Thanks for the backup G-Man.
Some things to notice on this run card of 1955:
The first alarm response was actually a 2 and 2, as E96 was then a Quad. It rolled in as both an engine and a truck.
The battalion chief could special call E61 for an All Hands or just go to the 2d alarm and get a 4 and 1. Tough decision.
There was only one battalion chief on an All Hands, with a Deputy Chief assigned in on the 2d Alarm. (The column marked "Covering Chief' indicated who would respond to any other boxes in the vicinity that came in while this incident was still operating.) No 10-75 Chief, no Safety Coordinator Chief, etc,.
No Rescue 3 (then quartered with E71), or Squad (they did not yet exist) or any other special units. It was up to the battallion chief or deputy to request anything else they thought might be necessary.The Police Emergency Unit, which had the FDNY telegraph bells in their quarters, would usually go automatically on a 2d Alarm. (Their rigs were very similar to the FDNY rescue apparatus, only painted dark green and white. No "battle of the badges" back then.)
No ladder company relocations between the 2d and 5th Alarms. L38 (at L47) and 32 (at 41) then covered the entire area from the Bronx Zoo to Hunts Point to Throggs Neck to City Island on succeeding alarms. And behind them, L27, L33, and L37 had as much to cover in the areas vacated. (No L56, 58, 59, or 61 in those days.)
Times do change.