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Waynes Stuff 13
HEY GUYS HERE ARE JUST SOME OF THE PIKE POLES VARIOUS
FIRE DEPARTMENTS USED.
OURS WERE BASICALLY LIKE THE TOP LEFT CORNER WITH SOME VARIATIONS
 
   
  
 
BESIDES THESE HOOKS THERE WAS ANOTHER
"HOOK" ON A HOOK
AND LADDER TRUCK, THEREBY GIVING IT ITS NAME.

THE ABOVE IS THAT HOOK. I HAD TO CREATE
THIS PICTURE AS THE ONLY PICTURES I FOUND WEREN'T VERY CLEAR...
IT LOOKED LIKE IT WAS ABOUT 12 TO 18 INCHES IN DIAMETER FROM THE PICTURES I
SAW. IT WAS ATTACHED TO A LENGTH
OF CHAIN ABOUT 10 FEET LONG. THAT WAS THEN ATTACHED TO A THICK ROPE.
THE HOOK WAS EITHER THROWN OVER THE ROOF BOARDS OR POSITIONED BY THE OTHER
END OF A PIKE POLE INSERTED IN
THE HOLLOW END OF THE CIRCULAR HOOK. THEN THIS ROPE WAS ATTACHED TO
HORSES TO PULL DOWN THE HOUSE IN
CREATING A FIRE BREAK.. THIS FIRE BREAK PREVENTED THE FIRE FROM LEAPING FROM
HOUSE TO HOUSE AND
DESTROYING ENTIRE BLOCKS.
AT TIMES CITIES USED GUNPOWDER TO BLOW UP HOUSES TO CREATE A FIRE BREAK
THERE IS STILL ONE MORE POLE THAT WAS CARRIED LONG, LONG
AGO. I HAVEN'T FOUND ANY PICTURES OF IT TO CREATE
ONE. WHAT IT WAS IS A LONG POLE WITH A "SWAB" ON THE END. THE FIREMEN DUNKED
THE SWAB IN WATER AND USED IT
TO BEAT OUT FIRES ON THE WOODEN SHINGLES OF HOMES.
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE

HEY GUYS I KNOW YOU REMEMBER THIS, ESPECIALLY YOU OLD TRUCK
GUYS.
THE HARDIE GUN
REMEMBER YOU HELD ONE HAND ON THE HANDLE AND THE OTHER AT THE FRONT ,KIND OF
LIKE A MACHINE GUN AND
ATTACKED MR. FIRE.
THE TRIGGER HAD , I THINK, THREE CATCHES THAT ALLOWED YOU TO SET IT ON THE
DESIRED WATER FLOW.
NOW I ALSO KNOW SOME OF YOU SENIOR CITIZENS FORGOT WHAT WE KEPT IN THE GLOVE BOX

THE HARDIE GUN
ELBOW
NOTE ,I HAD TO CREATE THIS AS I COULDN'T FIND ANY PICTURES OF ONE.
WHILE THE HARDIE GUN WAS ABOUT 2 FEET LONG , THE ELBOW
WAS ONLY ABOUT 5 TO 6 INCHES LONG
ALSO WE JUST HAD THE ELBOW IN THE
GLOVE BOX. THE TIP YOU SEE ON THE END IS UNSCREWED FROM THE
GUN AND
SCREWED ON THE ELBOW, THEN THE
ELBOW ASSEMBLY IS SCREWED ON THE
HARDIE GUN END.
REMEMBER WE USED THIS SETUP TO SHOOT UP FURNACE CLEAN OUTS AND
APARTMENT INCINERATOR TRASH CHUTES.
THOSE WERE THE GOOD OLD DAYS, WEREN'T THEY GUYS
NOW GO TAKE A NAP WHILE I CREATE ANOTHER ONE OF THESE "WAYNE'S STUFF" COLUMNS,
"YOU OLD FARTS"
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
 
HEY GUYS
I KNOW YOU REMEMBER THESE
WE ALL WANTED THE JOB SO MUCH THAT WHATEVER IT TOOK WE WERE GOING TO DO.
IF I CAN RECALL THE EVOLUTION'S INVOLVING THE LADDER , BELT AND ROPE
(1) STARTING FROM THE CANVAS WE WENT FROM THERE TO THE TOP, WINDOW TO WINDOW
AND DOWN AGAIN
(2) STARTING FROM THE CANVAS WE WENT TO THE TOP AND THEN HAD TO HOOK INTO THE
LADDER WITH OUR POMPIER
BELT AND LEAN BACKWARDS AS FAR AS POSSIBLE WITH ARMS OUTSTRETCHED
(3) WE HAD A PARTNER STAND IN THE WINDOW FACING OUTWARD HOLDING ON TO TWO
INTERIOR HANDLES WHILE WE,
.
FACING INWARDS, HOOKED INTO HIS POMPIER BELT WITH OURS. THEN WE HAD TO
LEAN BACKWARDS AS FAR AS
POSSIBLE WITH ARMS OUTSTRETCHED
(4) WE CHANGED POSITIONS AND BECAME THE INTERIOR MAN
(5) WE HAD TO HOOK INTO THE ROPE AND SLIDE DOWN USING THOSE HEAVY GLOVES TO
CONTROL OUR DECENT.
(6) WE HAD TO HOOK INTO THE ROPE , THEN WITH THE GUYS DOWN BELOW HOLDING THE
ROPE. WE HAD TO SLIDE DOWN
WITHOUT TOUCHING IT. THE GUYS DOWN BELOW PULLED ON THE ROPE TO CONTROL
OUR DESCENT
-
The Pompier
Ladder
-
-
New York City learned
of a new life saving ladder invented by a Lieutenant from St Louis named Chris
Hoell. This new ladder was called the Chris Hoell Life saving device. It was
shaped like a question mark with saw type teeth in the hook portion and rungs
affixed to the long part. A skilled freighter could start from the ground and
scale the outside of a building to the roof. The hook part was plunged through
the window and pulled into the sill. The firefighter would then climb up and
into the window. Stradling the sill, he now pulled the ladder up and plunged
it through the next higher window and repeated this procedure until he reached
his destination.
