaze started when a couch in a communal area was ignited by a butane cigarette lighter and spread rapidly through a 33-year-old timber-frame building whose interior doors were often wedged open or stripped of their closing devices. The chapter president, returning to his car, was alerted by a friend who saw flames and ran through the house banging on doors before being forced to jump from a patio to escape.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
University of California, Berkeley
Public R1 · CA
Person-to-person alarm and fire department (pre-mass-notification era)
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTother
Approximate reconstruction63 chars
Fire! Get out! Everybody up, the house is on fire! Get out now!

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed: in 1990 there was no campus mass-notification system, and accounts indicate the warning was a person-to-person alarm as a resident ran through the house banging on doors.
The case record notes the resident raising the alarm was forced to jump from a patio to a roof and then to the ground to survive.
UPDATEother
Approximate reconstruction267 chars
Three students died and two were injured in an early-morning fire at a fraternity house near the UC Berkeley campus. Investigators believe a couch in a common area was ignited by a cigarette lighter. The cause and fire-safety conditions at the house are under review.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed: the toll of three killed and two injured is documented in fire-safety case literature and the WRAL list of fatal college fires.
The ignition source, a butane cigarette lighter setting a couch alight in a communal area, is cited as the cause in the case record.
Context

Background

The September 8, 1990 fire at UC Berkeley's Phi Sigma Kappa house is a frequently cited example in campus fire-safety education. According to a fire-engineering case study, the blaze began when a couch in a communal area was set alight by a butane cigarette lighter and spread quickly through a 33-year-old timber-frame structure clad in wooden paneling on its exits and staircases. Crucially, the solid-core doors meant to separate bedrooms from communal areas were commonly wedged open or had their self-closing devices removed, defeating the building's compartmentation and letting smoke and heat race through the house. The chapter president, who was parking his car, was alerted by a friend who spotted flames; he ran inside banging on doors to wake the occupants and ultimately jumped from a patio to a roof and then to the ground to save himself. Three UC Berkeley students died and two were injured, a toll recorded in WRAL's history of fatal college-student fires. Because the incident long predated campus mass-notification, the only real-time 'alert' was a person shouting and pounding on doors, an example of why fraternity and dormitory fires of this era drove later reforms in detection, sprinklers, and Clery fire reporting.
Analysis

Key Findings

A couch ignited by a butane lighter started a fatal fire at UC Berkeley's Phi Sigma Kappa house on September 8, 1990
Three UC Berkeley students died and two were injured
Interior fire doors were commonly wedged open or stripped of closing devices, defeating the building's compartmentation
With no mass-notification system, the only warning was a resident running through the house banging on doors
Outcome
Three UC Berkeley students died and two were injured. The fatal fire became a widely studied case in campus fire-safety literature, illustrating the dangers of combustible interiors and propped-open fire doors in Greek housing.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. News
Tags
firefraternitycaliforniahistoricpre-modern-alertfatalitiesgreek-life
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion