FDNY and NYC Firehouses and Fire Companies - 2nd Section

Engine 277/Ladder 112 (continued):


Bushwick fires:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgnpbW-6zI8&t=2s


    Captain Ron Carritue, Ladder 112:


          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4PuIy0pf2A


    Bushwick Blackout July 1977:

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=le4TNjlLJCo

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1UKaV5VkoE


    RUTH & SAM & THE BUSHWICK FIRES (1977)

          http://www.brownstonedetectives.com/ruth-sam-the-bushwick-fires-1977/


    ALL HANDS FIRE / WITH INJURIES, 145 BLEECKER STREET, BUSHWICK, BROOKLYN - 1987

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBwCixGoRCQ&t=106s


    4 ALARM FIRE, 271 KNICKERBOCKER AVE, BROOKLYN, BUSHWICK - 1989

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yBxdcOZunE&t=14s


    2 ALARM FIRE 334 KNICKERBOCKER AVE, BROOKLYN - 1990

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bO99CPB4Xtw


    2 ALARM FIRE, 1146 HANCOCK STREET, BROOKLYN, BUSHWICK - 1990

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Li87Mw8m0A8
 
Engine 277/Ladder 112 (continued):


Engine 277/Ladder 112 2008 rescue:

   


Engine 277/Ladder 112 medals:

    JAMES B. GILL CAPT. ENG. 277 1922

         

    ALL MEMBERS ENG. 277 1930 1931 FIRE COLLEGE

         

    THOMAS R. CLEMENTS LT. ENG. 277 L-111 DEC. 24, 1948 1949 BROOKMAN

    FRANK HAIG FF. LAD. 112 JAN. 29, 1922 1923 TREVOR-WARREN

    FRANK B. CARTWRIGHT FF. LAD. 112 JAN. 29, 1922 1923 HUGH BONNER

    ROBERT H. HABERSTOCK FF. LAD. 112 JUN. 30, 1948 1949 CONRAN

    RALPH BOFSHEVER FF. LAD. 112 JUN. 30, 1948 1949 KENNY

    WILLIAM WENDEL FF. LAD. 112 JUN. 30, 1948 1949 DOUGHERTY

         

    JOHN CERATO FF. LAD. 112 MAR. 10, 1965 1966 PULASKI

         

    JERRY D. HORTON FF. LAD. 112 NOV. 1, 1967 1968 HUGH BONNER

         

    PETER L. BADALUCCO LAD. 112  FEB. 4, 1968 1969 SCOTT

    ROBERT D. WENDEL FF. LAD. 112 SEP. 18, 1969 1970 MC ELLIGOTT

         

    RONALD CARRITUE FF. LAD. 112 NOV. 10, 1973 1974 BROOKLYN CITIZENS

         

    CHARLES F. MAGRATH FF. LAD. 112 SEP. 15, 1974 1975 WILLIAMS

         

    JOSEPH D. LYONS FF. LAD. 112 APR. 7, 1986 1987 FIRE BELL CLUB
         
         

    CARL WAITE FF. LAD. 112 APR. 7, 1986 1987 STIEFEL

         

    EDWARD S. KILDUFF LT. LAD. 112 OCT. 12, 1988 1989 COLUMBIA

         

          Chief of Department FDNY  2010-2014:

             

    EUGENE T. CUMMINGS FF. LAD. 112 APR. 8, 1993 1994 WAGNER

    KEVIN R. CALHOUN FF. LAD. 112 APR. 24, 1993 1994 POLICE HONOR

    ANTHONY M. CAMPOS LT. LAD. 112 MAY 24, 1993 1994 FIRE MARSHALS

    THOMAS P. KUEFNER LT. LAD. 112 DEC. 24, 1995 1996 DOUGHERTY

         

    JOHN C. COLOMBI FF. LAD. 112 DEC. 24, 1995 1996 FIRE BELL CLUB

         
 
Engine 277/Ladder 112 (continued):


Ladder 112 disabled fireman's death:

    FF JOHN BURNS LADDER 112 Ladder 112
 
         


Engine 277/Ladder 112 LODDs:

    FIREFIGHTER PATRICK DEVLIN ENGINE 277 May 29, 1940

         

         

          Fireman Patrick Devlin was killed while Engine 277 was responding to an alarm at Onderdonk Avenue and Grove Street. At Gates Avenue and Seneca Avenue, Engine 277 collided with a truck. Fireman Devlin received a broken leg and fatal internal injuries. Three men who pulled the false alarm were arrested and charged with homicide. (From "The Last Alarm)

    LIEUTENANT JOSEPH M. OESAU ENGINE 277 January 12, 1955

         

