Detroit Fire Historical Record 1825-1977
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Detroit Fire Historical Record 1825-1977 - Turner Publishing
A Brief History Of Firefighting
Actually firefighting is as old as history itself. Since primitive man was driven from his early cave shelter by forest fires started by lightning, he has sought ways to control it.
The ancient Greeks and Egyptians were our first firefighters. In 440 B.C., the first fire extinguisher was the invention of a Greek writer and soldier named Appolodorus, who conceived the idea of a fire extinguisher fashioned from the bladder of an Ox and filled with water.
In 200 B.C., Heron, an Egyptian, invented the principle of the first piston type force pump which was used in all the early hand engines, and continued to be used in the steam and early automobile pumpers.
During the regime of Caesar Augustus in 6 A.D., the first public fire fighting companies were organized consisting of slaves, their equipment consisted of siphon pumps and buckets.
After the decline of the Greek and Roman civilization which was followed by centuries of general ignorance and superstition, known as the dark ages, fire engines were forgotten for possibly 1,300 years.
The Sixteenth Century was the era of the Re-discovery and development of the earlier fire engines and in the year 1518, crude fire engines were introduced in Germany.
It was a Dutchman in 1672, that invented the leather fire hose, and to England goes the honor of inventing the first practical hand engine in 1721. These early engines had to be filled with water provided by a bucket brigade.
In 1721, the first practical and successful hand operated fire engine was produced by Richard Newsham in London, England. The engine was a tub-type, goose-neck machine which had to be filled by buckets. The engine featured a piston pump and was the first type to use long wooden handle bars known as brakes
.
1732 was the year that the first American fire engine was built in Philadelphia by Anthony Nichols.
In 1737, the World’s first organized fire engine company, manned by volunteers was also formed in Philadelphia by Benjamin Franklin.
Messrs. Sellers & Pennock, of Philadelphia introduced the first riveted leather fire hose. This new method of securing the seams in fire hose eliminated the troublesome hand-sewn leaky hose used since 1672.
To London, England goes the credit for inventing the steam fire engine. In 1829, John Ericsson & George Braithwaite built the World’s first steam fire pumper.
To America goes the credit for perfecting the steam fire engine. In 1841, John Rapsey Hodge built the first practical steamer. The unit weighed 8 ton, was 13½ feet long and was operated by the Pearl Hose Co. No. 28 of New York City. This first American engine was declared impractical by the members of the volunteer company operating it for a period of two years. The steamer was removed from service and spent its remaining life operating at a paper box factory.
The chemical fire engine was developed in England using soda and acid. Chemical engines were introduced in America in 1860. By 1910, 90% of all our fires were extinguished by these machines. Booster water tanks were introduced in 1913, and by 1935 chemical tanks were replaced by the more practical and less costly booster tanks.
Hook and ladder trucks were introduced into the firefighting profession in 1790, and hose reels were invented in 1805.
It was not until 1822, that the suction engine was developed in America which forever eliminated the bucket brigades.
As the cities grew larger and the buildings became taller the hand engines were soon found to be ineffective. The first steam fire engine was invented in London, England and could pump 250 gallons of water per minute. Later, the steam fire engine was perfected in the United States and the first paid steam fire engine company went into service in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1852. This marked the era of horse drawn fire apparatus.
Self-propelled steamers were introduced in 1872, and it was in the year 1900 when the horses went under the hood and the first gasoline propelled fire pumper made its appearance. Fire department horses faded from the scene in most major cities in 1922.
Our Colonial Firefighters
A tribute to the small army of men who make up our great Fire Department—men who are dedicated to a career of saving life and property from man’s worst enemy—Fire.
By Clarence C. Woodard
D.F.D. Historian
One of the most picturesque segments of Detroit’s city life and cause for civic pride prior to the Civil War was the Volunteer Fire Department. These men, in their red shirts and white helmets, were among the gay blades of the town. They were young men of prospects or means. Being a fireman was so much fun one didn’t always have time to attend fires, what with excursions, parades, dances, contests and other social obligations. The frequent fires which broke out would test the competition and skills between the companies, which, in turn, would be rewarded by grateful citizens with great quantities of refreshments.
