The cause of the fire is under investigation.
A fire in a Philadelphia row house Wednesday morning left at least 12 people dead, eight of whom were children, officials said.
City officials revised the death toll Wednesday evening after the Philadelphia Fire Department initially reported during the recovery process that 13 people, including seven children, had died.
Two others, including one child, were critically injured and have been transported to hospitals. At least eight people were able to self-evacuate.
Firefighters were able to rescue one child from the building, but the child did not survive, officials said.
“It was terrible,” Deputy Fire Commissioner Craig Murphy said during a news conference. “I’ve been around for 35 years now, and this was probably one of the worst fires I’ve ever been to.”
The Philadelphia Fire Department’s Fire Marshal’s Office is leading the investigation into the cause of the fire.
“This is without a doubt one of the most tragic days in our city’s history,” Mayor Jim Kenney said during the press conference. “Losing so many kids is just devastating.”
The fire started in the second story of a three-story row house around a kitchen, according to the department.
Roughly 26 people lived in the building, which was divided into two duplex units. Eight people lived in a unit between the first and second floor, and 18 people lived in a unit between the second and third floor, which Murphy said was a “tremendous amount of people to be living in a duplex.”
Fire officials arrived on the scene of the fire just before 6:40 a.m. and said the fire was under control 50 minutes later.
The building was operated by the Philadelphia Housing Authority.
The city’s housing authority said the building had six working smoke detectors as recently as last May. Speaking to reporters, Executive Vice President for Housing Operations at the Philadelphia Housing Authority Dinesh Indala said housing authority inspectors visited the building on May 5 of last year, contradicting what fire officials said earlier Wednesday.
Fire officials said there were four battery-operated smoke detectors in the building, none of which were working. According to fire officials, an inspection was made in 2019 to install four smoke detectors, and the latest inspection was made in 2020, when two more smoke detectors were installed.
“I don’t know if they were replaced or tampered with. We have no idea,” Indala said.
Indala said the PHA was not aware that 26 people were living there.
“We are in total shock. Everyone is mourning the loss. We’re just trying to find out who’s in there, and we’re working with the families right now and with authorities,” he said.
ABC News’ Aaron Katersky and Will McDuffie contributed to this report.