FIRE DEPARTMENTS IN NY STATE

mack

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RYE


Rye Firefighter Monument, "The Lady"


Sitting in the heart of Rye, the firefighters memorial sits on Daniel E Balls Circle, named after the long time Hook & Ladder Company member, which is the intersection of Milton Road and Grace Church Street. In 1931 the City of Rye Fire Department dedicated a statue to its past volunteer firefighters sculpted by Frederick V. Guinzberg, cast by the Gorham company of NY. The statue depicts a veiled, seated women holding a firefighters helmet. The memorial symbolizes memory and the palm leaf she holds symbolizes honor.

By 1991 with the elements of weather having taken its toll the statue and the landscape around it was due for a makeover. The department needed to raise $15,000 to restore the statue and fix the landscape and so a massive fundraising effort was started by the departments four companies, with firefighter Al Lang as the chairman of the eight member committe of the restoration project. To help raise money the fire departments softball team played in charity softball games against The New York Rangers and DJ's from WFAN sports radio. In addition donations big and small poured in from the community. The restoration took place in three phases. The first two phases of the project was to relandscape the traffic circle where the monument sits and add lighting to the flag pole where the US flag flies 24 hours a day. The projects third phase was to recreate the statues patina, the thin coating on the sculpture. As many as five solutions were applied to restore the sculptures texture and appearance with a final layer of acrylic lacquer. There is also a time capsule at the monument that will be opened in 2043.


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9-11-2001 Memorial

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mack

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Joined
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Messages
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RYE


Volunteers


The Rye Fire Department recruits individuals who wish to serve the City of Rye and surrounding areas in the capacity of firefighters. Eligibility requirements include men or women ages 18 and older, who live or work in the City of Rye or a surrounding town, are in good physical condition, and desire to participate in fire and/or emergency activities. Fire scene roles and responsibilities are determined by certifications obtained through various training programs. No training or fire service experience necessary for membership. The Rye Fire Department sponsors all volunteer training given by Westchester County's Department of Emergency Services and the State of New York's Office of Fire Prevention and Control.


Fire Chief
Dan Bochicchio


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mack

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Messages
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TROY

Troy Fire Department

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The Troy Fire Department numbers 119 uniformed personnel and operates 5 engine companies, a rescue engine company, 2 truck companies, three ambulances, a hazardous material response unit, and 2 rescue boats. Approximately 9,000 calls are answered each year, about 500 for fire, about 250 of which occur in structures. The Troy Fire Department is also the hazardous material response unit for the County of Rensselaer.




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Eric J. McMahon
Fire Chief



Fire Stations

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Station #1
Lansingburgh Station
115th & 5th Ave

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Station #2
Bouton Road Station
Bouton Road & 15th Street

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Station #3
Campbell Avenue Station
530 Campbell Avenue

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Station #4
North Street Station
North St. & River St.

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Station #5

Central Station
2175 6th Ave.

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Station #6
Canal Ave Station
Canal Ave. & 3rd St.

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mack

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TROY


Apparatus

Fire Station 1


Engine 1 - 2019 Rosenbauer Commander (1500/750)

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Truck 1 - 2006 Sutphen Monarch SP 95 6x4 (1500/300/95' mid-mount platform) (SN#HS-4044) (Ex-Truck 2)

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Medic 1 - 2022 Ford E-450 XL / PL Custom (SN#4287)

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Medic 10 (Reserve)- 2015 Ford E-450 / Braun


Fire Station 2

Engine 2 - 2003 American LaFrance Eagle (1500/750)

Medic 2 - 2017 Ford E-350 / Braun

Medic 3 - 2015 Ford E-350/ Braun

Engine 9 (Recall Engine / Reserve) - 1999 American LaFrance Eagle / General Safety (1500/750)


Fire Station 3

Engine 3 - 2009 Pierce Arrow XT (1500/750) (SN#22191) (Ex-Engine 4)

Truck 3 - 1991 Sutphen (1500/300/100' mid-mount platform)

Engine 8 (Reserve) - 1999 American LaFrance Eagle / General Safety (1500/750)

Engine 6A (Surplus) - 2003 American LaFrance Eagle (1500/500)


Fire Station 4

Engine 4 - 2020 Rosenbauer Commander (1500/750)

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Fire Station 5 (Headquarters)

Rescue Squad - 2016 Sutphen Monarch (1500/500)

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Rescue Squad 2 (Reserve) - 2003 American LaFrance Eagle (1500/500)

Truck 2 - 2012 Sutphen Monarch SP 95 6x4 (1500/300/95' mid-mount platform)

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Medic 4 - 2018 Ford E-350 / Braun