             

          LT Joseph M Oesau, died January 12, 1955 from injuries received operating at Brooklyn Box 5-5-1642

          Lieutenant Joseph M. Oesau of Engine 277 died while fighting a five-alarm fire in a row of stores on Pitkin Avenue. Lieutenant Oesau heard that three employees were trapped in one of the stores. He went in through a wall of flames and was heard shouting; ?I?ve got to get out of here!? He collapsed, was dragged outside and worked on for over an hour but never regained consciousness. He was going to retire six months before, after putting in thirty years in the Department, but told his wife that he had nothing to do and put in one more year. He was sixty-one years old. (From "The Last Alarm")

    FIREFIGHTER HENRY HANSON LADDER 112 December 14, 1908

       

         

          FF Henry Hanson, fell from fire escape 719 Hancock Street, December 14, 1908

    CAPTAIN JAMES R. STARKEY LADDER 112 July 16, 1924

         

          Captain James R. Starkey died from injuries received fighting a bakery fire.


    RIP.  Never forget.
 
Lt. James "Jimmy" Zahn (L 112) was killed as he tried to thwart an armed robbery not to far from quarters. (July 1985) Zahn/ Troiano Medal awarded annually.


Added:

NY TIMES - 3 YOUTHS SEIZED IN KILLING OF FIRE LIEUTENANT
    By Jilian Mincer
    July 24, 1985

Three teen-agers were arrested and charged yesterday with the fatal shooting of an off-duty fire lieutenant during a robbery last Friday at a Queens bar.

The police said the arrests were the result of a tip. On Sunday, the city announced a $10,000 reward for information leading to the killers, and the Uniformed Fire Officers Association provided an additional $10,000 reward.

The 41-year-old lieutenant, James Zahn, a 17-year member of the Fire Department, was shot to death at Paula's Bar and Grill, at 60-44 Cooper Avenue in Glendale, Queens. He worked a few blocks away, at the Knickerbocker Avenue firehouse in Brooklyn.

The three suspects - Rodney Nelson, 16, of 291 Stuyvesant Avenue; Percival Santos, 17, of 172 Stuyvesant Avenue, and Terry Hooker, 19, of 884 Green Avenue, all of Brooklyn - were charged with two counts of murder and one count each of robbery and illegal weapons possession.
 
Ron Carritue was a FF...LT...CPT in 112 (except for awhile when he was a LT in 222 at first) ...Ron & i got Promoted to LT together in 1987.....Tom Kuefner was in my proby class in 1968 & attended our 50th Reunion at Maggie Mays last Fall......my good friend Howie Carlson RIP was appointed to 277 in 1969 when they had the R Model '69 Mack... so many Greats from 277/112 (i won't try & name them all) .... when the FH for 222/BN*37 was being built on Ralph & Gates Aves 112 was slated to go there but Legendary DV*17 DC Al Schaefner insisted to HQ that 112 had to remain on the Wood City side of Broadway due to the  Firestorm sweeping the neighborhood back then.
 
I remember my first buff trip to Bushwick as the neighborhood was starting to burn. I sat in the buff mobile with another buddy of mine. It was about 10:00 am and within one hour we had taken in a job on Evergreen Ave. I remember the entire cockloft was burning the entire length of the city block. Engine 277 and Ladder 112 was first due. It was a school day but nobody was in school.

An entire block on fire and it only went to a second alarm. That's just the way it was then.

That was my first introduction to the Bushwick area of Brooklyn. Later on Bushwick saw a huge number of fires in a 24 hour period when the lights went out in July '77. Then came the huge Boro Call that destroyed about 30 or 40 buildings.

I got to meet Retired FDNY Member Tom Kuefner recently. A guy who was also into the job. I believe that when he was a Lt., Dan P., aka "JohnnyGage" worked with him in that firehouse.
 
Yes Willy, I had the pleasure of working with TK, just so happen we had an oldtimers reunion last week and got to see TK (he reads these posts too!) and many others too. It was instantaneously flashback to the Glory Days. Conversation and laughter picked back up as if there was not a time lapse...I realized how fortunate I was to work with these Brothers,  I was  truly blessed to work with some of the best bosses and tough firefighters otj.

TK and I dubbed 112 "The NO FRILLS Truck". As I mentioned in another thread, companies around us were receiving new tools almost daily; one truck company received a "hurst tool", we got a car jack with chains ( to pull steering column). Another company got the new portable hydra ram, we got a reconditioned rabbit tool (that was like carrying an anvil compared to hydra ram), other companies were testing new tools. We were discussing this one day, TK and I almost said it together, "what are we NO FRILLS?",  and it stuck. We had "NO FRILLS" stenciled on the back of our turnout coats, "NO FRILLS" painted on the outriggers and TK had one of our talented members paint the familiar Pathmark "NO FRILLS" sign on the officers apparatus door.

