FDNY and NYC Firehouses and Fire Companies

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mack

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Airport Crash Unit 31/Bridge Chemical Unit 62  LaGuardia Airport  Queens                  Disbanded

    Airport Crash Unit 31 organized LaGuardia Airport Hanger 4                                          1946
    Airport Crash Unit 31 new quarters LaGuardia Airport Building 32                                    1947
    Airport Crash Unit 31 disbanded                                                                                  1947

    Bridge Chemical Unit 62 organized 22-61 35th Street at Engine 312                                1939
    Bridge Chemical Unit 62 moved LaGuardia Airport Hanger 4 at Airport Crash Unit 31        1946
    Bridge Chemical Unit 62 new quarters LaGuardia Airport building w/Airport Crash Unit 31  1947
    Bridge Chemical Unit 62 moved 22-61 35th Street at Engine 312                                    1947
    Bridge Chemical Unit 62 disbanded                                                                                1954

Airport Crash Unit 31:

   

    1939 Diamond T:
   

    1938 Ahrens Fox:
   

   

   

   

    Fire Class Truck Class No 155 - US Army:
    Tank capacity 1000 gal; 21 tons; 2 motors - driving and pumping; supplied 3 3/4 in lines; ; 2 deck guns; foam units; truck company tools 
   
    http://www.armyfiretrucks.com/155%20page.htm

    Army Fire Truck Class No 125:
    International chassis; Bean pump; supplied 3 3/4 in 100 ft handlines (2 water, 1 foam); truck tools:
   

    Army Fire Truck Class No 125:
    Tank capacity 1000 gal; 21 tons; 2 motors - driving and pumping; supplied 3 3/4 in lines; ; 2 deck guns; foam units; truck company tools:
   
    http://www.armyfiretrucks.com/125%20page.htm

    1946 Mack/Brockway crash unit:
   


Bridge Chemical Unit 62:

   

    Bridge Chemical Units were organized in 1939 to protect bridges and tunnels.  Units had 700 GPM pumpers, 1000 ft 2 1/2 inch hose, 600 ft 1 1/2 inch hose, foam generator and hopper, 400 lbs foam powder and fire extinguishers.  Bridge Chemical Unit 62 was relocated to LaGuardia Airport to support Airport Crash Unit 31 from 1946 to 1947.  Bridge Chemical Units were disbanded in 1954 when FDNY purchased pumpers with booster tanks.


May 29, 1947 LaGuardia Airport DC-4 crash - FDNY response and operations:

    FDNY ACU 31's firehouse was located less than 200 yards from Runway 18, the short 3,500 ft runway at the relatively new municipal airport.  The pilot of a United Airlines DC-4 was attempting to take off into a sudden head wind of 23 mph.  It was 8:05 PM.  The housewatch desk of the firehouse had a clear view of the runway and Fireman Edward Leeds was on duty.  He saw the plane struggle to lift off, heard the brakes being applied and turned out the company as the aircraft crashed through the aircraft barrier fence.  He then contacted the dispatcher and requested that a box be transmitted for an emergency.  The Queens dispatcher transmitted  Box 7638 on the verbal.  By the time Leeds finished with the dispatcher, all firefighting apparatus had left the firehouse and he had to jump on the former sanitation department flush truck used for water supply on the runways.

    ACU 31 arrived at the crash site less than 50 seconds after the box was transmitted.  The plane had crashed through a heavy wooden fence and had settled into a swamp adjacent to the runway.  Flames lit up the area and the fuselage was surrounded by fire.  The fabric coverings of the aircraft were on fire and there were burning pools of fuel and oil.  Access to the aircraft for fire apparatus was limited by swamp and rocky slopes, as well as fire.  Apparatus had to approach towards the right rear quarter of the aircraft.  ACU 31's Apparatus 1, the heavy Army Class No 155 truck, blasted a path through the flames with deck guns.  Fireman Joseph Pilipow was successfully able to clear an access corridor to the rear of the 50 ft passenger cabin.  3 hand fog lines were "raced into position" and a 16 ft ladder was thrown against the airplane about 10 ft to the rear of the wing. Fireman Joseph McLaughlin broke the surface of the aircraft and began to hit the inside with a cabin with a fog handline.  The skin of the aircraft was described as "white hot".  McLaughlin took a beating with the line and was relieved by Fireman Joseph Mackey.  He could only hit the front of the cabin from his position.  Heat had cause the sides of the aircraft to fold in. 

