FDNY and NYC Firehouses and Fire Companies

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811

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Thanks guitarman314 and memorymaster:  Story and many photos is in WNYF 1955-3.

Cover color photo of 1940s Mack, thorough article with photos and diagram inside.  Fire was 5/12/1955 at Brooklyn Box 290. In about 30 minutes Fifth Alarm plus TWO Third Alarm Borough Calls were transmitted. 77-290-66-33-760 (FDR Drive & 41st Street and 77-290-99-33-9027 (Queens Blvd & Broadway).

This is an especially fine issue of WNYF, look it up if possible.  Besides this fire, there are tons of information on FDNY History and current Organization and Bureaus of the Department including functions of Companies, Communications, and R&T. The section on Alarm Assignment includes an illustration of the Assignment Card for Box 290 (E206 and L124 first due).
 

811

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Correction on my last.  The WNYF 1955-3 cover photo was not the Brooklyn Borough Call, but a Simultaneous Call lumberyard fire at 186th Street and Jamaica Ave, Hollis, Queens a few days later 5/15/1955.
 

mack

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In 1973, the Pitt Street firehouse (combined FDNY/NYPD) was planned for Engine 17, Ladder 18, Squad 5 and Battalion 4.  Engine 17/Ladder 18/Battalion 4 were on Broome Street and Squad 5 was at Engine 9's old quarters on E. Broadway.  Squad 5 instead moved to the Bronx and was later disbanded.  Engine 17 moved to Pitt Street with Ladder 18 but was later disbanded in 1991.  Engine 15 eventually moved to Pitt Street in 2001 with Ladder 18 and Battalion 4.  Fort Pitt was originally lettered for Engine 18, Ladder 18, Squad 5 and Battalion 4:

   
 

mack

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In 1915, the new Clove Road firehouse was planned for Engine 160 and Ladder 81.  But only Engine 160 moved into the large, 3 story firehouse.  Ladder 81 instead was organized at Engine 159 in their old former volunteer firehouse on Richmond Road in Dongan Hills.  Ladder 81 eventually moved to Engine 161 in South Beach in 1960 when Ladder 85 was organized in New Dorp.  The Grasmere firehouse was labeled for Ladder 161 but remained occupied only by Engine 160 until Division 8 relocated in 1930.  Later, Rescue 5 was reorganized at the Clove Road firehouse in 1984.  Division 8 was originally at Ladder 79 on Castleton Avenue (SI's oldest still-active firehouse) in Port Richmond, then moved to Engine 163 on Jewett Avenue and then Engine 154 in Tompkinsville, close to the SI Ferry.  Engine 152's and Engine 158's firehouses still carry "Hook and Ladder" lettering.
 
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mack said:
In 1973...Fort Pitt was originally lettered for Engine 18, Ladder 18, Squad 5 and Battalion 4:
   

Too bad they didn't save the "5" from the Squad and use it when Engine 15 moved in.
 

mack

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Engine 238/Ladder 106  Firehouse  205 Greenpoint Avenue  Greenpoint, Brooklyn  11th Division, 28th Battalion  "Greenpoint" "The Tiller Truck"

    Engine 38 BFD organized 176 Norman Avenue                                          1895
    Engine 38 BFD became Engine 38 FDNY                                                    1898
    Engine 38 became Engine 138                                                                  1899
    Engine 138 became Engine 238                                                                1913
    Engine 238 new firehouse w/Ladder 106                                                    1972

    Ladder 6 BFD organized 124 Greenpoint Avenue former volunteer firehouse  1869
    Ladder 6 BFD relocated to unknown location while new quarters built approx 1878
    Ladder 6 BFD new firehouse 124 Greenpoint Avenue                                  1880
    Ladder 6 BFD became Ladder 6 FDNY                                                        1898
    Ladder 6 became Ladder 56                                                                      1899
    Ladder 56 moved 683 Leonard Street                                                        1908
    Ladder 56 new firehouse 124 Greenpoint Avenue                                        1910
    Ladder 56 became Ladder 106                                                                    1913
    Ladder 106 new firehouse 205 Greenpoint Avenue w/Engine 238                  1972

    Battalion 36 organized 176 Norman Avenue at Engine 138                            1906
    Battalion 36 new firehouse 205 Greenpoint Avenue w/Engine 238                1972
    Battalion 36 disbanded                                                                              1975

    Foam Tender organized 205 Greenpoint Avenue at Engine 238                      1994

Ladder 6 BFD history: 

    Ladder 6 BFD organized at former firehouse of volunteer Valley Forge Engine 11 and Excelsior Ladder 4 at 124 Greenpoint Avenue. Firehouse was razed and Brooklyn Fire Department built a new firehouse in 1880 for Ladder 6.  FDNY then built another firehouse at the same location for Ladder 56 which then became Ladder 106. 