-
FDNY bought this new
devise. Special units were formed and trained with this latest life saving
tool. The year was 1882, the Hoell life saving device was placed into service.
-
The first rescue made
using the Hoell devise occurred on April 7, 1884. Firefighter John Binns of
Ladder Company number three climbed up the outside of a burning Saint George
Flats apartment house to the sixth floor. An aerial was raised to Binns
location, it was maxed out, Firefighter Binns climbed onto the tip of the
aerial. Using his pompier ladder, he climbed up to the seventh floor and
rescued a trapped elevator operator named Louis Castigan. Binns brought the
frightened young man down over the pompier ladder to the aerial where he was
safely delivered to the ground. Firefighter John Binns was awarded the James
Gordon Bennet Medal, which is the highest award presented by the New York City
Fire Department.
-
Pompier ladder
rescues wrote new chapters in the proud history of firefighting. Old film
footage of parading firefighters often shows special groups of firefighters
marching while carrying their special rescue tool.
Pompier ladders remained in service on apparatus for many years. The last
rescue made using a pompier ladder was accomplished on December 15,1967. FDNY
Firefighter Gene Dowling of Ladder Company Number Twenty-Five made this
dramatic rescue. Firefighter Dowling responded to a fire in the Morgan Post
Office. This fire went to five alarms. Dowling spotted three trapped postal
employees at a window. Ladder Company Twenty Five quickly raised it's hundred
foot aerial but it was one story sort of the terrified postal workers.
Firefighter Dowling grabbed a pompier ladder and climbed the hundred foot
aerial to the tip. The window was just above a large out cropping of
decorative granite. Dowling, in a thirty mile per hour wind, raised the
pompier ladder over his head and made his first attempt at placing the pompier
into the windowsill, he missed, but held onto the ladder. Mustering all his
strength he made a second attempt. The pompier ladder just cleared the granite
and made it into the sill. Firefighter Dowling then climbed up the Pompeir
ladder and one by one brought down all three postal workers. Firefighter Gene
Dowling received the James Gordon Bennet medal for this rescue. Ironically the
first and the last rescues made using the pompier ladder both resulted in the
awarding of the James Gordon Bennet Medal.
-
Pompier ladders are used in training for all FFOPs in the Boston fire
Department drill school but they are no longer carried on the apparatus.
-
When you hear about
pompier ladders it conjures up thoughts of horse drawn apparatus and a
colorful long gone era in firefighting history.
-
But think again, The
New York City Fire Department carried pompier ladders on their apparatus up
until July 11, 1996 when they were officially placed out of service
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE

HEY SOME OF YOU REALLY OLD TIMERS
DO YOU REMEMBER THESE
I CAME ON IN 1962 AND IN 1963 I CAN RECALL BEING IN THE BASEMENT OF LADDER 22
AND SEEING ONE OF
THESE SPITTOONS, ALSO KNOW AS CUSPIDORS I
NEVER SAW ONE IN ACTUAL USE. THE FEW TOBACCO
CHEWERS WE HAD ON THE JOB WALKED AROUND WITH A POP CAN OR BOTTLE THAT THEY SPIT
IN.
I FOUND THREE NAMES FOR SPITTOONS
CAST IRON GRANITEWARE SPITTOON
WHITE STONE SPITTOON
GUTTA-PERCHA SPITTOON
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE ABOVE ARE
I DID FIND OUT THAT THE YOUNGEST MAN CLEANED THEM.
THERE WAS ALSO ANOTHER NAME I HEARD ASSOCIATED WITH THEM. THEY WERE REFERRED TO
AS
GABOONS
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE
TODAY...................................................AND IF YOU'RE CHEWING,
SPIT, DON'T SWALLOW.
WAYNE
Hi Wayne, See what you can
find out about pompier "axes", and leather belt sheaths. All I know (from my
father) is that they were a very small axe. They were in use early on in my
father's time.

THESE ARE WHAT
I COULD FIND, AND THEY ARE THE POMPIER AXES THAT YOU REFER TO.
I COULD NOT LOCATE THEIR HOLDERS.
Hi Wayne, The "axes" are really
neat! So, after all these years I am seeing them for the first time. They
look like my father described them. He called them "fancy". He also
informed me that no one was allowed to use them. Hell, I would like
to have one . I like the top one in the picture best. It's form is more like
the full size axes.
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
HEY YOU OLD GUYS
I KNOW YOU REMEMBER THESE PIPES

THE ROCKWOOD
AND THE ELKHART
NOZZLES
NONE OF THOSE NEW FANCY PIPES WITH PISTOL GRIPS FOR US .
NO, WE HAD TO STRUGGLE WITH SQUEEZING THE LINE UNDER ONE ARM AND HOLDING ON
THAT HANDLE
WITH THOSE FIRST ISSUED YELLOW
DISHWASHING GLOVES OR THE RED
BALL GLOVES WE
BOUGHT ON OUR OWN. I DON'T THINK THE GLOVES THEY ISSUE NOW WOULD EVEN FIT IN
THE OPENINGS
OF THOSE OLD HANDLES.
NO FLUSH FEATURE ON EITHER ONE. IF IT CLOGGED FROM THE JUNK IN THE HYDRANTS
, TOUGH LUCK.
I KNOW YOU REMEMBER HOW THE ROCKWOOD BEING SO HEAVY THAT EVEN IF YOU STUCK IT
IN THE
MIDDLE OF THE BUNDLE WHEN YOU MADE IT, IT WOULD A T TIMES POP OUT WHILE
CARRYING THE
BUNDLE TO A FIRE. THEN IT WOULD BASH INTO YOUR KNEES. YOUR KNEES ARE HURTING
EVEN BEFORE
YOU HAVE TO GO TO WORK AT THE FIRE.