TK had a great sense of humor, he also had fun with a certain dispatcher. She was professional in a sense, but had a little trouble on occassion. For instance; she would announce "fire reported on the "number TOP FLOOR" , or mispronounce streets, Legion (Lee-jun) Street was prounounced as "Leg- ion". When she was on the radio,  TK would have a little fun and transmit to her; "Ladder 1-1-12 to Brooklyn, K"... instead of 112. She would respond back, "go ahead one, one twelve" not realizing the goof.

TK was a solid fire officer,  and fun all around guy...I really enjoyed working alongside him on the "NO FRILLS" truck in those busy Bushwick days. I know your reading this Tom, thanks for great memories!, and enjoy your new 'vette!
(PS: Years later (mid-late 1990's) we both went seperate ways, TK made a grab in his new company L 155 and awarded on medal day.)




Lt. Tom Keufner





L 112 "NO FRILLS" door emblem. (as a spare)
 
JohnnyGage said:
Yes Willy, I had the pleasure of working with TK, just so happen we had an oldtimers reunion last week and got to see TK (he reads these posts too!) and many others too. It was instantaneously flashback to the Glory Days. Conversation and laughter picked back up as if there was not a time lapse...I realized how fortunate I was to work with these Brothers,  I was  truly blessed to work with some of the best bosses and tough firefighters otj.

TK and I dubbed 112 "The NO FRILLS Truck". As I mentioned in another thread, companies around us were receiving new tools almost daily; one truck company received a "hurst tool", we got a car jack with chains ( to pull steering column). Another company got the new portable hydra ram, we got a reconditioned rabbit tool (that was like carrying an anvil compared to hydra ram), other companies were testing new tools. We were discussing this one day, TK and I almost said it together, "what are we NO FRILLS?",  and it stuck. We had "NO FRILLS" stenciled on the back of our turnout coats, "NO FRILLS" painted on the outriggers and TK had one of our talented members paint the familiar Pathmark "NO FRILLS" sign on the officers apparatus door.

TK had a great sense of humor, he also had fun with a certain dispatcher. She was professional in a sense, but had a little trouble on occassion. For instance; she would announce "fire reported on the "number TOP FLOOR" , or mispronounce streets, Legion (Lee-jun) Street was prounounced as "Leg- ion". When she was on the radio,  TK would have a little fun and transmit to her; "Ladder 1-1-12 to Brooklyn, K"... instead of 112. She would respond back, "go ahead one, one twelve" not realizing the goof.

TK was a solid fire officer,  and fun all around guy...I really enjoyed working alongside him on the "NO FRILLS" truck in those busy Bushwick days. I know your reading this Tom, thanks for great memories!
(PS: Years later (mid-late 1990's) we both went sepeate ways, TK made a grab in his new company L 155 and awarded on medal day.)




Lt. Tom Keufner





L 112 "NO FRILLS" door emblem. (as a spare)

  THOMAS P. KUEFNER LT. LAD. 150 MAR. 2, 2001 2002 COMPANY OFFICERS

         

          1315 hours Box 75-5459  The incident building, located at 91-35 193rd Street, was a seven-story, non-fireproof, multiple dwelling, containing 85 apartments with a fire on the top floor.While responding, Ladder 150 was notified that people were trapped on the rear fire escape. On arrival, Lieutenant Kuefner and the inside team raced into the building and found that the elevator car was not in the lobby. Believing that speed and decisive action were necessary, Lieutenant Kuefner led his team, including FFs Sean Sammon (can) and Michael J. Razukiewicz (irons), up the seven flights of stairs to the fire floor.

    Before the team reached the second floor, they were notified of a trapped victim hanging out the window of the fire apartment and enduring a heavy smoke condition. Reaching the fire floor, the Lieutenant and Firefighters found a medium smoke condition with the main amount of smoke emanating from the north end of the hall at apartment 6-L.

    Before forcing the door, Lieutenant Kuefner roped the apartment?s doorknob to better control it, knowing it would be some time before a hose-line could be brought into action (due to the long and difficult stretch up scissor stairs). As the door was forced, the members encountered a heavy smoke condition and--with a new supply of oxygen entering the apartment--the fire immediately intensified, engulfing the kitchen and going over the rescuers? heads.