    Ladder 6 BFD history:  "One of the first truck companies to be equipped when the Department went into active operation in 1869 was Hook and ladder Company No. 6, and the changes in officers and men since the first time the truck rolled out of the house have been many. The company's quarters are on Greenpoint Avenue near Manhattan Avenue, Greenpoint, and the house which was rebuilt in the '80's is on the site of one occupied by "Valley Forge" Engine 11, of the Volunteer Department. Among those who make up the present company are men who have saved human life and others who have been injured while in the discharge of duty. All have seen hardship since they have entered the service, and not a few have been place in perilous positions from which they escaped fortunately without a scar. There have been brave, fearless men connected with this company in times past, who while battling with smoke and flame went down beneath falling wall and sere crushed and burned beyond all possible recognition. There are still others who yet carry scars upon their faces and hands to tell of fierce conflict with the destroyer of life and property. The interior of the truck house is comfortable, the apparatus is equipped with all the modern appliances for life-saving, and the team which pulls it is made up pf a sorrel and a roan, and both
young and powerful specimens of fire horses. The company on a first-alarm responds to calls from 48 boxes and on a second-alarm to 45 additional.  The territory covered by them on a first- alarm is bounded by Newtown Creek, Kingsland Avenue and Wither Street, North Ninth Street and by the East River and Newtown Creek.

          Among the large manufacturing establishments in the district are the Kings County oil works, Logwood Works, Smith's box factory, Ward's paper box factory, New York Stamping Company, the Havemeyer sugar works, Orr & Company's lumber yard, Faber's pencil works, Heckler iron works, Smith's American Porcelain Company, Jensen's porcelain works, Reeves & Church's box factory and lumber yard, New York wire and nail factory, Chelsea jute mills, Crosstown car stables, Kent Avenue car stables, Adler veneering and cane seat factory, Leary's ship-yard, Storm's planning mill, two large sash and blind factories belonging to Young & Gerard, Refrigerator Manufacturing Company foot of Guernsey Street, the Rutherford soap works and McCaifrey & Jacob's varnish works.

          The company has done active service at all the big fires in Greenpoint and the Eastern District since its organization, and the Herseman bakery fire will ever be fresh in their minds, for it was there that Jonathan Tyack, then Acting Foreman, and George Haight, temporarily detailed to the company, lost their lives beneath the falling walls. At Pratt's oil works fire on Oct.11, 1888, where Foreman Joseph J. McCormick, James McElroy and Henry Hellen of Engine Company No. 15, were severely burned, they worked for twenty hours without intermission. They were present and did
active duty at the Reeves & Church's box factory fire, at Havemeyer's sugar refinery, South Third Street and Kent Avenue, at Church's soda works in 1891, at Heckler's iron works in 1891, and at Palmer's bagging factory fire at the foot of North Seventh Street at which fire Engine No.15 was burned up, and several firemen had a narrow escape from being crushed by falling walls.

Foreman STEPHEN ALLEN was born in the city of New York, Aug. 13, 1853, and was appointed a fireman on May 28, 1880. He rose from the ranks step by step, an4 on March 1, 1887, was made Assistant Foreman. On July 1, 1889, he was promoted to the grade of Foreman. During the period of service in the Department and prior to being put in command of Hook and Ladder No. 5, he did active duty with Hook and Ladder Companies Nos. 4 and 8 and Engine Company No.12. At the Herseman bakery fire, on June 22, 1883, he was so badly burned about the face and body and bruised on the back and legs by falling walls, that he was laid up for nearly six months Mr. Allen is a bachelor and lives at No.638 Leonard Street.

Assistant Foreman FRANCIS C. SPILLANE was born in New York City, on Sept. 9, 1861. He is a bachelor and resides at No.308 Lorimer Street.  When appointed to the force, Feb. 16, 1884, he was assigned to duty with Truck No.6, where he has since remained. He was made an Assistant Foreman on July 1, 1889.