Hazmat 50 - 2006 American LaFrance Eagle walk-around

Technical Rescue Squad - 1989 Simon-Duplex / Saulsbury walk-around

Marine 1 - 2018 Stanley Bullnose 32' high-speed fire-rescue boat

Boat 1 - Boston Whaler rescue boat


Fire Station 6

Engine 6 - 2021 Rosenbauer Commander (1500/750)

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Medic 6 (Reserve / Tactical Medic) - 1997 Ford F-350 / Horton

Antique - 1947 Mack B pumper (Owned by by Troy Uniformed Firefighters)

Antique - 1947 Mack B pumper (Ex-Engine 12) (Owned by by Troy Uniformed Firefighters)


Shop

Ford E-350 / PL Custom ambulance


Chief Units

Car 1 (Chief) - 2020 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 2 (Assistant Chief) - 2020 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 3 (Deputy Chief) - 2022 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 4 (Battalion Chief) - 2022 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 5 (Battalion Chief) - 2003 Chevrolet Suburban 4x4

Car 6 (Battalion Chief) - 2015 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 7 - 2009 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

Car 8 - 2020 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 4x4

Car 11 - 2015 Dodge Charger 4x4

Car 81 - 1999 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 4x4 Shops


On Order

Truck 2 - 2023 Sutphen Monarch SP95 aerial platform

Medic 4 - 2022 Ford F-450 / Braun ambulance


Retired Apparatus

2003 Ford E-350 / Braun ambulance

2002 Ford E-350 ambulance (Ex-Medic 2)

2002 Ford E-350 ambulance (Ex-Medic 5)

20?? Dodge Charger

1999 American LaFrance pumper (Ex-Engine 3, ex-Engine 7)

1997 Ford F-350 ambulance (Ex-Medic 6, now TPD SWAT)

1993 Sutphen pumper (1500/500) (Ex-Engine 5, ex-Engine 6, ex-Engine 7)

1990 Ford F-150 / E-One rescue (Ex-Medic 2)

199? Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4

1986 Sutphen pumper (1250/750) (Ex-Engine 3, ex-Engine 8)

1984 Sutphen pumper (Ex-Rescue Squad, ex-Engine 2)

1981 Maxim pumper (1000/500) (Ex-Engine 6)

1980 Maxim pumper (1000/500) (Ex-Engine 1, ex-Engine 8) (Sold to Albany International Airport Fire Department)

1980 GMC / E-One walk-around rescue ( (Ex-Medic 1)

1980 GMC / E-One walk-around rescue ( (Ex-Medic 2)

1980 GMC / E-One walk-around rescue ( (Ex-Medic 3)

1980 Sutphen SL75 (Ex-Truck 1, ex-Truck 3)

1979 Maxim pumper (Ex-Engine 4, ex-Engine 8)

1979 Maxim pumper (Ex-Engine 5, ex-Engine 7)

1975 Hahn pumper (Ex-Engine 2)

1975 Hahn pumper (Ex-Engine 3)

1962 American LaFrance pumper (Ex-Engine 1)

1962 American LaFrance pumper (Ex-Rescue Squad)

1962 American LaFrance aerial (-/-/100' tractor-drawn) (Ex-Truck 1)

1956 Ward LaFrance pumper

1956 Ward LaFrance pumper

1956 Ward LaFrance pumper

1956 Ward LaFrance pumper

1956 Ward LaFrance pumper

1986 Sutphen SP95 (Ex-Truck 1, ex-Truck 3)

1975 Sutphen SP95 (Ex-Truck 3)

1947 Mack pumper

1947 Mack pumper

1947 Mack pumper

1947 Mack pumper

1947 Mack pumper





 
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Messages
2,069
RYE


Volunteers


The Rye Fire Department recruits individuals who wish to serve the City of Rye and surrounding areas in the capacity of firefighters. Eligibility requirements include men or women ages 18 and older, who live or work in the City of Rye or a surrounding town, are in good physical condition, and desire to participate in fire and/or emergency activities. Fire scene roles and responsibilities are determined by certifications obtained through various training programs. No training or fire service experience necessary for membership. The Rye Fire Department sponsors all volunteer training given by Westchester County's Department of Emergency Services and the State of New York's Office of Fire Prevention and Control.


Fire Chief
Dan Bochicchio


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Interesting patch - like they firemanized the NYPD patch 🤣
 

mack

Administrator
Joined
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Messages
13,431
TROY


Volunteer Fire Company History


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Premier Engine Company, organized 1798; discontinued from service, August 23d, 1861; disbanded September 5th, that year. First engine-house on the south side of the courthouse; the engine was subsequently housed in a wooden building on the north side of Center Market; and in 1843 at No. 21 State Street.

Neptune Engine Company No. 2, organized June 20th, 1803; discontinued August 1861; disbanded September 5th, that year. Engine-house on the north side of Center Market in 1828; and in 1843 at No. 23 State Street. The company paid the tuition of a large number of children attending the Lancastrian and other schools in the city.