    Access to the DC-4 was only available through an 18 in x 24 in utility door.  Approximately 1 minute after ACU 31 began operations, Fireman Charles Ortlam crawled through the small utility door opening, into the plane's bathroom, and gained access to the center aisleway.  Passengers were still strapped in smoldering seats, some were heaped on the floor.  He immediately removed 2 passengers through the utility door.  This was accomplished even though the bathroom sink limited clearance to the hatch door to 10 in.  Ortlam was also operating without a mask.  Fireman Ortlam was removed from the aircraft and McLaughlin slid into the burning DC-4. McLaughlin quickly rescued a female passenger from the adjacent bathroom.  Fireman Edward Stegmaier then cut a hole through the main door which had remained unopened.  He pulled out a male passenger, freed a pinned injured passenger, and began extricating other passengers.  5 rescues were made by ACU 31 during immediate operations and prior to the arrival of other FDNY and emergency units.  H&L 117 and H&L 154 arrived and began assisting ACU 31 with rescue operations.  5 more living passengers were rescued.  37 deceased victims were removed.

    Firefighting operations continued to try and extinguish the burning aircraft and pools of fuel.  BC Mulvaney of Bn 49 and then DC O'Connor of the 14th Division arrived and assumed command.  A 2nd alarm for Box 7638 was quickly transmitted.  Bridge Chemical Unit 62 and Foam Powder Supply Unit 81 were special called.  Eng 307 stretched in and put a foam line into operation using ACU 31's foam generator.  Eng 263 used it's deck pipe.  Eng 316 and Eng 307  stretched 2 1/2 inch lines.  Eng 263 used rescue 4's foam generator for a second foam line.  Bridge Chemical unit put a third foam line into operation.  Rescue 4 assisted with rescue efforts and took care of survivors with inhalators and 1st aid measures.

    This was the worst aircraft disaster in US history to that point in time.  There were 44 passengers and 4 crew members.  10 were rescued by FDNY ACU 31, H&L 117 and H&L 154, and Rescue 4. Cause of the crash was pilot error.   
    - WNYF 1947   

4 members of Airport Crash Unit 31 received Department awards for valor for their actions May 29, 1947:

    FF Charles G. Ortlam  Engine 263  Department Medal  Airport Crash Unit 31

    FF John P. McLaughlin Engine 275  Department Medal  Airport Crash Unit 31

    LT Edwin G. Rankin  Engine 319  Department Medal  Airport Crash Unit 31 

    FF Edward J. Stegmaier Ladder 163  Department Medal  Airport Crash Unit 31


Airport Crash Unit 31 history:
   
    FDNY Airport Crash Unit 31 was organized to protect the new LaGuardia Airport in 1946.  Primary duty was to extinguish fire and lend aid for emergencies related to aircraft entering or leaving the airport.  Equipment included a Sanitation Department sprinkler and three Army fire trucks.  Unit established fire protection system and procedures for airport, responded to major crash in which they saved many lives and stayed in service until disbanded and responsibilities turned over to Port Authority.

   

   

   


FDNY 1947 Crash Operations:

   


LaGuardia Airport history:

    The airport site was first occupied by the Gala Amusement Park, a popular destination owned by the Steinway family:

         


      In 1929, the park was transformed into a 105-acre private flying field and first named Glenn H. Curtiss Airport after aviation pioneer Glenn H. Curtiss, and then re-named North Beach Airport:

         


    In 1937, New York City took over the airport and enlarged the grounds with the purchase of adjoining land and by filling in 357 acres of waterfront along the east side. In 1939, it re-opened with a new name, New York Municipal Airport-LaGuardia Field.


NYPD amphibian:

   


Airport was built on the waterfront to service both seaplanes and land planes.

    1929 hangers were 120 ft wide state of the art hangers
    NYPD operated squadron of 5 amphibians for patrol and rescue

    http://www.airfields-freeman.com/NY/Airfields_NY_NY_Queens.htm#northbeach


Laguardia Airport 1940s:

    La Guardia Airport 1940s


The airport was leased to the Port Authority in 1947.


      http://www.panynj.gov/airports/lga-history.html     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LaGuardia_Airport


Gone but not forgotten.





 

mack

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Engine 320/Ladder 167  firehouse  36-18 Francis Lewis Boulevard  Auburndale/Bayside Queens

    Engine 320 organized 36-18 Francis Lewis Boulevard w/Ladder 167                      1931

    Ladder 167 organized 36-18 Francis Lewis Boulevard w/Engine 320                      1931


36-18 Francis Lewis Boulevard firehouse opening dedication 1931:

   

   

    Original members 1931:
   


36-18 Francis Lewis Boulevard firehouse:

   

   

   

   

   

   


Engine 320:

   

   


Ladder 167:

    1930s:
   

    1950s:
   

   

   

   

   

    Ladder 167 at Engine 306:
   


Engine 320/Ladder 167:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SEdVyRFCTY

Engine 320 responding from Engine 274:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qh0Xk7AIINk

Ladder 167 returns to quarters:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOnzHoTXmS4

Ladder 167 responding from Engine 306:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gXFbChYVF1s


Ladder 167 LODD:

    Captain Thomas Herlihy, Ladder 167, Queens box 6909, Northern Boulevard and Auburndale Road, overcome by smoke December 24, 1954, died January 1, 1955

    Captain Herlihy was overcome by smoke at Box 6909. He was appointed to the Department on June 1, 1913, promoted to Lieutenant on March 16, 1926 and Captain on December 25, 1934. He served as a Lieutenant of Ladder 167 from 1931 until promoted in 1934. He returned to Ladder 167 on April 1, 1939. He was sixty-seven years old and was born in Ireland. - The Last Alarm" by Boucher, Urbanowicz & Melahn

    Captain Herlihy was an original member of Ladder 167 in 1931 as Lieutenant. (see newspaper clipping above)

   


    Never forget.