    FF Sammon opened the can to try to hold back the fire, while Lieutenant Kuefner and FF Razukiewicz crawled into the inferno to search for the victim. As Lieutenant Kuefner probed straight ahead, he heard the distinct sound of glass breaking and realized it must be from the outside vent man. He turned to feel for another room and on hearing cries for help to his left, he found the bedroom. Entering the room, he found Mervin Berrian halfway out the window and highly agitated. To keep Mr. Berrian from jumping to his death, Lieutenant Kuefner forcibly grabbed him and tried to calm him. However, due to the heavy smoke and heat condition in the rest of the apartment, Lieutenant Kuefner knew the victim could not be removed until the fire was knocked down.

    Therefore, the Lieutenant ordered FF Razukiewicz to exit the room, close the door behind him and stay with FF Sammon until the can was empty. At that time, they were to vacate the apartment, ensuring that the door did not lock behind them.

    Lieutenant Kuefner then stayed with the victim, forcibly holding onto him until the fire was knocked down and the smoke and heat condition subsided. Mr. Berrian, suffering from smoke inhalation, then was assisted from the apartment and taken by EMS personnel to Jamaica Hospital.

    In his report of the incident, Deputy Chief Rup of Division 13 noted that Lieutenant Kuefner?s action ?...placed him at unusual personal risk by going past the fire without the protection of a hose-line. By sheltering the victim in place, he also put his path of exit in jeopardy in the calculated risk that an Engine Company would extinguish the fire quickly.?
 
NY Fire Patrol 3 (later Fire Patrol 1) firehouse 240 W 30th Street


Daytonian in Manhattan
Thursday, September 20, 2012
The 1894 Fire Patrol #3 -- 240 West 30th Street

   
          photo by Alice Lum

    In 1839 the New York Board of Fire Underwriters was established as an outgrowth of the Mutual Assistance and Bag Corporation which had been formed 36 years earlier.  The insurance companies sought to prevent or at least reduce the loss of property caused by fires.  Claims by merchants for lost inventory were often due to water damage caused by the fire department as much as by the fire itself.

    When the Board of Fire Underwriters added actual fire fighting to its methods of preventing losses to insured property, the Fire Patrol was established.  The Fire Patrol was a private organization, distinct from the Fire Department.  The Patrol would rush to a fire working side-by-side with fire fighters, laying tarps to protect goods from water , removing goods when possible, and all the while fighting the flames.

    The Fire Patrolmen became recognizable by their bright red helmets.  In 1858, with still just two Fire Patrol Companies in New York, an order dictated ?Resolved?That the men belonging to the Fire Patrol be required immediately at their own cost, to have their fire caps painted a bright red color, and have front pieces furnished with the words, ?Insurance Patrol No. 1? for the lower district, and ?Insurance Patrol No. 2? for the upper district, together with the initials of the wearer of the cap legibly painted thereon to be white, with black letters as above.?
The success of the Fire Patrol resulted in a third company being formed.  In 1894 a new fire patrol house at No. 240 West 30th Street in the crime-ridden Tenderloin district began rising.  When the Board of Underwriters hired the architectural firm of D?Oench & Simon to design the building, the choice was obvious.  Albert F. D?Oench served as an instructor in the first fire fighter training school when it opened in 1892, and was the Superintendent of Buildings. 
At the time a renewed interest in the Dutch heritage of New York resulted in the appearance of Flemish Revival buildings throughout the city, especially on the Upper West Side.   

    D?Oench & Simon turned to this style for the new Patrol Company No. 3.  Completed in September 1895 it rose four stories to an elaborate stepped gable and peaked roof covered in Spanish tile.    The ground floor was clad in Indiana limestone and the upper floors were a cream-colored brick.  Terra cotta ornamentation included window pediments that changed with each successive floor.

   

          The original stepped gable and Spanish-tiled roof.  - The New York Times September 11, 1895 (copyright expired)

    The new patrol house was opened with a large ceremony on the evening of September 10, 1895.  The Sun reported that ?Hundreds of guests of the Fire Patrol Committee of the New York Board of Fire Underwriters viewed the building.?    It was a model of up-to-the-minute technology and conveniences.

    There were accommodations for twenty-six men on the second floor, ?each of whom has a separate brass bedstead and a clothes closet,? reported The New York Times.  Here too was the private office of the captain.    Five sliding poles pierced the floor to enable the patrolmen to rapidly respond to the alarm.  One especially clever innovation was the short pole for the driver, located near his bed.  When the driver slid down this brass pole, it dropped him conveniently into the seat of the waiting wagon.

    The third floor included a billiard room and a sitting room for the patrolmen, as well as the superintendent?s office.  ?Throughout the building great care has been taken to provide for the comfort and convenience of the men,? said The Times.  The top floor was designated for workshops and the supply room.  Racks for drying the tarps lined the ceiling. 