Washington Volunteer Fire Company, incorporated May 26th, 1812. First engine-house west side of Fourth Street, about seventy feet north of Fulton Street; after April 1820, the apparatus was housed in a building on the north side of the market-house lot on the north-west corner of Third and State streets; in 1823, it was kept in a building in the shipyard, on the southwest corner of River and Elbow (Fulton) streets; in 1824, it was again housed in the building near the northwest corner of Third and State streets. In December 1843, the engine was placed in the brick engine-house, at No. 25 State Street, on the site of the Second Precinct Station-house.

Engine Company No. 3, organized February 1st, 1821; changed to a hose company in December 1834 and became the Franklin Hose Company.

Engine Company No. 4, organized January 6th, 1825; changed to a hose company October 7th, 1837, subsequently known as the Eagle Hose Company No. 10. On July 3d, 1845, this became the Eagle Engine Company No. 10.

Torrent Engine Company No. 4, organized August 2d, 1838; disbanded May 20th, 1841; reorganized September 1st, 1842; disbanded August 3d, 1843; reorganized November 2d, 1843; discontinued August 1861; disbanded September 5th, that year. The engine-house was on Congress Street, at Ida Hill.

Empire State Engine Company No. 5, organized March 1st, 1821. The engine-house was at the Iron Works. (See Edmond Stanton Steam Fire Engine Company No. 6.)

Hope Engine Company No. 6, organized May 20th, 1826. The engine-house was on the northwest corner of Brunswick Avenue and Washington Street, Albia. (See Hope Steam Fire Engine Company No. 7.)

Niagara Engine Company No. 7, organized May 27th, 1828. Engine-house on South Market lot, northeast corner of Second and Division streets. (See Jason C. Osgood Steam Fire Engine Company No. 3.)

Cataract Engine Company No. 8, organized August 2d, 1832; disbanded September 10th, 1851; reorganized and served until disbanded September 5th, 1861. The engine-house was at No. 12 Federal Street.

Rough and Ready Engine Company No. 9, organized September 21st, 1837, as the Hydraulic Engine company No. 9. In 1863, adopted the name of Rough and Ready Engine Company No. 9. The engine was housed at No. 9 River Street, near State Dam. In 1865, the company reorganized as the Rough and Ready Hose Company No. 4. (See Charles Eddy Steam Fire Engine Company No. 4.)

Lafayette Engine Company No. 10, organized August 15th, 1839. Engine-house on Ida Hill. (See F. W. Farnam Steam Fire Engine Company No. 5.)

Eagle Engine Company No. 10, organized July 13th, 1845. Members resigned September 16th, 1847; company reorganized March 14th, 1848; became Eagle Steam Fire Engine Company No. 2 on December 20th, 1860. The engine was housed at No. 14 Federal Street. (See Hugh Ranken Steam Fire Engine Company No. 2.)

Aetna Engine Company No. 12, organized in 1846, and in 1857 became the Hibernia Engine Company No. 12.

Hibernia Engine Company No. 12, in 1857 known as the Aetna Engine Company No. 12; company discontinued in 1863. The engine-house was on the corner of Fifth and Madison streets.

Good Intent Engine Company No. 13 (independent), formed in 1850 and disbanded in 1856. The engine-house was on Batavia Street.

Franklin Hose Company No. 1, organized December 18th, 1834, from Engine Company No. 3. On January 1st, 1835, it took the name of Franklin Hose Company No. 1. The hose-house was on Franklin Street, near the courthouse.

Phoenix Hose Company, organized in 1840; discontinued in 1851.

General Wool Hose Company No. 2, organized February 1st, 1859; discontinued in 1861. The hose-house was at No. 19 State Street.

Union Hose Company No. 3, organized February 1st, 1859; existed for about a year. The hose-house was at No. 7 Hoosick Street.

Hall Hose Company, organized December 1859; discontinued January 1st, 1871.

J. C. Taylor Hose Company No. 3, formed in 1860. (See Charles Eddy Steam Fire Engine Company No. 4.)

Hook and Ladder Company No. 1, organized February 16th, 1826; discontinued in 1857. The truck-house was in a building on the north side of Center Market; in 1843, it was at No. 27 State Street.

Union Hook and Ladder Company No. 2, organized April 5th, 1832; discontinued in 1874. The truck-house was at the Iron Works.

Trojan Hook and Ladder Company No. 3, organized February 5th, 1835. The truck-house was at No. 14 Federal Street; it burned May 10th, 1862. Subsequently housed at Cozzens' Northern Hotel, and afterward at a brick engine-house on State Street.

These are excerpts from Troy's One Hundred Years 1789-1889, compiled by Arthur James Weise, M. A., and published in 1891 by William H. Young of 7-9 First Street in Troy.