AH YES, MEMORIES
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
DID YOU KNOW
THE MAIN PURPOSE FOR THE TRAPDOORS THAT
COVERED THE POLE HOLES WAS NOT JUST TO PREVENT
THE FIREMEN FROM FALLING THROUGH TO THE FIRST FLOOR . POLES WERE INSTALLED
DURING THE
HORSE ERA AND YOU KNOW WHAT COMES WITH
HORSES, HORSE AND HORSE SHIT SMELL ALONG
WITH
FLIES SINCE THE FIREMEN SLEPT UPSTAIRS
THE TRAPDOORS PREVENTED THE SMELLS AND FLIES
FROM
ENTERING THEIR EATING AND SLEEPING AREA. ALSO HORSES HAVE A HABIT OF GRINDING
THEIR TEETH
, STOMPING THEIR FEET AND MOVING AROUND THEREBY RATTLING THEIR HARNESS CHAINS.
THE
TRAPDOORS PREVENTED THIS NOISE FROM DISTURBING THEM.
DID YOU KNOW
THE "MYTH" ABOUT THE CENTER HORSE
SINCE I HAVE BEEN DOING THESE COLUMNS I HAVE
BOUGHT ALMOST 40 BOOKS ON FIRE DEPARTMENTS.
I HAD ALWAYS HEARD THAT THE CENTER HORSE OF A THREE HORSE TEAM WAS THE
DUMBEST AS HE
DIDN'T HAVE TO MAKE ANY DECISIONS AS TO TURN LEFT OR RIGHT, HE JUST FOLLOWED
THE LEAD OF THE
TWO OUTSIDE HORSES.
TWO WELL KNOWN FIRE DEPARTMENT HISTORIANS, CLARENCE WOODWARD AND PAUL DITZEL
WROTE
ABOUT THE CENTER HORSE.
FROM CLARENCE WOODWARD..........THE CENTER HORSE WAS THE MOST GRACEFUL OF
A THREE HORSE
TEAM.
FROM PAUL DITZEL..........THE CENTER POSITION WAS WHERE THE BEST HORSE
WAS TRAINED TO GO.
ON TURNING
.............THE CENTER HORSE HAD HIS REINS PULLED FIRST TO TURN.
THEN AS HE
BORE TO THE LEFT OR RIGHT THE TWO OUTSIDE HORSES STARTED TO FOLLOW HIS LEAD. AT
THAT POINT
THE DRIVER WOULD PULL THEIR REINS AND THEY WOULD ALSO NOW TURN LEFT OR RIGHT
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
DID YOU KNOW
THAT THE MOST DESIRED OF HORSES WERE CROSSBREEDS OF
MARE GRADE DRAFT HORSES WITH
MORGANS AND PERCHERONS.
DID YOU KNOW
THAT HORSES GOT TRANSFERRED JUST LIKE US GUYS DID.
THE REASONS WERE TO EXTEND THEIR WORKING LIFE. THEY WENT FROM BUSY COMPANIES TO
SLOWER
ONES TO GIVE THEM A REST. THEY GOT VACATIONS TOO.. THE CITIES HAD AN
INVESTMENT IN THESE HORSES THAT WAS
TO BE PROTECTED. ALSO SOME WOULD NOT WORK OUT AT CERTAIN HOUSES,
EITHER WITH THE
DRIVER OR AROUND SOME OTHER HORSES. THEY SOUND JUST LIKE TYPICAL FIREMEN.
THE EXPECTED SERVICE LIFE WAS 4 YEARS BUT EVERY BOOK LISTED DIFFERENT
AMOUNT OF YEARS . SOME
HORSES LASTED 20 YEARS, SOME ONLY A COUPLE OF YEARS IT APPEARS IT DEPENDED ON
MANY
VARIABLES, BUSY COMPANY, WEATHER, CARE, ACCIDENTS, KIND OF JUST LIKE OUR
GUYS.
Fire horses came in three
classifications:
- The lightweight: 1,100 pound horses that were used on the
hose wagons,
- The middleweight: 1,400 pound horses that were used on the
steamers, and
- The large, 1,700 pounders that were used to pull the hook and
ladders as well as other heavy equipment.
DID YOU KNOW
THE LAST RUN FOR DETROIT HORSES WAS APRIL 22, 1922 AND
WAS A CEREMONIAL RUN FROM ENGINE 37 , CENTRAL AND
DIX, TO THE DOWNTOWN AREA
FROM A
WEB SITE
Detroit Fire Dept. horses dash into history
The Detroit Fire Department
acquired the first motorized fire engine in the world, a Packard. Objections
by firefighters and Detroiters over the replacement of their beloved horses
continued for years. The horse, it was argued, was much more reliable.
Motorized vehicles started with difficulty and broke down frequently.
The firemen joked about the ridiculous purchase,
nicknaming it the "Hustle Buggy."
Over the years, some 500 horses served the Detroit Fire Department, with an
average working life of four or five years. Pounding hard city pavement at
high speeds took a heavy toll on the animals. Always, after dousing a blaze,
the firefighters cared first for their hard-working horses.
Inevitably, the reign of the horse ended as engineering improved on
automobiles.
On April 10, 1922, more than 50,000 people gathered to witness the historic
last run by Detroit Fire Department horses. The last five -- Peter, Jim, Tom,
Babe and Rusty -- dashed down Woodward Avenue on a symbolic final emergency as
a fake alarm sounded at the National Bank Building. Nostalgic spectators lined
Woodward from Grand Circus Park to Cadillac Square, cheering while the fire
department's band played Auld Lang Syne. Many in the crowd, according to The
Detroit News, cried as the horses passed.These last five hoofed firefighters
retired to an "Equine Elysium" in Rouge Park.
It
was the economy and efficiency that dictated the change. In Chicago it began
in 1917 under the direction of John F. Cullerton, the fire departments
business manager. Horses sold for approximately 265.00 and cost an additional
3,621.00 on an average per year to feed and care for. Motorized vehicles cost
about 1,000.00 per year to maintain. The savings in fire losses alone were
estimated at about one million annually. This was a direct result of the speed
and efficiency in responding.
But, just as in Detroit, progress was relentless throughout the United States.
In April of 1921, the Chicago Fire Department still had 350 horse drawn fire
apparatus. Committees were sent to other cities to see how the motorized
engines and equipment were working. When they returned, they were ecstatic.
The manager, Cullerton, rattled off figures to demonstrate how the gas
guzzling engines would serve the city better than the horse drawn carts.