Service in these early fire companies was voluntary and without monetary compensation. Membership was decided entirely by election. The firemen also elected their own foreman and other officers by ballot. Members lavished money on dress uniforms, silver trophies, and decorations for their engines.
Although the city bought the hand-operated pumping engines, the firemen bought nearly everything else, even in some cases, items for their fire halls. However, their responsibility to the citizens of Detroit was, for the most part, theoretical, and at times they sought political power. They had lots of color, but little efficiency, and almost no discipline. Today discipline and efficiency come before everything else in the Fire Department, and what was once a hobby has now become a profession and a science.
Detroit’s first engine was imported from England by the British Military Command. It was a crude, hand-tub affair which had to be filled with buckets. The machine was built by Richard Newsham of London, and arrived on March 5, 1778. The engine cost 373.16 pounds (approximately $1,500 including transportation) and was placed in charge of a Thomas Williams. The population of Detroit was about 2,000 at the time.
After the Americans took over Detroit from the British, in 1796, they made the first effort to organize the citizens in case of fire on February 9, 1798. Article 9 of the early fire regulations said: … on the first notice of fire assemble at the engine house to take the engine to the fire, and there to work as it may be judged the most expedient …
Detroit was incorporated as a town and governed by a Board of Trustees
in 1802, and one of the first acts of the Board
was to establish a new fire ordinance posted in both English and French, so all citizens could read it. This new ordinance Regulations for Securing the Town of Detroit from Injuries by Fires
required householders and shopkeepers to provide leather buckets, water-filled barrels, ladders of sufficient length to reach the highest level as well as fire-bags
to carry goods from stores or homes in case of fire.
It was also required that chimneys be swept every two weeks between October and April, and every four weeks the rest of the year. Failure to do so was punishable by a five-dollar fine, the fine to be doubled in case a householder’s chimney took fire. So that housewives’ linen might not be soiled, the ordinance provided that the sweeping be done on Saturdays before 9:00 a.m. Two fire inspectors were appointed to enforce the new ordinance. In 1803, it was further ordered by the Council that all male citizens were to turn out at the cry of Fire
! Failure to do so was punishable by a fine of two dollars or imprisonment for not more than two weeks.
On June 11, 1805, the entire village of Detroit consisting of two hundred wooden buildings burned to the ground, with the exception of one storehouse. The fire originated in a stable at the rear of Harvey’s Bakery on the north side of Jefferson. As the flames spread, nearly all buildings were destroyed with a loss of $200,000. It is believed the first fire engine was used to little avail and was destroyed by the flames.
The second fire engine to be placed in operation was assembled in 1816, by local craftsmen, from an old bilge pump which had seen service on the Commodore Perry flagship during the War of 1812.
As the 1816 makeshift engine was frequently in need of repairs and of little value, a meeting was called at the Council House
on April 9, 1821, to consider the purchase of a fire engine. As a result of the meeting, $400 was voted for the purchase. In 1823, the first engine house was constructed at Bates and East Larned Streets. It was provided with a large bell triangle to be used as a fire alarm. The following year, Peter Berthelet was granted authority to build a pump station at the foot of Randolph Street to supply the city with water. Early in 1825, the first Tamarack water mains were laid in Larned, Congress and Jefferson, and on September 25,1825, the Common Council appointed and confirmed a fire department.
On December 26, 1825, the new fire engine, built by Jacob Smith of New York, arrived aboard the Schooner Superior. With this date, the great era of our Volunteer Fire Department began. The new engine was called Protection No. 1,
and was in service for 30 years. When a new engine was bought the old engine was given to the new company, and this old engine was therefore the first engine of six successive companies in turn. After the engine was retired, it was used in Fourth of July parades drawn about on a platform. The Protection
Engine Company motto was: Deeds are fruits, words are but leaves.
A second hand-engine company was organized on March 31, 1827, known as Eagle
Engine Company No. 2. They used the original cantonment engine after it had been repaired, and their station house was erected on the northeast corner of Fort and Griswold Streets. In 1830, the company received a new engine costing $450.