   

          Ornate medallions are emblazoned with F and P for Fire Patrol -- photo by Alice Lum

    Five horses and two patrol wagons?with improved apparatus for quickly reaching fires, said The New York Times--were housed on the first floor.  Behind the station was a two-story brick building with feed rooms and a hayloft.  ?Here are two large box-stalls with a thick flooring of Irish peat, where the horses in turn are allowed a chance to recover from hard runs,? said The Times. 

    The Weekly Underwriter praised the design.  ?It is a model of completeness for the purposes for which it was constructed and is equipped with every known device and improvement for comfort of the men and the uses of the business.?  Like the Times reporter, the writer was impressed with the conveniences.  ?The floors of the office, toilet and bath rooms are made of marble and mosaic, the stalls have asphalted floors, each stall being separately drained; the entire building is piped for gas and electric light?the building is heated by steam.?  Even more impressive was the electric elevator in the rear of the building ?for passengers or freight.?

   

          Before being thoughtlessly covered in white paint, the terra cotta and ornamental cast iron masonry supports would have been an attractive contrast to the light-colored brick -- photo by Alice Lum

    The 26 men of Fire Patrol No. 3 had an immense territory to cover?from river to river and from 14th Street to 57th Street.  But on the morning of June 18, 1901 the men did not have to travel far.  The tenement building at No. 441 West 31st Street was on fire.  Rather than evacuating the burning building immediately, one tenant, Mrs. O?Hagan, took the time to gather up her money and some valuables and then became trapped.  The New York Tribune reported that ?She is a fat woman and was unable to get down the fire escape.  She stood at the window threatening to jump, two of her children, a boy and a girl, beside her.?

    Hook and Ladder Company No. 24 was fighting the blaze and Fire Patrol Company 3 was working alongside.  When Fire Patrolman Cunningham and Fire Lieutenant Kehoe found her, Mrs. O?Hagan was hanging out of the window.  Using a short ladder they reached the fire escape and passed the two children down.  But as their portly mother started down, there was a problem.  The ladder slipped loose from its fastenings.

    Fire Patrolman Cunningham caught the portly woman by her wrist and held her dangling three stories above the sidewalk until the lieutenant could get the ladder secured.  ?Then she was brought down safely,? said the Tribune, ?Her wrist was sprained.?

    Along with the 26 fire patrolmen, the captain and the superintendant, Willie was in residence at No. 240 West 30th Street.  Willie was a goat.  And on February 19, 1903 Willie noticed that the stable door was ajar and he decided to explore the city.  As the goat wandered to 6th Avenue a group of boys followed him, some throwing snowballs.  Willie, apparently not enjoying the sport, charged the group, knocking one boy down.  He moved on to fashionable 5th Avenue.

    ?The real excitement began there,? reported The New York Tribune.  ?The goat was not used to such bewilderment of vehicles, and he had difficulty in dodging them.  The horses were not used to seeing goats running loose in New York?s fashionable thoroughfare, and they pranced and danced, none caring to come in contact with Willie.?

    Carriages carrying wealthy residents were rocked and several pedestrians were knocked down by the rampaging goat.  ?Soon the avenue was in a tumult,? said the newspaper.  A crowd of hansom cab drivers and boys with sticks and other weapons attempted to corral the goat.  Willie ran to the private entrance to the exclusive Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and the mayhem continued when porters tried to remove him and one was knocked down.

    Willie?s adventure came to an end when he simply returned to the stable.  ?No one had been seriously injured,? comforted The Tribune.

    Prospective fire patrolmen were carefully screened.  Because they were constantly in contact with the valuable goods they were trusted to protect, a dishonest patrolmen was definitely not wanted.  However in 1909 the Board of Fire Underwriters took a chance on Joseph Carmichael.  The man had been in the Catholic Protectory and the House of Refuge ?as an incorrigible,? said The Sun, and on June 3 he had been convicted of stealing $60 worth of jewelry and $30.50 in cash from Charles W. Gould.  But his sentence had been suspended and he was accepted as a fire patrolman.

Unfortunately, becoming a fire patrolman did not chance his habits.  Three days before Christmas that year Carmichael stayed back while the company rushed to a fire.  When the men returned, David H. Drought noticed his gold watch and chain was missing from his locker.  Carmichael confessed and was arrested, promising to return the watch.

    The arresting detective waited while Carmichael received the 14-pound turkey that the Board of Underwriters gave to every fire patrolman for Christmas.  They then proceeded to his mother?s house on Lexington Avenue.  Mrs. Carmichael received a Christmas turkey, Fire Patrolman Drought received his watch, and Carmichael received a jail sentence.