Not everyone supported this change. One of the drivers, William Moir from
Engine Company 105 wept as his horses were retired from service in 1922. "I
never abused you, but I made you get over the ground," he told them as they
were led away. "I feel like I've lost my best friends." Moir was twice
decorated for saving lives in the line of duty. He joined the department
because of his love of horses. He announced that he would quit the day his two
"black beauties" were sent out to the pasture.
Still, tales of smart horses abounded. Babe at Engine Company # 106 was said
to have stolen tobacco from firemen's pockets and oats from the feed box by
learning to pick the lock with his teeth. One of the horses actually led a
lost driver not only to the fire, but also to the closets hydrant, this with
the help of the Dalmatian.
But on that historic day in February 6th., 1923, Chicago's Mayor Bill Thompson
joined other dignitaries, the Chicago Fire Department's band, Fire Chiefs,
firemen and their families, as well as thousands of spectators to watch the
horses respond to their last fire bell. Buck, Beauty, Dan and Teddy answered
their false alarm as if it were the real thing. They never returned to the
station...
Buck and Beauty were sold to a country pastor. The fates of Teddy and Dan were
not documented. However, seven months later, an ex-fire horse named Ted was
hit by a speeding auto while pulling a milk wagon. The accident took place at
47th Street and Michigan Avenue. None of the drivers were hurt, just Ted.
Thrown to the ground with his leg and hip broken, Ted lay still as people
gathered and a police patrol car sped to the scene. As the police unit
approached with its bell clanging, Ted, conditioned to respond to the bell,
pulled himself off the ground. He rose to three legs, plunged ahead a few feet
and collapsed.
A veterinarian, with tears in his eyes, ended Ted's misery with a bullet.
That was his last alarm...
MAKE SOMEONE REMEMBER TODAY
WAYNE
BELOW IS WHAT I
FOUND ON THE WEB ABOUT HORSES OUT IN CALIFORNIA , NOTE THE NAMES WERE JUST
SIMPLE NAMES TO AVOID CONFUSING THE HORSE AS YOU HAD TO SHOUT HIS NAME, NOT LIKE
RACE HORSES THAT HAVE MOSTLY TWO WORD NAMES
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
HORSE DEPARTMENT
| No. |
Name |
Color |
Purchased |
Age |
Weight |
Height |
| 1. |
Babe |
chestnut |
1889 |
21 |
1300 |
16.3 |
| 4. |
Dick |
bay |
1892 |
16 |
1310 |
16.1 |
| 5. |
Bob |
bay |
1892 |
17 |
1400 |
16.1 1/2 |
| 6. |
Bob Second |
bay |
1893 |
18 |
1425 |
17.0 |
| 8. |
Toby |
bay |
1894 |
15 |
1100 |
16.1 |
| 10. |
Ned |
brown |
1895 |
14 |
1250 |
16.2 1/2 |
| 11. |
Paddy |
black |
1895 |
15 |
1100 |
15.3 1/2 |
| 13. |
Rowdy |
gray |
1896 |
13 |
1370 |
16.1 1/2 |
| 14. |
Sam |
chestnut |
1896 |
13 |
1510 |
17.0 |
| 15. |
Izzy |
roan |
1896 |
12 |
1350 |
16.2 |
| 16. |
Major |
roan |
1896 |
13 |
1500 |
17.2 |
| 17. |
John |
bay |
1896 |
11 |
1270 |
17.1 |
| 18. |
Mike |
black |
1896 |
13 |
1375 |
17.2 |
| 19. |
Dandy |
black |
1896 |
13 |
1350 |
17.0 1/2 |
| 20. |
Rock |
gray |
1896 |
13 |
1350 |
16.2 1/2 |
| 21. |
Rufus |
brown |
1897 |
14 |
1225 |
16.0 1/2 |
| 22. |
Pete |
chestnut |
1897 |
13 |
1275 |
17.0 |
| 23. |
Patsey |
bay |
1897 |
12 |
1250 |
16.2 |
| 24. |
Dave |
bay |
1897 |
13 |
1500 |
17.2 |
| 25. |
Yukon |
chestnut |
1897 |
12 |
1300 |
16.3 1/2 |
| 26. |
McKinley |
bay |
1897 |
13 |
1400 |
16.0 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 28. |
Dewey |
bay |
1898 |
11 |
1100 |
16.0 1/2 |
| 29. |
Ike |
chestnut |
1898 |
12 |
1150 |
16.2 |
| 30. |
Jerry |
gray |
1899 |
9 |
1250 |
16.0 |
| 31. |
Barney |
bay |
1899 |
10 |
1450 |
17.0 |
| 32. |
Tom |
bay |
1899 |
11 |
1500 |
17.0 |
| 33. |
Jeff |
bay |
1899 |
11 |
1350 |
16.3 |
| 34. |
Moses |
bay |
1899 |
13 |
1250 |
17.0 |
| 35. |
Henry |
bay |
1899 |
11 |
1400 |
16.2 |
| 36. |
Pacific |
gray |
1899 |
10 |
1235 |
16.2 |
| 37. |
Buck |
chestnut |
1899 |
11 |
1300 |
16.3 |
| 38. |
Bunch |
black |
1899 |
12 |
1350 |
17.0 |
| 39. |
Dugan |
black |
1899 |
10 |
1200 |
16.3 |
| 40. |
Sadie |
bay |
1899 |
12 |
1200 |
16.2 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 42. |
Belle |
gray |
1899 |
10 |
1300 |
16.0 |
| 43. |
Don Juan |
gray |
1899 |
10 |
1200 |
15.2 1/2 |
| 44. |
Eagle |
gray |
1899 |
12 |
1150 |
15.2 |
| 45. |
Chub |
bay |
1899 |
14 |
1400 |
16.2 |
| 46. |
Yankee |
chestnut |
1899 |
13 |
1000 |
16.1 |
| 47. |
Gray Prince |
gray |
1900 |
12 |
1225 |
16.2 |
| 48. |
Kruger |
gray |
1900 |
11 |
1400 |
16.3 |
| 49. |
Kid |
gray |
1900 |
9 |
1350 |
17.0 |
| 50. |
Aguinaldo |
gray |
1900 |
11 |
1200 |
16.1 |
| 51. |
Gentry |
bay |
1900 |
10 |
1060 |
16.1 |
| 52. |
Teddy |
bay |
1900 |
13 |
1200 |
16.1 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 54. |
Dan |
gray |
1900 |
10 |
1300 |
16.3 |
| 55. |