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1862 fire deadly and devastating

But conflagration that ignited 150 years ago couldn't stop Troy from bouncing right back​

Kenneth C. Crowe II
May 9, 2012


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1200x0.jpg1of15A view of downtown Troy, N.Y. before the Great Fire made from a historical image at the Rensselaer County Historical Society offices May 9, 2012. (Skip Dickstein / Times Union)SKIP DICKSTEIN


TROY — Gale force winds ripped across the city on May 10, 1862, a Saturday afternoon.

A train had steamed out of the downtown Troy Union Depot and was crossing the wooden covered Green Island Bridge when sparks from the engine set the structure on fire.

It wasn't long before the burning bridge's flames were whipped up by the winds and burning pieces of the bridge were flying into downtown Troy.

A firestorm swept the city of wooden buildings.


By nightfall six hours later, downtown's 4th Ward was a charred landscape of 75 acres where 670 buildings once stood. Despite the conflagration that consumed downtown only about eight people died.

"I turned up Grand Division St. and at the Troy City Bank saw the belfry of the 6th St. Church blazing. The air was full of smoke and cinders," a Troy woman, Cousin Aurora, wrote her Cousin Allie on May 12, 1862, two days after the blaze, in a letter now in the collection of the Rensselaer County Historical Society.

"All were working with pails putting out the cinders that lit on the roofs of the houses, barns and sheds of that block," Cousin Aurora continues.
While the country continues to mark the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, Troy is marking the sesquicentennial of its Great Fire, an event that reworked its urban fabric.

The stories of Gurley, Cousin Aurora and other 1862 residents are told in a new Rensselaer County Historical Society exhibit, "The air was full of smoke and cinders" — Troy's Great Fire of 1862.

The exhibit opens at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, on the 150th anniversary of the Great Fire.

"What was going on in Troy in 1862. What happened during the fire and what happened after the fire" is what is addressed, said Stacy Pomeroy Draper, RCHS curator, who organized the exhibit.

Putting the Great Fire's story together means touching on the lives of people who survived or died in the fire. RCHS is near to figuring out Cousin Aurora's identity.

For those who perished, such as Zenas Carey of Grand Division Street and Margaret Murray of Eighth Street, the exhibit has their death certificates. Both say they died accidentally. And there's the picture of Ranson Haight's tombstone that reads "It was God's will."

Gurley withdrew about $500, the equivalent of two year's pay, from the bank as the fire burned, allowing the company to begin rebuilding immediately.

The consuming flames didn't advance wooden building by wooden building, Draper said. The strong winds blew burning pieces ahead causing the fire to jump throughout downtown. Part of the exhibit includes melted glass recovered from the flames and period-related items.

Draper described the city's 1862 fire ravaged scenery as equivalent to the devastation left behind by natural disasters.

The damage was estimated at $3 million in 1862. The website MeasuringWorth,com estimated the cost of rebuilding would be equivalent to roughly $7.82 billion today.

Troy is often referred to as the Silicon Valley of the 19th century due to its cutting edge technology and wealth. It was here that horseshoes were produced by the millions for the Union Army cavalry; the iron plates were made for the U.S.S. Monitor; and other war supplies were made.

As the city burned, the telegraph wires heated up with messages for help, Draper said. Fire departments from Albany, Waterford, Greenbush, West Troy and Lansingburgh came by steamship and railroad to join the fight.

Troy's firefighting battle was successful, Draper said due in part to technology. The city had three of the newest steam engines for firefighting. Those engines were moved around downtown to battle the fire, Draper said.

Fire Capt. Charles Green rescued three women in hoop skirts who were trapped by the flames, Draper said.

Rebuilding Troy began immediately. The Green Island Bridge, the first railroad bridge to span the Hudson River was reconstructed by July 1862, Draper said.

The Civil War was a boom time for Troy, said P. Thomas Carroll, executive director of RiverSpark Hudson-Mohawk Heritage Area.
"Since it was in the middle of the Civil War, they rebuilt the city very fast," Carroll said.

One impact of the fire was that Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute moved from downtown up the hill after its buildings were destroyed, Carroll said.

By November 1862, Draper said that most of Troy's downtown lots either had completed buildings or were in the process of rebuilding.

"The city didn't stop. The look of the city changed. Buildings were brick and metal," Draper said.

Draper will lead a walking tour of downtown Troy to describe the fire at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. The cost is $5 per person and free for RCHS members. The tour departs from the market table at the Troy Waterfront Farmers' Market.


 
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mack

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TROY


HISTORY OF THE TROY, N.Y. FIRE DEPARTMENT


On January 5, 1789 a group of freeholders met at Ashley’s Tavern and changed the name of ‘Ashley’s Ferry’, their recently settled community on the banks of the Hudson River, to Troy. By 1791 Troy became a town, and in the same year the larger Village of Lansingburgh to Troy’s north purchased a ‘Philadelphia’ style hand engine.