CORNELIUS CUNNINGHAM was born at Lyons Falls, Lewis County  NY, on September 15, (1856). He was appointed to the Department on Oct. 15, 1886 among the life-savers. On Oct. 23, 1888, a fire occurred at No. three-story and attic building. In the attic lived John Gravesmuller, who had but one leg. Cunningham was sent up the ladder to search the attic and while thus engaged, and being almost exhausted by the dense, smoke, he stumbled over the cripple. Cunnningham seized the unconscious man and dragged him to the window, where a rope was let down from the roof, by which Gravesmuller was lowered to the ground, but he died five weeks later at the Long Island College Hospital. Mr. Cunningham is married and lives at No.219 Twentieth Street.

PATRICK MURRAY is the driver of the truck. He was born 43 years ago in Ireland, and was appointed a fireman on March 8, 1888. He served 3 years in the United States Navy, and in the Volunteer Department days was attached to Ridgewood Hose No.7.

JOHN CLUNIE was born in Glasgow, Scotland, Oct. 3, 1865, and of the uniformed force, July 21, 1890. He served seven years in the Navy, on board  the "Minnesota," "Portsmouth," "Constitution," "New Hampshire", "Essex", "Powhattan" and "Wabash." He is a bachelor and lives at No.188 Kent Street

MICHAEL REARDON was injured some time ago by the breaking down of the apparatus while on the way to a fire, and he is now detailed to duty at the Bell tower. He was born in Ireland, Dec. 12, 1859, and was appointed to the force Mr. Reardon is married and lives at No.526 Lorimer Street.

THOMAS MCCAFFREY was born in 1832, in the city of New York a fireman since the date of the organization of the Department, and resides with his family, at No. 156 North Fourth Street. At present he is detailed the Sub-Office on South First Street. At the chalk factory fire on South Third Street in 1869, Mr. McCaffrey was standing on a ladder when the walls fell, with them and received severe injuries to his back. In the old volunteer days he ran with an engine company.

NORMAN HUGHES was born in the Fourteenth Ward, Williamsburg, Oct 3, 1850 and became a fireman May 8, 1874. While going to a fire he received a severe scalp wound and had his collar-bone broken by the breaking down of the apparatus. He is now doing duty as an operator at the Sub-Telephone Office.

JOHN CONNOLLY was born in Ireland, on March 10, 1845, and has been connected with the Fire Department since its organization, in 1869. Prior to that time he ran with Ridgewood Hose No.7. He is married and lives at No.123 Greenpoint Avenue.

JOHN F. MAHER was born in the County Tipperrary, in 1867, and became a fireman on March 12, 1891. He lives at No.571 Driggs Avenue.

GEORGE F. MCGEARY was born in this city on July 26, 1860 and received his appointment Dec. 15, 1885. He was burned severely about the face at a fire at the foot of Manhattan Avenue, a few years ago. He lives with his family, at No. 382 Leonard Street.

EUGENE J. MCKENNA was born in New York City on Oct. 16, 1865, and was appointed to the uniformed force on Nov. 15, 1891.

MICHAEL S. QUINN was born in this city, March 20, 1842. He served in the late with the 47th Brooklyn Regiment, and became a fireman Jan.31, 1882. He is a widower and lives at No.199 Green Street.

MICHAEL O'KEEFE was born in New York City, July 14, 1855, and on Jan.31, 1882, became a fireman. At the fire at Pratt's oil works, on Oct. 18, 1888, he was severely burned about the face and hands.  Mr. O'Keefe is married and lives at No.138 North Eighth Street.

CHARLES MCCONEGHY was born in this city, on Sept. 16, 1865. He is a bachelor and lives at No.159 Meserole Avenue. His appointment is dated Oct.29, 1890.


Engine 238 176 Norman Ave former firehouse:

   

   

   
   
    Engine 238 Norman Avenue firehouse history:

          http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/brooklyn-fire-department-house-on-norman-avenue



Ladder 56 (Ladder 106) 124 Greenpoint Avenue former BFD firehouse built 1910:

   

   

   

   


Engine 238/Ladder 106 205 Greenpoint Avenue firehouse built 1972:

   

   

   

   

   


Engine 238:

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   


Ladder 106:

   

   

   

   

   

   

   


Foam Tender:

   


Engine 238/Ladder 106:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UyZ7EEzGV8

    Engine 238 Responding

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcdZHoyuV9Y

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhR4DkxuSnY

    http://nyfd.com/brooklyn_ladders/ladder_106.html


Engine 238 Medals:

    FF Charles B. Helmoltz  April 24, 1912, awarded 1913 Hurley Medal

          FF Helmoltz rescued 22 year old woman from a 3rd floor apartment fire at 479 Metropolitan Avenue, April 24, 1912.  Fire was reported at 1:05 AM.