King |
brown |
1900 |
10 |
1100 |
16.2 |
| 56. |
Mack |
black |
1900 |
10 |
1375 |
15.3 |
| 57. |
Jase |
gray |
1900 |
12 |
1250 |
16.1 |
| 58. |
Rondo |
bay |
1900 |
11 |
1210 |
15.2 1/2 |
| 59. |
Keno |
bay |
1900 |
10 |
1070 |
15.0 |
| 60. |
Eddie |
brown |
1900 |
10 |
1175 |
16.2 |
| 61. |
Inyo |
brown |
1900 |
10 |
1135 |
16.2 |
| 62. |
Gus |
brown |
1900 |
10 |
1200 |
15.2 |
| 63. |
Spot |
brown |
1900 |
8 |
1200 |
16.1 |
| 64. |
Tom S. |
bay |
1901 |
11 |
1400 |
17.2 |
| 65. |
Snyder |
bay |
1901 |
11 |
1225 |
16.0 |
| 66. |
Sontag |
bay |
1902 |
8 |
1190 |
16.1 1/2 |
| 67. |
Charlie |
black |
1902 |
9 |
1300 |
16.3 |
| 68. |
Frank |
bay |
1902 |
10 |
1150 |
16.2 |
| 69. |
Ben |
gray |
1902 |
10 |
1380 |
16.1 |
| 70. |
Bullet |
bay |
1902 |
11 |
1100 |
15.3 1/2 |
| 71. |
Veto |
chestnut |
1902 |
11 |
1200 |
16.3 |
| 72. |
Pepper |
black |
1902 |
10 |
1150 |
15.3 1/2 |
| 73. |
Bull |
bay |
1902 |
14 |
1275 |
16.2 1/2 |
| 74. |
Baldy |
bay |
1903 |
7 |
1160 |
16.2 1/2 |
| 75. |
Percy T. |
gray |
1903 |
7 |
1250 |
15.3 1/2 |
| 76. |
Wallie |
bay |
1903 |
6 |
1230 |
16.3 |
| 77. |
Jim Y. |
gray |
1903 |
7 |
1300 |
15.3 1/2 |
| 78. |
Major D. |
black |
1903 |
9 |
1375 |
16.2 |
| 79. |
Stam |
bay |
1903 |
7 |
1170 |
16.2 |
| 80. |
Kirk |
bay |
1903 |
9 |
1200 |
16.2 |
| 83. |
Jean |
bay |
1903 |
7 |
1400 |
17.0 |
| 84. |
Rube |
brown |
1903 |
8 |
1200 |
16.1 |
| 85. |
Lou |
gray |
1903 |
7 |
1125 |
16.0 |
| 86. |
Bruder |
gray |
1903 |
7 |
1220 |
16.2 |
| 87. |
Gray Bill |
gray |
1904 |
6 |
1425 |
16.2 |
| 88. |
Jake |
gray |
1904 |
6 |
1500 |
16.2 |
| 89. |
Steve |
gray |
1904 |
6 |
1400 |
16.2 |
| 90. |
Chief |
gray |
1904 |
7 |
1250 |
16.0 |
| 91. |
Dutch |
gray |
1904 |
7 |
1500 |
17.0 |
| 92. |
Fred |
gray |
1904 |
8 |
1350 |
16.3 |
| 93. |
Sam |
gray |
1904 |
6 |
1275 |
16.3 |
| 94. |
Ed |
gray |
1904 |
5 |
1500 |
17.0 |
| 95. |
Ned |
gray |
1904 |
5 |
1290 |
16.2 |
| 96. |
Dick |
gray |
1904 |
5 |
1240 |
16.1 |
| 97. |
Bert |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1250 |
15.3 |
| 98. |
Don |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1200 |
16.1 |
| 99. |
Joe |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1200 |
15.3 |
| 100. |
Hans |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1450 |
16.2 |
| 101. |
Mollie |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1400 |
16.0 |
| 102. |
Aleck |
gray |
1904 |
5 |
1180 |
16.2 |
| 103. |
Dexter |
gray |
1904 |
4 |
1250 |
16.1 |
| 104. |
Blue |
roan |
1904 |
10 |
1350 |
17.0 |
REPRINTED FROM A WEB
SITE OF A 1904 FIREMANS DAY
The
fireman's day started at 6 a.m. If a driver,
it started at 5 a.m. when upon arising he removed bedding and separated the
straw in the horse stalls. He then watered each
horse and put hay in the boxes. If the
driver drove a first size engine he cared for
three horses. The same number of
horses drew the larger trucks. Wagons required a
two horse hitch. Following the first chores of
tending the horses the drivers were then free to
take one hour for their own breakfast. Upon returning to the engine house the
stalls were then flushed out, the horses hoofs
scraped, the mouth and bridles washed. Each horse
received a currying daily.
Other members upon rising
took care of routine house work. The lanterns were put out and trimmed. Coal oil
was replenished and the lanterns prepared for the next night. All assisted in
washing and soaping the harness and polishing the brass. After the
drivers returned from their breakfast other company
members were permitted an hour to eat, usually two to three men at a time. Later
on the privilege of taking two one and a half hour meals was permitted in lieu
of three one hour meals. This was the fireman's daily routine seven days a
week. Allowance was given for one twenty-four day off a month.
Engineers were pump operators and were required to have a license to
operate a steam boiler which required the passing of a test and the payment of a
yearly fee. In the outlying areas the engineer did his
own stoking while in the high value and heavier districts a
stoker was provided and rode the "tail board"
of the engine with the engineer. At large fires the
stoker had a back breaking job to keep up the required steam pressure
determined by the engineer at the gages on the side
of the engine. Coal was delivered to the engine by a fuel wagon which was
summoned by giving short blasts on their steam whistles corresponding to the
company number.
When the engine was no
longer needed it was permitted to return to quarters ahead of the wagon which it
often did after emptying the ashes on the grate into the street. Upon arrival
home the engineer blew out the fire box and stack
and built a new fire makings. This he did by filling a
cup under the grate with a mixture of potash and sugar.