All was generally well in the small town called Troy until the afternoon of October 6, 1793 when fire destroyed 14 houses and stores. This loss stirred the citizens of Troy into action, Subael Gorham was appointed Superintendent of the settlement’s fire hooks, axes and ladders, and an act of the New York State Legislature compelled the citizens to purchase buckets and firefighting tools.

A second fire at the NW corner of State and River Streets in Asa Anthony’s Store, during the early hours of December 12, 1797, spread and destroyed the hardware store of Benjamin Heart. Early the next year Troy incorporated into a Village and purchased a Newsham style hand engine from a New York dealer. It arrived on a Hudson River sloop and was housed in a small wooden building to the south of the courthouse. In 1799 a narrow shed to house the village hooks and ladders was erected in the center of State Street.

A second engine company, Neptune Engine No. 2 was organized in 1803 and housed on the NW corner of State and Third Streets. A large fire which started at midnight March 18, 1810 destroyed an entire block of business buildings on the east side of River St. from Congress St. to State St. Mutual aid was utilized for the first time with help from the villages of Lansingburgh and Waterford. In 1812 a third engine company, the Washington Volunteers, purchased an engine capable of taking ‘suction’ from a cistern or other standing water source through a hose, a great improvement on the earlier engines which had to be supplied by a bucket brigade in order to pump water through their deck mounted nozzle. Rapid growth of the Village resulted in Troy’s incorporation as a city on April 12, 1816, population at this time was 4,254.

By 1820 Troy had grown to 5,623 and was the 35th largest city in the U.S. The same year, on June 20, a devastating fire destroyed 69 stores and dwellings and 21 outbuildings along River and First Streets. This small conflagration caused a new flurry of fire control effort resulting in the purchase of two new engines and the formation of Hook and Ladder Company No. 1. During the 1820’s the new city suffered few fires but the 11 or 12 fires occurring during the decade did cause great loss.

By 1830 Troy had grown to 11,556 residents, and was the 19th largest city in the U.S. Fast becoming an industrial city due to it’s iron production, Troy lost its first rolling mill, that of the Troy Iron and Nail Co., located on the Wynantskill to fire on January 10, 1831 when a fire being used to thaw out the company’s water wheel spread. The night of January 25, 1834 saw the first use of a fire hydrant on the City’s new system when the Franklin House Hotel at Fulton and Third Streets suffered heavy damage in a 2 AM fire. The City lost it’s first firefighter in the line of duty on January 10, 1835 when simultaneous fires destroyed the Read, Armstrong and Co. Brewery at Ferry and Fifth Sts. and Brittnell’s Soap and Candle Factory, 411- 421 River St. Clark W. Segmann and possibly some other firefighters died from cold exposure on this –18 degree night. The decade saw the formation of a number of engine companies, hose companies and two additional hook and ladder companies.

Having long rung the church bells for alarms of fire, on December 7, 1843, an ordinance was enacted dividing the City into three fire districts with the number of the district with the fire to be rung. No. 1 was south of Congress St., No. 2 between Congress and Elbow (now Fulton) St. and No. 3 north of Elbow St. This was supposed to indicate an approximate location of the alarm for the firefighters, but in practice the policeman or sexton at the bell rope was not often able to ring a distinct 1, 2, or 3 possibly due to overexcitement.

On August 25, 1854 at 1 PM Troy suffered its greatest fire to date when over 100 buildings in 8 city blocks south of Division St. along the riverfront burned. The destruction of a number of industries and lumberyards raised the loss from this fire to a total of $ 1,000,000, a great deal of money at that time. With the city averaging between 50 and 75 fires per year, and suffering a great deal of drunkenness and fighting among the volunteer companies, several influential citizens began to promote the adoption of steam power to pump water and paid firefighters to operate the equipment.

Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 In 1860 the Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 was formed. A steam pumper was purchased from the Amoskeag Co. of Manchester, N.H. A fully paid engineer was hired to operate this highly technical piece of equipment, but volunteers were still heavily relied upon.

The engine proved practical and soon two more Amoskeags were purchased, one later that year and a third in 1862. On May 10th 1862 Troy suffered its greatest loss by fire. A spark from a locomotive ignited a covered wood railroad bridge to Center Island, and a strong west wind drove the fire into Troy and by evening 508 buildings had been destroyed and at least 8 persons lost their lives. The financial loss was $3.9 million dollars.

Troy installed a new Gamewell Fire Alarm system in late 1868 and placed the system in service on March 25, 1869. Alarms were rung on fire station gongs and the bells of several city churches.

Troy’s last hand engine was replaced with a steamer in April 1882 when Hope Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 7 was formed.
River St. grocery Warehouse Fire The Village of Lansingburgh was annexed by Troy on January 1, 1901. By 1906 the city had 1119 volunteers and 61 career firefighters. On May 7, 1908 Truck 2 was formed as the city’s first fully paid company. Engine 14 became the first fully paid engine company on February 2, 1912.

