MELROSE, Minn. – Melrose newspaper editor Carol Moorman had just turned off the police scanner in her office on Friday and was about to leave for the night when her phone rang.
The church is on fire, someone said.
"I said a prayer, turned the corner and saw flames coming out of the sacristy," Moorman said Monday, three days after a fire that burned for hours ravaged the historic, 118-year-old Church of St. Mary.
A lifelong member of the church who was baptized there, Moorman said she and other shellshocked townspeople watched with dismay Friday night as smoke billowed out of broken windows near the church's main wooden altar, which reportedly was destroyed along with several important statues.
"Some were hugging, some were crying," she said. "We were witnessing it, but it was unbelievable."
As of Monday, the fire's cause had yet to be determined. An estimate of the damage was not immediately available.
Inspectors for the state fire marshal's office and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) were at the site, along with local police officials, sifting through the damage in hopes of finding a clue as to what started the blaze.
While the ATF typically investigates church arsons, there had been no official determination Monday that arson was a factor.