Over this was a wire cage containing a vial of sulfuric acid. A plunger broke
the vial when the engineer desired to start a fire in the box.
The reaction of acid and the potash-sugar mixture caused a
violent fire which ignited a
bed of excelsior, kindling wood and coal. The
plunger was pushed breaking the glass vial just after the engine cleared the
engine house doors thus preventing smoke from filling the building.
These men became very
skillful at maintaining pump pressures. One case known of to the writer during
an underwriter's test when the pressure varied only one pound in a four hour
period. Great pride was taken by the various engineers
in their ability and the stoker was often chosen
with care.
Alarms of fire frequently
interrupted the routine of engine house life. In those days there was no
HOLDOUT SYSTEM which meant frequent rising at night for all 15
companies THE HOLDOUT
SYSTEM WAS WHERE RATHER THEN A BOX COMING OVER THE TAPE AND BIG BELL
TO EVERY ENGINE HOUSE IN THE CITY CENTRAL
OFFICE WAS ABLE TO JUST SEND IT OUT TO THE TAPE AND SMALL
BELL. THAT WAY THE
NONRESPONDING COMPANIES COULD GET THEIR REST AND NOT SLIDE THE POLE.
The average just before the two-two platoon adopted in 1915 was four
boxes nightly. In cases when companies would respond on second alarms the horses
were to remain hitched for ten minutes upon receipt of the first alarm. The
officer called the roll on each alarm marking the presence of every member in a
book after each box was received. In the event there was no runs after midnight
during a 24 hour period it was necessary to hitch the horses to the apparatus
and exercise them for 30 minutes each day. Except in the downtown areas this
often meant an additional clean up since some officers preferred to exercise in
the afternoon. Downtown companies usually exercised their horses during early
morning hours before the business traffic of the day took to the streets.
In the event of working
fires at night companies upon return to their quarters were required to prepare
themselves for service immediately regardless of the hour. This entailed
cleaning the equipment, changing the hose, "cooling out" the horses, which
consisted of sponging out the mouth, washing the harness and bridle, sponging
off the horses with a bucket and sponge (the use of cold water from a hose was
against regulations and considered cruel treatment and was not done except by
special permission) and blanketing them until they had returned to normal
temperatures. Six sips of fresh water was given to each horse from a bucket. The
company was then ready for another response after the equipment and animals were
cared for, the men could look to themselves. As can readily be seen the "night
life" of a fireman on occasions could be rather extensive.
Engine seats and tillerman seats were
equipped with a heavy leather strap and snaps to secure the drivers in their
seats while making breakneck runs down the avenue. The brake pedal or rod
extended the entire width of the floor board and the driver kept one foot on it
at all times when the apparatus was in response to an alarm.
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
REPRINTED FROM A WEB SITE OF
A 1905 FIREMEN
Yes, the modern-day station
has more the appearance of a first class hotel whereas the station of former
days was more in the nature of a barn, with sleeping quarters for the men
upstairs, which had to be guarded by means of trap doors around the sliding
poles to keep the flies and odors from the horses below from entering the
sleeping quarters of the men above. And these same horses were quite a
disturbance all night long, with their grinding bits as they munched the hay
about their feet or their bedding. Horses are animals which do little sleeping
and as fire horses were well cared for and well bedded down each evening for the
night they had plenty to munch on during their resting hours, eating up their
bedding.
. The grinding bit to which
I refer was the bridle bit which the fire horse was required to have in his
mouth both night and day to allow for a quick hitch-up when the alarm sounded.
The only time this bit was removed was when the horse was fed his grain. The
bridle bit was the only obstruction in the way of rapid hitch-up and the only
solution was to keep the bridle on the horse and the bit in his mouth. The horse
was so used to this method that it did not interfere with his eating his hay. If
this bit had not been kept in the horse's mouth it would have been difficult to
get the animal to take it in case of an alarm and valuable time would have been
lost, especially if the hitching-up was done by a new or relief man. All those
experienced with horses could get the bit in the horse's mouth very easily by
simply putting a thump between his back teeth which would cause the animal to
open his jaws and the bit then was put in place and snapped to the bridle.
. The system was mostly
volunteer and the regular men were on duty 24 hours a day, 365 days in the year,
except the annual 10-day vacation. When a man wanted to lay off he had to pay
his substitute at the rate of $50. per month while he was off. This was the rate
of firemen's pay.
Athletics have received a big
boost in the department and are greatly encouraged, as they should be. In the
days of the single shift the men were required to put in all their time around
the fire station with the exception of meal hours and their annual ten-day
vacation and even on their meal hours they were required to "answer in" on all
alarms and for their services they received the munificent salary of $50 per
month, with $75 for drivers and $100 for engineers. This was later changed to a
scale for hosemen of $60 to $80, drivers $80 and $85, lieutenant $90, engineer
$115 and $120, and captain $120 and $125, being first and second class. The
distinction in class for drivers was in two horse and three horse hitches. The
three horse hitch was used on the steamer and the driver received $5 a month
over the driver of the two horse hitch as used on the hose wagon. The
distinction in class for engineer and captain was in the location of the fire
station, the down town stations being designated as first class and the
outlaying stations being second class houses.
The hours of duty were also
changed with the salary, the men being allowed time off for meals, also two days
a month or 24 hours every 15 days. The $60 to $80 for hosemen was for first,
second and third year of service, an increase of $10 annually being allowed for
each of the three years until he became a full paid man. Hosemen were allowed to
take a lieutenant's examination after six months of service, that is, they could
go up for promotion any time after they had served six months as hoseman. They
were also allowed to take the examination for driver at any time and many were
the hosemen who were anxious to take the driver's examination and get the
increase in pay as a first year hoseman at $60 a month who was successful in
obtaining a driver's job would be increased to $80 a month. In 1906 the
Battalion Chief was added to the department, two being appointed in the persons
of Captains Chas. B. Casey and John G. Todd. The salary was fixed at $150 a
month, while the Assistant Chief received $175 a month. Quite a contrast with
the present day salary in which a Captain receives the same salary as the Chief
did at that time and a new man joining the department starts at a salary which
is within $5 a month of what the Assistant Chief received at that time.