The following year a Knox Chemical-Hose Wagon stationed with E-8 became the City’s first piece of motorized fire apparatus. By 1917 the downtown truck (3) and Engine 8 were motorized Seagraves. 1917 also saw the loss of two firefighters and a battalion chief as the result of an ammonia explosion during a River St. grocery warehouse fire. Chief of Department Patrick Byron died 53 weeks later as a result of injuries suffered in the same explosion. A squad company was organized on July 8, 1919 and outfitted with a new motorized Seagrave chemical wagon.
A motorized apparatus On January 23, 1922, by act of the City Council, all remaining volunteer companies were disbanded, the TFD was now a fully paid department. On November 1, 1923 a second platoon was formed, firefighters worked a 10 and 14 hour schedule for a short time.

In the summer of 1924 the last of the horse drawn engines and trucks were replaced by motorized apparatus. A third platoon was formed on January 1, 1959 allowing Troy’s firefighters a 56 hour workweek. Also in 1959 the fire alarm telegraph system was removed and replaced with telephone boxes. On February 4, 1973 a fourth platoon was formed, reducing the firefighters workweek to 40 hours. The telephone boxes were removed from the street corners on February 15, 1982. April 1st 1981 saw the TFD take over emergency medical response in the city and on October 9, 1995 emergency medical transport was taken over by the TFD.


 

mack

Administrator
Joined
Aug 8, 2009
Messages
13,431
TROY


HISTORY OF THE TROY, N.Y. FIRE DEPARTMENT


On January 5, 1789 a group of freeholders met at Ashley’s Tavern and changed the name of ‘Ashley’s Ferry’, their recently settled community on the banks of the Hudson River, to Troy. By 1791 Troy became a town, and in the same year the larger Village of Lansingburgh to Troy’s north purchased a ‘Philadelphia’ style hand engine.

All was generally well in the small town called Troy until the afternoon of October 6, 1793 when fire destroyed 14 houses and stores. This loss stirred the citizens of Troy into action, Subael Gorham was appointed Superintendent of the settlement’s fire hooks, axes and ladders, and an act of the New York State Legislature compelled the citizens to purchase buckets and firefighting tools.

A second fire at the NW corner of State and River Streets in Asa Anthony’s Store, during the early hours of December 12, 1797, spread and destroyed the hardware store of Benjamin Heart. Early the next year Troy incorporated into a Village and purchased a Newsham style hand engine from a New York dealer. It arrived on a Hudson River sloop and was housed in a small wooden building to the south of the courthouse. In 1799 a narrow shed to house the village hooks and ladders was erected in the center of State Street.

A second engine company, Neptune Engine No. 2 was organized in 1803 and housed on the NW corner of State and Third Streets. A large fire which started at midnight March 18, 1810 destroyed an entire block of business buildings on the east side of River St. from Congress St. to State St. Mutual aid was utilized for the first time with help from the villages of Lansingburgh and Waterford. In 1812 a third engine company, the Washington Volunteers, purchased an engine capable of taking ‘suction’ from a cistern or other standing water source through a hose, a great improvement on the earlier engines which had to be supplied by a bucket brigade in order to pump water through their deck mounted nozzle. Rapid growth of the Village resulted in Troy’s incorporation as a city on April 12, 1816, population at this time was 4,254.

By 1820 Troy had grown to 5,623 and was the 35th largest city in the U.S. The same year, on June 20, a devastating fire destroyed 69 stores and dwellings and 21 outbuildings along River and First Streets. This small conflagration caused a new flurry of fire control effort resulting in the purchase of two new engines and the formation of Hook and Ladder Company No. 1. During the 1820’s the new city suffered few fires but the 11 or 12 fires occurring during the decade did cause great loss.

By 1830 Troy had grown to 11,556 residents, and was the 19th largest city in the U.S. Fast becoming an industrial city due to it’s iron production, Troy lost its first rolling mill, that of the Troy Iron and Nail Co., located on the Wynantskill to fire on January 10, 1831 when a fire being used to thaw out the company’s water wheel spread. The night of January 25, 1834 saw the first use of a fire hydrant on the City’s new system when the Franklin House Hotel at Fulton and Third Streets suffered heavy damage in a 2 AM fire. The City lost it’s first firefighter in the line of duty on January 10, 1835 when simultaneous fires destroyed the Read, Armstrong and Co. Brewery at Ferry and Fifth Sts. and Brittnell’s Soap and Candle Factory, 411- 421 River St. Clark W. Segmann and possibly some other firefighters died from cold exposure on this –18 degree night. The decade saw the formation of a number of engine companies, hose companies and two additional hook and ladder companies.