    Throughout the years Fire Patrol No. 3 continued to go beyond the mere protection of insured goods from water and fire.  On September 22, 1915 a massive explosion in the nearby 7th Avenue subway resulted in the collapse of the street for blocks.  Subway passengers were trapped beneath the rubble and dozens of motorists and pedestrians fell into the chasm including a passenger-filled trolley car.

    ?Lieut. John Sanders, Sergeant John Butler and the six men of Fire Patrol No. 3 did heroic work in getting out injured and frightened persons,? reported The Sun.  ?When they arrived they had no long ladders, so used ordinary scaling ladders and ropes.  They gave first attention to the trolley car, from which there were rising cries for help.?
In 1916 Irving Crump supplied an eye witness account of the dangers the Fire Patrol encountered.  ?White coated men wearing red fire helmets were working about in the glare of the rays from the searchlight engine.  I learned later that they were the men of the Fire Patrol, and that they were busy saving property in the warehouse.

    ?When I arrived, several of them were rolling huge blue barrels, that looked like oil containers, through one of the doorways of the building.  They seemed to be working madly, and firemen were helping them.  In and out of the building they hurried, plunging through smoke so dense that I wondered they could go through it and remain alive.  Now and then one staggered back, coughing and choking, only to master himself with an effort and plunge back into the smoke again.?

    When Crump asked what the patrolmen were doing, he was told that there were barrels of gasoline and motion picture film in the building which presented a potential disaster.  But even as the explanation was being given, the worst of the patrol?s fears became reality?the remaining gasoline barrels exploded.

    ?Out through the doorways staggered the men of the Fire Patrol and the firemen who had been operating lines inside the building,? said Crump.  ?Some of them seemed literally blown into the street by the force of the explosion.?
The same year Sergeant William S. Cashman was on the scene of a fire at No. 347 West 38th Street.  Fireman Harry J. Murphy of Engine Company No. 26 fell through the floor, landing unconscious in the cellar of the burning building.  Cashman rushed in, pulling the fireman to the safety of the street, saving his life.  A year later he was awarded the Fire Underwriters? life saving medal.  The gold medal ?goes only to those who have performed feats of signal bravery,? said The Sun.

    The unit was later renamed Fire Patrol #1 and at some point during the 20th century the handsome Flemish Revival gable and peaked roof were removed, to be replaced by a stepped parapet and flat roof.  The building was decommissioned in 2006.

   

          photo by Alice Lum

    Today the first two floors, where fire patrolmen slid down brass poles and horse-drawn wagons awaited the alarm, are home to a nightclub.  And although someone thought it would be a good idea to cover the brick, terra cotta and limestone with white paint, the building retains its handsome architectural integrity?even with the loss of the wonderful gable.


    http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-1894-fire-patrol-3-240-west-30th.html

 
NY Fire Patrol 3  Manhattan

    FP 3 organized at 115 W 29th St  1868
      - 115 W 29th St firehouse was former quarters of volunteer Madison Hose Co 37 and belonged to FDNY
    FP 3 moved to 104 W 30th St  - date unknown 
    FP 3 moved to 240 W 30th St  1895
    FP 3 redesignated FP 1 1955

    Note: FDNY Engine 1 operated from FP 3's quarters 1906-1907


FP 3's initial response district was 23rd St to 57th St.


Firehouse at 240 W 30th St:

   

   


FP 3 leaving 240 W 30th St firehouse:

   


Firehouse at 240 W 30th St today:

   


LODDS:

    Sergeant Michael McGee  Wooster Street Collapse February 14, 1958

         

    Patrolman Louis Brusati  Wooster Street Collapse February 14, 1958

         

    Patrolman James Devine  Wooster Street Collapse February 14, 1958   

         

    Patrolman Michael Tracey  Wooster Street Collapse February 14, 1958

         


         

    RIP.  Never forget.







 
NY Fire Patrol 2 firehouse 84 W 3rd Street, Manhattan

Daytonian in Manhattan
Friday, December 23, 2011
The 1906 Fire Patrol #2 -- 84 West Third Street

   

          photo by Alice Lum

    The New York Fire Patrol had firehouses, drove fire trucks, fought fires and its firefighters wore uniforms essentially indistinguishable from the FDNY. But it was not part of the New York City Fire Department.

    In 1803 a group of volunteers formed the Mutual Assistance and Bag Corporation, the purpose of which was to protect and salvage the contents of structures from fire and water damage. Thirty-six years later the New York Board of Fire Underwriters was established. The group added fire fighting to its methods of preventing losses to insured property. Funded by the insurance companies, the Fire Patrol was established.