There was a horse attached to Engine 6 which seemed to delight in
stamping in his stall in the early hours of the morning, much to the annoyance
of the men sleeping above. To cure him of this habit a barrel hoop with a lot of
tin cans was rigged over his stall in such a way that it would be raised and
lowered by means of a small rope from above. When Mr. Horse started his usual
stamping this hoop was dropped and raised suddenly, giving him such a scare that
he was soon broken of the habit.
The intelligence of fire
horses was really wonderful and we have had horses which showed almost human
intelligence. There was the big dapple gray "Eddie" of Engine 16 who delighted,
when he was led out each morning for his hour of exercise, to break away from
his master and run down the street for a block and look back as much as to say
"Come and get me." About the time the driver would get up to Eddie and reach out
for his rope, the horse would break away and make a dash back for a block or so
when he would stand and wait for the driver to come and get him.
Horses were great pets
among the men sometimes and nothing seemed to delight them more than to be given
a lump of sugar or an apple. There was a roan horse attached to one of the
companies who seemed to have a contempt for paved streets and each time he was
driven up on a paved street he would politely lay down in his harness. He was
sold to the Chinese vegetable man.
Of all friendships formed among animals I believe none is stranger than that
between horses and dogs. A new team of horses had been purchased for use by the
department and by their appearance they had come from some farm. This team was
sent out to Engine 21 to be broken in for service. About three days after the
arrival of these horses there came to quarters a half starved dog which had the
appearance of having come a long way. This dog attached himself to quarters and
would be constantly with or near one of the new horses as though they had been
together before. We surmised that they had both been on the same ranch and when
the horses were taken away the dog determined to find his friends, so started
out and finally located them in our fire station.
The faithfulness of the
fire horse to duty was really wonderful. In one instance of a fire in a store
building where the heat was terrific, owing to the nearness of the fire to the
street and the narrowness of the thoroughfare the engine driver was forced to
drive his team past the fire in order to reach the fire hydrant. The faithful
animals dashed through the heat and brought the engine safe to the hydrant. The
paint on the engine was scorched and the near horse received burns about the
head which, though not severe, showed evidence of the heat through which the
faithful animal passed without hesitation.
New horses when bought for
fire department purposes had to be taught their duty the same way a new fireman
and the way these animals learned was sometimes almost unbelievable.
There were only two places
for the fire horse. One was in his stall and the other was under the harness. A
new horse was placed in his stall and then at a tap of the gong the chain in
front of him, and which held him in his stall, was dropped and the horse led to
his place under the harness. There were only three snaps to a set of harness
necessary to make the hitch. One was in the collar and the other two were at the
end of the reins which were then snapped into the bit which the horse was
required to have in his mouth at all times (except when eating his grain). The
snapping of the collar around the horse's neck automatically dropped the harness
upon his back and the snapping of the reins into the bit completed the
harnessing of the team to the apparatus. In teaching new horses, the horse was
led from his stall to his place under the harness, then by means of a rope tied
to the wagon tongue and the other end to the edge of the stall, the horse would
be urged from the rear when the gong was tapped and the chain dropped. The
animal would soon learn to take his place and it would be but a short time
before he was broken to his duties.
Dogs were great pets around
the fire stations on account of their intelligence and partly for their
friendliness for men and horses, and these animals would live for years in a
station, but cats have proven a failure around a fire station. Owing to their
desire for warmth they would usually find a spot to sleep under the engine
boiler in which steam was kept up at all times, they being provided with a cozy
resting place. Unfortunately for the cat, however, when the engine was driven
out in response to an alarm the cat would be too slow in getting form under and
would be crushed by the heavy wheels of the apparatus.
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
Fire Hydrant Colors
Fire hydrants are painted different colors to allow
firefighters to quickly identify the flow rate of any fire hydrant. Knowing the
flow rate of a fire hydrant tells them how much water it can provide for
firefighting operations. The four basic colors of fire hydrants and their
respective flow rates are listed below.
| RED |
Red fire
hydrants have a flow rate under 500 gallons per minute. |
| YELLOW |
Yellow fire
hydrants have a flow rate between 500 and 999 gallons per minute. |
| GREEN |
Green fire
hydrants have a flow rate between 1000 and 1499 gallons per minute. |
| BLUE/LIGHT
BLUE |
Blue or
light blue fire hydrants have a flow rate of 1500 gallons
per minute or higher. |
More On Fire Hydrants
There are two types of fire hydrants, wet barrel and dry barrel. As the name
suggest, wet barrel fire hydrants have water in the barrel at all times, whereas
dry barrel fire hydrants do not. Dry barrel fire hydrants are used in areas
where freezing temperatures are common. If wet barrel fire hydrants are used in
freezing climates the water inside can freeze and damage the hydrant.
The blue reflectors often seen in streets are used to mark water sources; most
commonly these water sources are fire hydrants however they can be lakes, ponds,
or any other water source.
A device known as a "Pitot Tube" is used to measure the flow rate of a fire
hydrant.
When early municipal water supply systems were installed under brick streets,
notches were cut out of the pipes to allow quick access to water for
firefighting operations. A plug was inserted into the hole and usually stuck
above the street level to allow easy location of the water source. These plugs
sticking up were known as "fire plugs". In many areas fire hydrants are still
known as fire plugs.
| REPRINTED
FROM A WEB SITE OF A 1909 FIREMAN
A fireman started at the
large salary of $75 a month, working 24 hours a day, seven days a week,
the meal hours ran in three periods, as follows, dived up in shifts from
6 a.m. to 9 a.m. for breakfast, and so on until supper time. You could
take three one hour meals, or two one and a half ones, or one three hour
meal. Anyway if you had a family you only saw them three hours a day.
Hardly enough for your wife and children to know you.