Having long rung the church bells for alarms of fire, on December 7, 1843, an ordinance was enacted dividing the City into three fire districts with the number of the district with the fire to be rung. No. 1 was south of Congress St., No. 2 between Congress and Elbow (now Fulton) St. and No. 3 north of Elbow St. This was supposed to indicate an approximate location of the alarm for the firefighters, but in practice the policeman or sexton at the bell rope was not often able to ring a distinct 1, 2, or 3 possibly due to overexcitement.

On August 25, 1854 at 1 PM Troy suffered its greatest fire to date when over 100 buildings in 8 city blocks south of Division St. along the riverfront burned. The destruction of a number of industries and lumberyards raised the loss from this fire to a total of $ 1,000,000, a great deal of money at that time. With the city averaging between 50 and 75 fires per year, and suffering a great deal of drunkenness and fighting among the volunteer companies, several influential citizens began to promote the adoption of steam power to pump water and paid firefighters to operate the equipment.

Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 In 1860 the Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 was formed. A steam pumper was purchased from the Amoskeag Co. of Manchester, N.H. A fully paid engineer was hired to operate this highly technical piece of equipment, but volunteers were still heavily relied upon.

The engine proved practical and soon two more Amoskeags were purchased, one later that year and a third in 1862. On May 10th 1862 Troy suffered its greatest loss by fire. A spark from a locomotive ignited a covered wood railroad bridge to Center Island, and a strong west wind drove the fire into Troy and by evening 508 buildings had been destroyed and at least 8 persons lost their lives. The financial loss was $3.9 million dollars.

Troy installed a new Gamewell Fire Alarm system in late 1868 and placed the system in service on March 25, 1869. Alarms were rung on fire station gongs and the bells of several city churches.

Troy’s last hand engine was replaced with a steamer in April 1882 when Hope Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 7 was formed.
River St. grocery Warehouse Fire The Village of Lansingburgh was annexed by Troy on January 1, 1901. By 1906 the city had 1119 volunteers and 61 career firefighters. On May 7, 1908 Truck 2 was formed as the city’s first fully paid company. Engine 14 became the first fully paid engine company on February 2, 1912.

The following year a Knox Chemical-Hose Wagon stationed with E-8 became the City’s first piece of motorized fire apparatus. By 1917 the downtown truck (3) and Engine 8 were motorized Seagraves. 1917 also saw the loss of two firefighters and a battalion chief as the result of an ammonia explosion during a River St. grocery warehouse fire. Chief of Department Patrick Byron died 53 weeks later as a result of injuries suffered in the same explosion. A squad company was organized on July 8, 1919 and outfitted with a new motorized Seagrave chemical wagon.
A motorized apparatus On January 23, 1922, by act of the City Council, all remaining volunteer companies were disbanded, the TFD was now a fully paid department. On November 1, 1923 a second platoon was formed, firefighters worked a 10 and 14 hour schedule for a short time.

In the summer of 1924 the last of the horse drawn engines and trucks were replaced by motorized apparatus. A third platoon was formed on January 1, 1959 allowing Troy’s firefighters a 56 hour workweek. Also in 1959 the fire alarm telegraph system was removed and replaced with telephone boxes. On February 4, 1973 a fourth platoon was formed, reducing the firefighters workweek to 40 hours. The telephone boxes were removed from the street corners on February 15, 1982. April 1st 1981 saw the TFD take over emergency medical response in the city and on October 9, 1995 emergency medical transport was taken over by the TFD.


 

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TROY


HISTORY OF THE TROY, N.Y. FIRE DEPARTMENT


On January 5, 1789 a group of freeholders met at Ashley’s Tavern and changed the name of ‘Ashley’s Ferry’, their recently settled community on the banks of the Hudson River, to Troy. By 1791 Troy became a town, and in the same year the larger Village of Lansingburgh to Troy’s north purchased a ‘Philadelphia’ style hand engine.

All was generally well in the small town called Troy until the afternoon of October 6, 1793 when fire destroyed 14 houses and stores. This loss stirred the citizens of Troy into action, Subael Gorham was appointed Superintendent of the settlement’s fire hooks, axes and ladders, and an act of the New York State Legislature compelled the citizens to purchase buckets and firefighting tools.

A second fire at the NW corner of State and River Streets in Asa Anthony’s Store, during the early hours of December 12, 1797, spread and destroyed the hardware store of Benjamin Heart. Early the next year Troy incorporated into a Village and purchased a Newsham style hand engine from a New York dealer. It arrived on a Hudson River sloop and was housed in a small wooden building to the south of the courthouse. In 1799 a narrow shed to house the village hooks and ladders was erected in the center of State Street.