         


    CAPT Michael F. Conley, awarded 1923 Stephenson Medal

    FF August V. Beck February 12, 1927, awarded 1928 Brooklyn Citizens Medal


Ladder 106 Medals:

    LT John J. Rakers, Jr. June 1, 1937, awarded 1938 La Guardia Medal

          Rescued FF John F. Herbst, Ladder 106, Driggs Avenue tenement fire

         

    FF John F. Herbst, June 1, 1937, awarded 1938 McElligott Medal

          Rescued Andrew Kivatowski at 178 Driggs Avenue tenement fire.

         

         

    FF John F. Herbst, January 30, 1938, awarded 1939 La Guardia Medal McElligott Medal

         

    FF Richard W. Schultz, February 1, 1940, awarded 1941 Dougherty Medal

          Rescue of family at 115 Calyer Street after oil stove explosion

         

    FF Louis J. Griffin, February 1, 1940, awarded 1941 Johnson Medal

          Rescue of family at 115 Calyer Street after oil stove explosion

    FF Francis P. O'Hara, February 1, 1940, awarded 1941 Delehanty Medal

          Rescue of family at 115 Calyer Street after oil stove explosion

    FF Robert J. Varese, March 17, 1987, awarded 1988 Fire Bell Club Medal

    FF Raymond W. Mayr, March 17, 1987, awarded 1988 Third Alarm Association Medal

    FF Eugene J. Marshal, March 17, 1987, awarded 1988 Signal 77 Medal


Engine 238 LODDs:

    FF Christopher Drissel, January 31, 1904

    FF Arthur J. Rank, January 31, 1904

    FF Peter J. Gaffney, February 1, 1904

          Greenpoint 1904 Jute Mill Fire:

             

         
    FF Richard P. Gifford, October 26, 1962

    FF George J. Zahn, October 26, 1962

          Queens box 5027 was transmitted at 2133 for a fire at the Sefu Soap and Fat Co., at 44-15 56th Road in Maspeth. 4 alarms had been transmitted for the 2 story brick factory.  The fire was declared under control at 2242.  Approximately 20 members were overhauling underneath a loading shed when a wall and ceiling collapsed without warning.  The dead and injured firemen were buried in 6 feet of debris.  Firemen Richard Andrews, James Marino, Captain William Russell of Engine 325, Firemen Richard Gifford, George Zahn of Engine 238 and Fireman Francis Egan of Ladder 115, were killed. 


         

         

         

              "The fire broke out from an unknown cause around 9 p.m. in the two-story brick, 73-by-50-foot building housing the Sefu Fat and Soap Co.
The four-alarm fire was brought under control at 10:50 p.m., and shortly thereafter the wall fell. A fifth alarm was sounded to bring emergency equipment to the scene.  Firemen were walking in and out of the first floor of the building from a loading platform outside. Then a voice cried out: "Look out, there goes ......"  The sentence was never finished.  The wall and ceiling tumbled down, burying the fireman under tons of bricks and other debris."  - Charleston Daily Mail West Virginia 1962-10-27

             

             

    LT Glenn Wilkenson, September 11, 2001

         

         

        https://www.firehero.org/fallen-firefighter/glenn-e-wilkinson/


Ladder 106 (Ladder 6 BFD) LODDs:

    LT Jonathan Tyack, June 22, 1884

    FF George W. Haight (detailed Ladder 6), June 22, 1984

          Herseman Bakery Fire:  "The fire started when a hot brick from one of the ovens on the second floor of Herseman's Bakery dropped to the floor below. It landed in the stable, igniting some hay. The fire gained headway before it was noticed. Workers went into the stables to release the forty-four horses but were driven back by the flames. Thirty-three of the horses were released, eleven were killed. Acting Foreman Jonathan Tyack and Fireman Stephen Allen and Firemen George W. Haight were ordered to add another section of hose to the line operating in the rear of the bakery. The three men entered the alleyway between the fire building and the adjoining building with the extra hose. The four walls of the building swayed before the roof fell in, pushing the walls out and burying the helpless firemen. Acting Foreman Tyack was found under six feet of bricks with his skull crushed. Fireman Haight was found badly burned. Fireman Allen was injured but escaped with only a broken leg when he was thrown into a doorway and through the door of the next building. Acting Foreman Tyack and Fireman Haight both lived on Meserole Avenue in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn. Acting Forman Tyack was forty-five years old, was married and the father of four children. Fireman Haight lost his wife several weeks earlier; they left three children orphaned. The fire from the time it was discovered until the building collapsed was less than fifteen minutes."  (From Cypress Hills webpage)

           

         

          http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pv&GRid=93085299&PIpi=62970545


    FF Jeremiah Leoney, November 27, 1913

          FF Jeremiah Leoney died as a result of injuries sustained November 24th, when he and several other F/Fs were caught under a collapsing wall at a fire in a chemical plant.