The driver of horse drawn
apparatus and officers usually had the first meal hour. As the drivers
arose at 5 a.m. their first duty was to water horses out of a bucket,
give them a feed of rolled barley, pick up the bedding of straw from
under the horses, put it in a box on rollers, wheel it outside quarters,
then hit the pole or ring the bell to get up the rest of the company,
who were on the apparatus floor for taps and roll call at 6 a.m. After
which all the men turned to and swept the apparatus floor. In some
companies the horses were hitched up and the apparatus was driven out on
the street for exercise of the horses for one hours. As the driver
returned he had to curry the horses all over, wash out mouths, clean
teeth, hoofs and polish halters, flush out stalls, give the animals a
feed of bran at noon, at night bed them down, and give them a feed of
barley hay. Besides, if a run was made and horses were wet, they had to
be taken out in the street and walked to cool them off. Quite a bit
different than drivers of the iron steeds of today who only have to shut
off the motor.
Floor watches were stood from
6 a.m. to 8 p.m. The duty of the man on watch was to keep the floor of
the stall where the horses stood clear of all matter, etc. As the alarm
system was connected so that any fire alarm sent in from any part of the
city came in to each fire station and every member had to get up or be
ready to respond, you can see how many hours of night and day the
officer had to call roll. It was the rule, and each time roll was called
it was kept in a book. Sometimes twenty of more alarms came in at night
and you did not go out. Thus a lot of sleep was lost, and written on the
dash boards of some hose wagon were the words "We never sleep." Oh, yes,
the firemen had to unload dirty briquettes (used to heat water and heat
up quarters) then a load of hay or barley came, besides changing hose
and general duties.
The engineer who rode on the
rear of the steam engine had a time keeping from being thrown off in
responding to alarms, as the wheels of the drawn engine had steel tires
and skidded all over the streets. The driver of the engine, upon
arriving at a fire, had to unhitch the horses, take them some distance
from the engine and tie them up Drivers of the hose wagon and the engine
were strapped to their seats. It was a thrill to see the horses plunging
at full speed to a fire, giving their best, and they were beloved by the
boys as the stations.
The engineer had the duty of
building fires in the fire boxes of the steam engines, which was as
follows: First a layer of excelsior, then kindling, then some coal. And
when an alarm came in he was to light a coaloil torch on the engine
which he lighted up the fire in the fire box. Some engineers thought up
a better idea. They had a contrivance under the fire box which held a
mixture of sugar and potash. Near it was a bottle of acid. As the
response to the alarm was made, a chain pulled by the engineer broke the
bottle of acid, causing it to mix with the potash and a flame was
ignited in the excelsior. In a few moments steam was raised and
sometimes the engineer had the stoker or fireman shovel coal into the
fire box at the fire. And did those fire boxes eat the coal. To hear the
even exhaust of the engine and see sparks and smoke flying out of the
stack was a thrill. When coal was needed a shrill blast on the steam
whistle at the engine called the coal wagon to come. The engineer had
his troubles if the boiler foamed. His eyes were on the water glass at
the boiler and pressure gauge. Often, far into the night, the engineer,
after returning from a fire, had to work filling the oiler, greasing and
getting the engine ready.
On pay day you went to the
City Hall for the pay. Two per cent was taken out for pension, and
always near the City Hall were a few loan sharks who were so willing to
loan you money at a rate of interest which kept firemen in their
clutches. If a fireman wanted to lay off he filled out a form, put up
cash for time off, and an extra fireman was called up to work who was
paid after he finished work. The Chief had a hard time getting extra men
to work; their only wages was what extra work they got. Anyone could get
on extra.
The nice blue flannel shirts
which opened at the side, with a lot of big pearl buttons around the
chest was the uniform shirt. The shirts were made to keep us from
getting a cold. It was quite an honor to be a fireman, and we were proud
to be a member of the fire department, but the long 24-hour day, seven
days a week, was a long time to be on duty, and that strain and the
constant waking up tended to break down men. So you see the firemen did
not have the life of Riley. |
BAGPIPES TRADITION.................................................................FROM
A WEB SITE
The tradition of bagpipes played at fire department
funerals in the United States goes back over one hundred fifty years. When the
Irish and Scottish immigrated to this country, they brought many of their
traditions with them. One of these was the bagpipe, often played at Celtic
weddings, funerals and ceilis (dances).
It wasn't until the great potato famine and massive Irish immigration to the
East Coast of the United States that the tradition of the pipes really took hold
in fire departments. Factories and shops had signs reading "NINA"-No Irish Need
Apply. The only jobs they could get were the ones no one else wanted -jobs that
were dirty, dangerous or both - fire-fighters and police officers. It was not an
uncommon event to have several firefighters killed at a working fire. The Irish
firefighters funerals were typical of all Irish funerals-the pipes were played.
It was somehow okay for a hardened firefighter to cry at the sound of pipes when
his dignity would not let him weep for a fallen comrade.
Those who have been to funerals when bagpipes play know how haunting and
mournful the sound of the pipes can be. Before too long, families and friends of
non-Irish firefighters began asking for the piper to play for these fallen
heroes. The pipes add a special air and dignity to the solemn occasion.
Associated with cities such as Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, pipe
bands representing both fire and police often have more than 60 uniformed
members. They are also traditionally known as Emerald Societies after
Ireland-the Emerald Isle. Many bands wear traditional Scottish dress while
others wear the simpler Irish uniform. All members wear the kilt and tunic,
whether it is a Scottish clan tartan or Irish single color kilt.
Today, the tradition is universal and not just for the Irish or Scottish. The
pipes have come to be a distinguishing feature of a fallen hero's funeral.
MAKE SOMEONE REMEMBER TODAY
WAYNE
First Water
The term "First Water" actually goes back to the
1800's. Back then Fire Departments actually competed with one another. There
were very few regulations governing fire department operations. When two
departments were in the same area the city or town would often pay the first
fire department on scene, while the second received nothing. In other areas it
was a matter of pride. The first department to put water on the fire would claim
"First Water" and in a way, get credit for fighting that fire. Some departments
even hired young kids who would race to a fire on foot and throw a single bucket
of water on the flames. This usually did very little or nothing to fight the
fire, but it would earn that department the right to claim "First Water".
The phrase is still used in some areas today. When a department is called out to
a fire they will often refer to three events: Dispatch time, On scene time, and
time of First Water, the moment when the first fire stream actually begins
fighting the fire.
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE TODAY
WAYNE
Wayne's
Stuff #14 | |
|