Wolverine
Engine Company No. 3 was formed, composed of the younger men of the community, as well as a new Hook and Ladder company early in 1830. On April 29, 1830, Engine Companies 1, 2, and 3, and the new Rescue
Hook and Ladder Company took part in the first firemen’s parade at the Public Wharf. The population of Detroit had grown to 2,222 at this time.
The city’s first two 20,000 gallon reservoirs were constructed in 1832 on Jefferson at Bates and at Jefferson and Griswold. Along with the reservoirs, there were now fire mains along the principal streets equipped with hollowed tamarack log fire hydrants placed upright in the fire main. The flow of water from the hydrant was controlled with a wooden plug. They were protected from freezing in the winter months by enclosing them in boxes filled with manure.
Detroit’s first practical fire engine, Protection No. 1
. Built by Jacob Smith of New York and delivered on December 26, 1825. The engine served the City 30 years.
On October 8, 1834, Lafayette
Company No. 4 was organized with a new hand engine along with 250 feet of riveted leather hose. Their motto was: At danger’s call we’re prompt to fly, and bravely do or bravely die.
In 1836, Common Council offered a reward of five dollars for the person first giving an alarm of fire by ringing the bell. The following year, the city took over the waterworks, and additional water mains were laid in 1838.
Still another fire engine company was formed in August, 1845 known as Phoenix
Company No. 5, and a new station house was built at Clifford and Griswold Streets. The motto lettered on the back of their engine read: Ready, Aye Ready. ‘Man the brakes and keep me clean, and I’ll take the butt from any machine.’
One year later, in 1846, Michigan
Company No. 6 was formed, and following a disastrous fire in downtown Detroit in 1848, Union
Fire Company No. 7, and Mechanics
No. 8 were formed in January, 1849.
With Detroit’s population at 21,000 and shipping its greatest industry, our second ladder company was formed in 1850, called Relief
Hook & Ladder Company No. 2, and their motto was: We Raze to Save.
Five years later, in 1856, Detroit
Engine Company No. 9 was formed and their house was located on Gratiot near Beaubien. The next three-hand engine companies were formed in 1857, as Operative
Engine Company No. 10, Hamtramck
Spouters No. 11, and Woodbridge
Engine Company No. 12. The Woodbridge
Company was the last of the Volunteer Engine Companies to be formed.
At the sound of the alarm the volunteers would rush to the engine house and seize the ropes to the engine. Then, they would haul the engine through the streets to the fire. At the fire, a suction hose would be thrust into a cistern, connected to a hydrant or placed in the Detroit River; then the men would pump on the handles (brakes, as they were called). By pumping vigorously they raised a stream of water to fight the balze.
Service in the early engine companies were entirely voluntary, and membership eventually became a much-sought honor. In those days parades, demonstrations and contests were gala occasions. The firemen were clad in red shirts and black pantaloons, and the engines in parades were wreathed in flowers and decked with solid silver nameplates.
During tournaments, hand-engine companies that could push
their engines to squirt the longest, highest and largest stream of water were declared the victors. These contests drew most of the citizens to watch, and the engine of the triumphant company was mounted with an immense broom, as it had swept the contest. To say, She carries the broom
was to speak with highest praise.
In the Volunteer Fire Department, rivalry among the members eventually became so keen that many times their eagerness for competition endangered the lives and property of our citizens. Even at fires, one company would go so far to cut the leather hose of another in order to gain advantage over their rival! Such an occurrence gripped the attention of the town in 1854 when an old building caught fire at Larned and Wayne Streets (on the site where Fire Department Headquarters is presently located.) A fight broke out between the members of Engine Companies No. 2 and No. 8 to determine which company was to connect to the hydrant first. The building burned down and public indignation ran high after the event, but not as high as when the firemen went on strike because the Council refused to let them drag their heavy equipment over the wooden sidewalks of the city, which the firemen often did due to the poor condition of the streets. The Council’s refusal was actuated by citizens who had complained with the hubs of the unwieldy engines too often ripped out pickets from the fences that surrounded nearly every home of this period, as well as endangered lives of pedestrians.
On April 24, 1855, the Council prohibited this practice between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. This displeased a number of firemen and after a meeting on May 2,