       


    RIP.  Never forget.


Greenpoint fires:

    1879: Friday - November 21, 1879 - 3rd alarm - factory fire following explosion - Greenpoint Avenue & Milton Street - Brooklyn Fire Dept

          1st alarm units: E 15, E 12, E 13, L6
          2nd alarm units: E 11, E 16, E 18, L 4
          3rd alarm units: E 17, L 2
          Chief in command - Chief Nevins - acted "with accustomed coolness and daring"
          Firefighters commended in press for "bravery and pluck"

    1883 - Herseman Bakery - 2 LODDs (Fireman Jonathan Tyact Ladder 106 and Fireman
              George Haight detailed Ladder 106 - crushed by falling wall

    1898 - 4th alarm - Greenpoint jute factory blaze injures 5 firemen

         

    1899 - Box 496 - two square blocks destroyed - E 15, E 12, E 38 L 6 first alarm companies

          http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_homeless_families_fire_greenpoint_1899_article00753.htm

    1900 - Major factory fire

          http://www.newyorkshitty.com/greenpoint-goodness/3734

    1908 - International Cork Company factory fire

    1919 - Standard Oil Plant fire - 20 acres - response over 40 engines - fire burned 4 days

    1950 - Underground sewer gas explosion - October 6, 1950

          https://greenpointers.com/2016/11/15/day-of-terror-in-1950-the-frightening-greenpoint-underground-explosion/
 
    1952 - Boro call - June 30, 1952 - 5 dead

         

          https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/58061401/?terms=

    1955 - Boro call 5/12/1955 at Brooklyn Box 290 -  In about 30 minutes 5th Alarm plus TWO 3rd Alarm Boro Calls were transmitted - 77-290-66-33-760 FDR Drive & 41st Street and 77-290-99-33-9027 Queens Blvd & Broadway - (-thanks 811)

    1965 - Boro call -  5 alarm Boro Call on 8/12/1965 - signal was 77-290-66-55-277 - the supply box Manhattan Box 277 is now Clinton & Delancey Sts, just across the Williamsburg Bridge  (- thanks 811)

    1979 - 3rd alarm - gasoline transfer facility - explosion and fire - Greenpoint Avenue and N Henry Street

    2006 - 10 alarms Greenpoint Terminal Market

          http://www.nydailynews.com/news/greenpoint-fire-gallery-1.19214#pmSlide=0


Greenpoint fire alarm boxes:

    https://brooklynimbecile.wordpress.com/2011/06/28/the-red-fire-call-boxes-of-greenpoint/


Greenpoint:

    http://www.boweryboyshistory.com/2016/02/greenpoint-brooklyn.html

    http://forgotten-ny.com/2005/05/greenpoint-top-to-bottom/

   







 
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EXCELLENT once again mack.... in the photo of 106s old qtrs (showing the market next door) labeled L106 fh1  look closely at the lower part of the roof cornice .....the lettering was not tin but rather an extremely heavy set of oversize bronze numbers & letters....in the next photo after the Fh was vacated notice they have been removed....some occupancies i remember in the old FH were a laundry & then a chicken market.....also ENG*215 formerly on India St was to be in the new Greenpoint Ave FH w/238..106..& BN*36.....the 215 numbers were on the new FH when it was built but they were disbanded before moving there....after the 36 was disbanded 106 was placed in the 35*BN....when i was in 108 the disliked interchange started in '68....our 1st interchange Co was 128 then after awhile we were switched to 115 then after awhile 136 then back to our own BN w/106 before it was stopped entirely in '75....106 was by far the best place (if we had to go somewhere)...many times we responded back to jobs in our own area in Williamsburg......one night while at 106 we had five hours of Fire duty including a job while relocated to LAD*29 in the BX......it is really unbelievable that having had so many more Units in the Greenpoint area (as well as surrounding Williamsburg & Long Island City) when they were mainly low rise /low density bldgs that now w/all the influx of new dwellings & old factories becoming residential & the proliferation of hi rise bldgs there are now less Units covering Greenpoint & surrounding areas....gone are 209..212..215..SQ*7..BNs 34 & 36 & the relocation of DV*11 formerly on Richardson St w/229/146 now has been moved out of the area to Tillary St. 
 