    In 1905, the National Board of Fire Underwriters reported on the Salvage Corps, or Fire Patrol, listing six companies and 148 employees (including ?patrolmen,? superintendents, janitors, a cover mender, a one storekeeper).  Each well-equipped wagon, according to the report, carried a 16-foot extension ladder, chemical extinguishers, hooks, axes, door-openers, brooms, shovels, buckets, ropes, ?squilgees,? sprinkler heads and various tools. ?Companies hitch on all alarms;? it said, ?this has involved calling the men to the main floor as often as 19 times in a single night.?

    In its attempts to expand the number of patrol houses (there would eventually be ten at the Patrol?s height), the report was tepid in its assessment of the force. ?The fire patrol is a fairly efficient force with a membership and equipment of moderate strength. The proposed additional company will strengthen the corps materially.?

    In 1906 Franklin Baylis began work on a new house for Fire Patrol #2 which was operating from 31 Great Jones Street in Greenwich Village. The old boarding house at No. 84 West 3rd Street was razed and in its place rose a handsome four-story structure with Beaux Arts splashes.

    Constructed of red brick, the architect made restrained use of limestone and terra cotta to embellish the fa?ade. Stepped limestone over the openings of the street level rested on rusticated brick piers. Above the truck entrance a carved head of Mercury represented the speed of the responders inside.

   

          The Fire Patrol poses outside its new house, below the Third Street elevated train tracks.

Limestone quoins framed the windows and piers and above the cornice a terra cotta panel announced the construction date of 1906 above firemen?s trumpets. The fire patrol company moved into its new space in 1907.

   

          Terra cotta firemen's trumpets frame the construction date -- photo ny.curbed.com

    A tool used by the Patrols to minimize water damage were heavy tarpaulins measuring around 12 by 18 feet. Used both as "stock covers" (to protect goods from fire hose water) and roof covers, they were rapidly spread at the scene of fires. In the new Fire Patrol 2 long, numbered poles extended through the beams of the top floor for drying the canvas tarps.

    The public became aware of the value of the Patrol when the Police Headquarters caught fire on the evening of January 8, 1909. Engine Company 33 responded, wielding their fire axes. The Sun reported that ?They ripped up boards, beams and everything else but the walls before they found the source of the fire.?

    The firefighters then ?turned on a full flow of water from a 2-1/2 inch hose. Hundreds of gallons of water poured in and roared down into Mr. Bugher?s office.? Mr. Bugher was the Deputy Police Commissioner.

    Below Bugher?s office was the ?telegraph room,? and dispatch room filled with telephone equipment. ?It was then found that the water was putting the entire police telephone system out of business,? said The Sun. Fire Patrol 2 was ?hurriedly sent for? and the heavy tarpaulins were stretched across the ceiling of the telegraph room to catch the water.

    The work of the fire patrolmen was of extreme value to the insurance companies; but it was highly dangerous work, sometimes resulting in fatal injuries. The New York Tribune reported on April 23, 1920 that the New York Board of Fire Underwriters had decided to increase the patrolmen?s pay. With the raise, patrolmen first grade would receive $1,900 a year; sergeants $2,100 and captains $3,200.

    Among the Fire Patrolmen responding on the tragic morning of September 11, 2001 was Keith M. Roma. Roma worked for over an hour evacuating World Trade Center employees. Witnesses estimate that he personally removed more than 200 individuals. He suddenly was missing.

    On Christmas Eve 2001 Keith Roma?s body, his helmet at his side, was discovered near the bodies of nine civilians he was trying to save. He was the first fire patrolman to die in the line of duty in more than three decades.

    The Fire Patrol 2 building by now had seen the effects of misplaced fire fighter love. The limestone sculpture of Mercury had been painted in flesh-colored paint with bright yellow hair. The limestone at street level was painted white and the entire building above was covered in shiny red enamel; the firefighters? favorite hue.


Fire patrolmen painted the brick and stone and gave the limestone Mercury a makeover -- photo by Jim Henderson
Then in 2006 the Fire Patrol was disbanded. The last three Fire Patrol houses were abandoned and Fire Patrol 2 was offered for sale by the New York Board of Fire Underwriters. The Greenwich Village Historic Society panicked, quickly requesting the Landmarks Preservation Commission to landmark the structure.

    The Society need not have been alarmed.  Journalist Anderson Cooper purchased the 8,240 square foot building in 2010 for $4.3 million and began restoration. Cooper commissioned architect Cary Tamarkin to renovate the fire patrol house into a private residence.