Auburndale:

    The name comes from Auburndale, Massachusetts, the home of L. H. Green who developed the community starting in 1901, when the Long Island Railroad started offering train service to the area.





 
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lucky said:
That trailer on 167s rig could be the first Seagrave metal aerial from the late 40s.

The tractor is definitely a Seagrave Tractor (L110 1948) that was attached to L167 in 1965 according to Jack Calderones book "Wheels of The Bravest"
 
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JOR176 said:
The tractor is definitely a Seagrave Tractor (L110 1948) that was attached to L167 in 1965 according to Jack Calderones book "Wheels of The Bravest"

Sorry, JOR.  The tractor is a commercial-style Ward LaFrance from the late 40's or early 50's.  Seagrave never built a truck that looked like that. Here's an ad for the commercial version:

 
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Ray, my mistake      :-[  I meant to type Trailor not tractor, I know the tractor was a Ward LaFrance.
 
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The 47/48 Ward tractors were in fact  WWII surplus. The City got them on the cheap and needed them desperately. No new aerial ladders had been purchased since 1941. Many trucks were running with late 1920s FWD and ALFs. The ladder trailers were still serviceable but the tractors were on their last legs.

These Wards were a lifesaver.  They wound up in the slower companies in the 1950s where they saw less usage than newer metal aerials purchased in that decade. They actually got a second life in the 60s. As the War Years wore out the tractors of those metal ALFs, Seagrave, and Pirsch rigs, their metal trailers were hooked up to the older Wards. Some were in service as late as 1970.

This picture is likely from the mid 60s; a metal aerial, re outfitted rotating beacon light over the windshield and federal siren on the right fender but no wooden canopy over the cab. Looks like a new paint job too.
 
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  That rig was the first metal Seagrave aerial, Shop #354 that started out as L-110 until 1960 then went to L-155, then to L-40 in 1965 then to L-117 in 1966 and to L-167 in 1968. The tractor is a 1948 Ward LaFrance. The difference between 1947 & '48 WLF tractors was the large spotlight in the '47 and a small windshield mounted spotlight on the 1948 models.
 
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Both model years came with red warning lights on the front fenders. I think it was the 48s (L38 had one) had a single red warning light centered over the windshield. It was not a swiveling MARS light and some of these were later replaced by rotating beacons.

Like the Ward Lafrance pumpers, these tractors became workhorses for the FDNY.
 
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  Ladder 38 was the only 1953 ALF to get a WLF tractor because of a major MVA and it was reassigned to the old "Rock" on Welfare Island. A couple of '53 ALF's got 1969 Mack tractors (5, 53) and L39's ex-L24 1948 ALF.
 
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140 had one of those Mack Postal cabs on their Rig...when they first  got it a friend of mine who was a Chauf there was telling me how great it was & that it even had a cigarette lighter in the dashboard....it was great until the first job he had w/it......he went to engage the power takeoff to use the aerial & the PTO came off in his hand w/out engaging. ......i remember they also made on of these cabs into a tow truck after awhile.
 
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I went to Chauf school on Welfare Island in March 1972 .....we had 2 Rig's to train on both if i remember were '47 Ward tractors attached to '38 Seagrave wooden aerials we spent most of the 2 weeks driving these around the Island the primary focus was on downshifting/double clutching etc so as not to burn out clutches....very little on aerial usage as you were expected to know this.....as different type Rigs came to the Rock for daily training we would go over the aerial ops on these Rigs...at that time there were many different LADs around & mostly aerials not TLs......i do not remember what the ENG school used as we only spent 1/2 a day going over the pumps. 
 
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I went to engine school in the early 80's and there was a lack of pumpers so we drove some old wreck tower ladders around. I still remember filling the steering fluid tank with motor oil several times a day because it left the system as fast as we filled it. The satellites still had manual transmission so they spent most of the time teaching one or two of the students down shifting and double clutching. One of the instructors was into softball so we played that at lunch.
 
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Mack,
Notice the MARS light over the windshield. It was a 1948, originally with just a plain red (blinking) red light.

Gman, Mack's picture likely shows L38s replacement tractor after they were t-boned in 1962 on 182d st. (Several members seriously hurt.) It was used by 38 for only a short time when L47s '56 ALF (Shop #411)  replaced it at 38. It then went to the Rock for training, as XTR remembers.

BUT...I was referring to L38s original Ward tractor,  which served there from 1948 till 1953.
And I remember it.
 
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