mack

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1908 Greenpoint International Cork Company factory fire:

    http://www.brownstoner.com/history/the-international-cork-company-of-greenpoint/

   
 

mack

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1979 - 3rd alarm - Greenpoint - gasoline transfer facility explosion and fire:

"November 12, 1979 - It was Veteran's Day, I just got off a midnight to 8:00am shift at the EMS Communications Center in Maspeth. I lived on 79th Street on the Middle Village side of Elmhurst. I went to bed and was awakened by my scanner as 2nd Alarm was transmitted over the Brooklyn Fire radio frequency. The fire was in Greenpoint at a gasoline transfer storage facility located at North Henry Street and Kingsland Ave and Greenpoint Ave. I lived about 10 to 15 minutes away from the fire. As I was responding, I heard a loud explosion. A 3rd Alarm was transmitted. A gasoline truck backed over and hit one of the loading bays where gas is loaded onto the trucks. The heat from the trucks muffler caused an explosion and fire. The fire was expanding quickly to the other loading docks. Handlines were stretched and quickly put into operation. Tower ladder 115 went into operation. The Foam unit, an old Mack pumper quickly put foam on the fire. soon the fire darkened down and disaster was averted."  - NYFD Steve Spak 

    - http://www.stevespak.com/fires/brooklyn/11-12-79.html

 
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I was at the gasoline yard Fire above ^^^^ w/R*2 ....responding there when we made the turn from Flushing Ave onto Kent Ave (still a good distance away) it looked like a bomb had hit from the amount of smoke in the sky...we had a foam handline & we were operating on one of the trucks .....there was a corrugated metal shed like roof over several trucks that prevented the stream from the foam rig's deck pipe from hitting parts of the Fire....the standard procedure is to approach a truck from the side since it is the  ends that can blow out if the tank fails...this was graphically proven when the back end of the truck we were directing our stream at blew out .....the meter & other equipment on the back of the truck flew by like giant pieces of shrapnel penetrating the fiberglass tilt hood of another Mack truck parked a good distance away...there are some pictures of us operating they are in a magazine i think it maybe was Fire Engineering...R*4 was there also & they & some ENGs were operating these stationary deck pipe like appliances that are located around the yard & hooked to a water system underground....they were using these to cool surrounding trucks not yet involved...the water from this system comes directly out of Newtown Creek & made for stinking sewage type rain.....  at that time R*4 used to have a pumper in qtrs filled w/5 gallon foam cans they responded w/that also. 
 

mack

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Engine 215  Firehouse  88 India Street, Greenpoint, Brooklyn  11th Division, 36th Battalion      DISBANDED

    Engine 15 BFD organized 88 India Street                              1872
    Engine 15 BFD became Engine 15 FDNY                                1898
    Engine 15 became Engine 115                                              1899
    Engine 115 moved 104 Huron Street                                    1909
    Engine 115 new firehouse 88 India Street                              1910
    Engine 115 became Engine 215                                            1913
    Engine 215 disbanded                                                          1972

    Engine 215-2 organized 88 India Street at Engine 215            1917
    Engine 215-2 disbanded                                                      1918


Engine 15 BFD original firehouse 88 India Street:

   


Plans for new firehouse Engine 15 BFD 88 India Street:

   


Engine 215 88 India Street (firehouse built 1910):

   

   


88 India Street 1980s:

   


88 India Street former firehouse:

   


Engine 15 Brooklyn Fire Department from "Our Firemen - The Official History of the Brooklyn Fire Department"  1892:
 
   


Engine 215 LODD:

    FF George W. Strait, Engine 15 BFD (Engine 215) - detailed to Ladder 6 (Ladder 106), Hersemann's Bakery fire, Graham Avenue and Powers Street, wall collapse, June 22, 1884

"The fire started when a hot brick from one of the ovens on the second floor of Herseman's Bakery dropped to the floor below. It landed in the stable, igniting some hay. The fire gained headway before it was noticed. Workers went into the stables to release the forty-four horses but were driven back by the flames. Thirty-three of the horses were released, eleven were killed. Acting Foreman Jonathan Tyack and Fireman Stephen Allen and Firemen George W. Haight were ordered to add another section of hose to the line operating in the rear of the bakery. The three men entered the alleyway between the fire building and the adjoining building with the extra hose. The four walls of the building swayed before the roof fell in, pushing the walls out and burying the helpless firemen. Acting Foreman Tyack was found under six feet of bricks with his skull crushed. Fireman Haight was found badly burned. Fireman Allen was injured but escaped with only a broken leg when he was thrown into a doorway and through the door of the next building. Acting Foreman Tyack and Fireman Haight both lived on Meserole Avenue in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn. Acting Forman Tyack was forty-five years old, was married and the father of four children. Fireman Haight lost his wife several weeks earlier; they left three children orphaned. The fire from the time it was discovered until the building collapsed was less than fifteen minutes." - from "The Last Alarm", by Boucher, Urbanowicz & Melahn