   

          Workmen removed decades of paint and restored the masonry facade -- photo ny.curbed.com

    ?We could not be happier with the gorgeous exterior renovation that highlights and respects the unique history of the building,? the Society said in its blog on September 1, 2011. Tamarkin restored the stone and terra cotta detailing, removed the layers of paint and replaced the windows. The architect promised to retain much of the interior details like the herringbone brick floor, brass fire poles and cast iron spiral staircase. Four bronze plaques dedicated to the patrolmen lost in the line of duty had been removed from the fa?ade; but Cooper planned to reinstall them in their rightful places.


   
 
          The limestone Mercury, less colorful but more natural, has been restored -- photo by Alice Lum

    The handsome utilitarian building has come back to life, its outward appearance looking much as it did in 1906?without the overhead train down the middle of West Third Street.  It is a praiseworthy example of the reuse of vintage structures.




 
NY Fire Patrol 2  Manhattan

    FP 2 organized firehouse Marion St vic bell tower  1855
    FP 2 moved to firehouse 153 Elm St  1866
    FP 2 moved to firehouse 173 Elm St (Lafayette St)
      former quarters volunteer Lady Washington Engine 40 1869
    FP 2 moved to 31 Great Jones St firehouse 1873
    FP 2 moved to 84 W 3rd St new firehouse  1907
    FP 2 disbanded 2006

FP 2 firehouse 173 Elm St  1869:

   

    Former quarters of vol Lady Washington Eng 40


FP 2 firehouse 31 Great Jones St 1873-1907:

   


FP 2 firehouse 31 Great Jones St 1873-1907:

   


FP 2 at 84 W 3rd St 1907:

   

   

          FP previously wore white rubber turnout coats w/ red helmets before switching to black turnout coats

   

   

   

   

   


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJ5z6ThYOsI#


   

   

   


    NYC Fire Patrol N? 2

   

    http://www.celebritynetworth.com/articles/celebrity-homes/anderson-coopers-home-historic-nyc-firehouse/


    31 Great Jones St former FP 2 firehouse currently used as restaurant:

         

          Was horse stable before FP 2 firehouse.
 
NY Fire Patrol 2:

LODD:

    KEITH ROMA PATROLMAN FIRE PATROL 2 SEPTEMBER 11, 2001

         

         

          https://www.silive.com/september-11/2010/09/keith_roma_27_fire_patrolman_c.html

          https://www.firehero.org/fallen-firefighter/keith-m-roma/


    RIP. Never forget.

 
Division 16 covered eastern Queens during the 'War Years' from quarters with Engine 274

Battalions assigned to Division 16

Battalion 52 1965 - 1975
Battalion 53 1965 - 1975
Battalion 54 1965 - 1975
 
Division 17 covered the Bedford-Stuyvesant and Bushwick neighborhoods of Brooklyn during the 'War Years' from quarters with Engine 252.
It was a split of mostly Division 15, and three of its battalions were created to assist with the workload of Battalion 34 and 37.

Battalions assigned to Division 17

Battalion 28  1969 - 1975  renumbering of Battalion 37-2, which itself was a split of Battalion 37 in 1968
Battalion 37  1969 - 1975
Battalion 38  1969 - 1975
Battalion 57  1969 - 1975  split of Battalion 34, which itself was disbanded in 1989*
Battalion 60  1970 - 1975  split of Battalion 37, which was split twice - in 1968 and again in 1970

*original Battalion (34) was disbanded, but newer Battalion (57) remains in service
 
fdhistorian said:
Division 16 covered eastern Queens during the 'War Years' from quarters with Engine 274

Battalions assigned to Division 16

Battalion 52 1965 - 1975
Battalion 53 1965 - 1975
Battalion 54 1965 - 1975

Division 17 covered the Bedford-Stuyvesant and Bushwick neighborhoods of Brooklyn during the 'War Years' from quarters with Engine 252.
It was a split of mostly Division 15, and three of its battalions were created to assist with the workload of Battalion 34 and 37.

Battalions assigned to Division 17

Battalion 28  1969 - 1975  renumbering of Battalion 37-2, which itself was a split of Battalion 37 in 1968
Battalion 37  1969 - 1975
Battalion 38  1969 - 1975
Battalion 57  1969 - 1975  split of Battalion 34, which itself was disbanded in 1989*
Battalion 60  1970 - 1975  split of Battalion 37, which was split twice - in 1968 and again in 1970

*original Battalion (34) was disbanded, but newer Battalion (57) remains in service

FDNY Divisions and Battalions - 1971:

   
 
Is there a Unit Location Chart available or perhaps already posted somewhere that corresponds with the 1971 map of the sixteen divisions?
 
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