    Cypress Hills Cemetery:

         

         

         

    Assistant Chief report:
   
         


Engine 215  LODD:

    FF Anton Jiranek, Engine 115, died from injuries received in a fall, January 7, 1911.  FF Jiranek was summoned to rescue a cat who climbed up a tree.  He was 25 years old and lived in Greenpoint on Java Street.

   


    RIP. Never forget.

   
88 India Street firehouse history:

    http://brooklynrelics.blogspot.com/2013/09/india-street-firehouse-88-india-street.html


Greenpoint history:

    Brooklyn's northern-most settlement was originally covered with trees and called "Green Point".

         
http://brooklyn.about.com/od/historicbrooklyn/a/A-Short-History-Of-Greenpoint-Brooklyn.htm


    http://www.archive.org/stream/historicgreenpoi00felt#page/n67/mode/2up

    http://forgotten-ny.com/2012/12/lost-streets-of-greenpoint/

 

mack

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Greenpoint ferry to Manhattan:

    "The first Greenpoint ferry dates from the 1830?s when there were perhaps only a hundred or so souls living in this farming community. The first ferry was started by a Greenpoint carpenter, Alpheus Rollins, when there were only about a dozen houses in the entire area. Rollins wanted to make a little extra money so he built a rowboat and charged three cents to be rowed to tenth street in Manhattan. His business was so good that he soon built four larger catboats to ferry passengers across the East River. Greenpoint was still quite verdant then and many Manhattanites came to the area for picnics. Soon Rollins had so many passengers that he had to hire a steamboat to bring the people across. One of Rollins? early passengers was Neziah Bliss who always insisted paying double fare. Bliss would later buy up a huge tract of Greenpoint land and develop the area laying out the areas first streets and lots. Eventually, Bliss got the legal right to run the ferry and he donated a piece of land at the end of Greenpoint Avenue so that the area could have a ferry terminal. He soon sold the ferry off to a man called Sheppard Knapp, and the Knapp family ran the local ferry for many years. In 1852 Archbishop Hughes had a ferryboat called ?Martha? built so that Manhattanites could travel by ferry first to Greenpoint and then to nearby Calvary cemetery in Queens.

    A steam ferry running between Greenpoint Avenue & 10th Street in Manhattan, was established on May 7, 1853. The first boat was a tub-like affair, about 75 feet long with a small cabin on the deck. This was an old boat which had formerly plied between New York & Dutchess Junction on the Hudson River, named Kate.  A regular slip could not be secured on the New York side until 18 months later, but it finally was and the Greenpoint Ferry service thrived for years. Four ferry boats provided regular ferry service connecting Greenpoint with Manhattan.

    The ferry boat though often ran in the red, so in 1921 the City of New York took over the ferry thanks in large part to the non-stop badgering of Alderman Pete McGuinness who so often berated Mayor Hylan that Hyland told him that the city would take over the ferry if Pete would only shut up. Amazingly, McGuinness did (he was a chatterbox extraordinaire) and the city began to run the ferry. McGuinness became the great champion of the ferry. Perhaps as a result of the motorcar and the East River bridges, the ferry became even more unprofitable and calls arose for the city to kill the Greenpoint Ferry As Alderman, one of his top priorities was preserving the money-losing Greenpoint Ferry, which he kept running for thirteen years despite every year being a prime target for budget cuts. For more than seventy-five years the ferry service provided Greenpoint with its only direct communication with Manhattan, but because many people worked locally and did not use it, the ferry?s ridership declined to a point that no longer justified its cost."

    - https://greenpointers.com/2017/05/01/history-greenpoint-ferry/
 

mack

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Messages
13,431
Engine 212 (Engine 12 Brooklyn Fire Department)  Firehouse 136 Wythe Ave  Williamsburg, Brooklyn  11th Division, 36th Battalion  DISBANDED

    Engine 12 BFD organized 136 Wythe Ave  former volunteer firehouse    1869
    Engine 12 BFD became Engine 12 FDNY                                              1898
    Engine 12 became Engine 112                                                            1899
    Engine 112 moved to stables on Wythe Ave vic. N. 9th St                    1908
    Engine 112 moved to new firehouse 136 Wythe Ave                            1908                                     
    Engine 112 became Engine 212                                                          1913
    Engine 212 disbanded                                                                        1975
    Engine 212 reorganized                                                                      1975
    Engine 212 disbanded                                                                        1975
    Engine 212 reorganized                                                                      1978
    Engine 212 disbanded                                                                        2003

    Squad 7 organized 136 Wythe Ave at Engine 212                                1959
    Squad 7 moved 43 Morgan Avenue at Engine 237                                1964
    Squad 7 disbanded                                                                            1966

    Hi-Ex Foam 82 organized 136 Wythe Ave at Engine 212                        1978
    Hi-Ex Foam 82 became Hi-Ex Foam 91                                                1988
    Hi-Ex Foam 91 moved to 75 Richardson St at Engine 229                      1996
    Hi-Ex Foam 91 moved to 136 Wythe Ave at Engine 212                        1998
    Hi-Ex Foam 91 became Foam 212                                                        1998
    Foam 212 disbanded                                                                          2003

    Utility 1 organized 136 Wythe Ave                                                        1977
    Utility 1 disbanded                                                                              1978


    Note:  Original Engine 5 BFD firehouse at 136 Wythe Avenue was quarters of volunteer "Northern Lights Engine 5


Engine 12 Brooklyn Fire Department history:

    "Engine Company No. 12 was organized on Sept. 15, 1869, and since that time has occupied its present quarters on Wythe Avenue near the corner of North Eighth Street.  The house was built in 1861, and prior to its occupation by Engine Company No. 12 was tenanted by "Northern Liberties" No. 5 of the Volunteer Department.  The house, with the
exception of a few small repairs, is in a very comfortable condition.  It is located in the center of a district which comprises all the large sugar refineries, oil works and factories which turn out goods of an inflammable nature, and make the hottest kind of fire when ignited.  Many of the buildings are eight ten and twelve stories high, and by reason of their real altitude, and the large area of ground covered by some of them, the firemen meet a difficult task when called upon to battle with a fire in one of them.  The members of No. 12 know whereof they speak when they say that
they are located in the heart of the worst fire district in Brooklyn, for they have many times had experiences which confirm their belief.  The company is equipped with a second-class Amoskeag engine, and a four wheeled tender,
and four kind, young, serviceable horses.  On a first-alarm they cover the entire territory lying between Kingsland Avenue  on the east and Kent Avenue on the west, and from the Hunter's Point jute works to South Ninth Street."
    - from "Our Firemen - the Official History of the BFD"
                                                                     

Engine 6 BFD initial firehouse 136 Wythe Avenue:

   


Engine 212 firehouse 136 Wythe Avenue:

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

 
   


Engine 212:

   

   

   


Foam 212:

   


Engine 212 LODDs:

    FF Charles McHugh, August 8, 1889

          Engine 12 was responding to an alarm for fire at 129 Kent Street.  FF McHugh was driver of Engine 12's horse-drawn hose tender.  The tender wheels struck car tracks in the street and FF McHugh was thrown from his seat on the tender.  He died from his injuries.

    LT Thomas F. Kain, January 12, 1931

          LT Thomas F. Kain of Engine 212 was overcome by smoke while operating at a fire at 152 India Street. In his forty-nine years as a fireman this was his first injury. He was taken to St. Catherine?s Hospital. Several hours after completing his fiftieth anniversary he passed away. Knowing he was slipping, his only wish was to see his fiftieth anniversary. He was a member of Engine 212 for the past twenty years and was seventy-one years old at his death. He lived in the Howard Beach section of Queens.  - From "The Last Alarm" by Boucher, Urbanowicz & Melahn

         

         


    RIP.  Never forget.


Engine 212 closure - the "Peoples Firehouse":

   

   

   

    http://nypost.com/2004/10/07/sign-of-anger-over-firehouse-closing/

    https://brooklynrelics.blogspot.com/2014/01/engine-company-212-peoples-firehouse.html
   
    http://www.placematters.net/node/1163

   
   

Williamsburg:

    https://www.bklynlibrary.org/ourbrooklyn/williamsburg/

    http://forgotten-ny.com/2006/07/williamsburg-part-one-brooklyn/





 
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Sq 7 was organized at the Qtrs of E212 later moved to E237 and then disbanded to organize E 232 around the Summer of 66'
 
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