A second engine company, Neptune Engine No. 2 was organized in 1803 and housed on the NW corner of State and Third Streets. A large fire which started at midnight March 18, 1810 destroyed an entire block of business buildings on the east side of River St. from Congress St. to State St. Mutual aid was utilized for the first time with help from the villages of Lansingburgh and Waterford. In 1812 a third engine company, the Washington Volunteers, purchased an engine capable of taking ‘suction’ from a cistern or other standing water source through a hose, a great improvement on the earlier engines which had to be supplied by a bucket brigade in order to pump water through their deck mounted nozzle. Rapid growth of the Village resulted in Troy’s incorporation as a city on April 12, 1816, population at this time was 4,254.

By 1820 Troy had grown to 5,623 and was the 35th largest city in the U.S. The same year, on June 20, a devastating fire destroyed 69 stores and dwellings and 21 outbuildings along River and First Streets. This small conflagration caused a new flurry of fire control effort resulting in the purchase of two new engines and the formation of Hook and Ladder Company No. 1. During the 1820’s the new city suffered few fires but the 11 or 12 fires occurring during the decade did cause great loss.

By 1830 Troy had grown to 11,556 residents, and was the 19th largest city in the U.S. Fast becoming an industrial city due to it’s iron production, Troy lost its first rolling mill, that of the Troy Iron and Nail Co., located on the Wynantskill to fire on January 10, 1831 when a fire being used to thaw out the company’s water wheel spread. The night of January 25, 1834 saw the first use of a fire hydrant on the City’s new system when the Franklin House Hotel at Fulton and Third Streets suffered heavy damage in a 2 AM fire. The City lost it’s first firefighter in the line of duty on January 10, 1835 when simultaneous fires destroyed the Read, Armstrong and Co. Brewery at Ferry and Fifth Sts. and Brittnell’s Soap and Candle Factory, 411- 421 River St. Clark W. Segmann and possibly some other firefighters died from cold exposure on this –18 degree night. The decade saw the formation of a number of engine companies, hose companies and two additional hook and ladder companies.

Having long rung the church bells for alarms of fire, on December 7, 1843, an ordinance was enacted dividing the City into three fire districts with the number of the district with the fire to be rung. No. 1 was south of Congress St., No. 2 between Congress and Elbow (now Fulton) St. and No. 3 north of Elbow St. This was supposed to indicate an approximate location of the alarm for the firefighters, but in practice the policeman or sexton at the bell rope was not often able to ring a distinct 1, 2, or 3 possibly due to overexcitement.

On August 25, 1854 at 1 PM Troy suffered its greatest fire to date when over 100 buildings in 8 city blocks south of Division St. along the riverfront burned. The destruction of a number of industries and lumberyards raised the loss from this fire to a total of $ 1,000,000, a great deal of money at that time. With the city averaging between 50 and 75 fires per year, and suffering a great deal of drunkenness and fighting among the volunteer companies, several influential citizens began to promote the adoption of steam power to pump water and paid firefighters to operate the equipment.

Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 In 1860 the Arba Read Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 1 was formed. A steam pumper was purchased from the Amoskeag Co. of Manchester, N.H. A fully paid engineer was hired to operate this highly technical piece of equipment, but volunteers were still heavily relied upon.

The engine proved practical and soon two more Amoskeags were purchased, one later that year and a third in 1862. On May 10th 1862 Troy suffered its greatest loss by fire. A spark from a locomotive ignited a covered wood railroad bridge to Center Island, and a strong west wind drove the fire into Troy and by evening 508 buildings had been destroyed and at least 8 persons lost their lives. The financial loss was $3.9 million dollars.

Troy installed a new Gamewell Fire Alarm system in late 1868 and placed the system in service on March 25, 1869. Alarms were rung on fire station gongs and the bells of several city churches.

Troy’s last hand engine was replaced with a steamer in April 1882 when Hope Steam Fire Engine Co. No. 7 was formed.
River St. grocery Warehouse Fire The Village of Lansingburgh was annexed by Troy on January 1, 1901. By 1906 the city had 1119 volunteers and 61 career firefighters. On May 7, 1908 Truck 2 was formed as the city’s first fully paid company. Engine 14 became the first fully paid engine company on February 2, 1912.

The following year a Knox Chemical-Hose Wagon stationed with E-8 became the City’s first piece of motorized fire apparatus. By 1917 the downtown truck (3) and Engine 8 were motorized Seagraves. 1917 also saw the loss of two firefighters and a battalion chief as the result of an ammonia explosion during a River St. grocery warehouse fire. Chief of Department Patrick Byron died 53 weeks later as a result of injuries suffered in the same explosion. A squad company was organized on July 8, 1919 and outfitted with a new motorized Seagrave chemical wagon.
A motorized apparatus On January 23, 1922, by act of the City Council, all remaining volunteer companies were disbanded, the TFD was now a fully paid department. On November 1, 1923 a second platoon was formed, firefighters worked a 10 and 14 hour schedule for a short time.

In the summer of 1924 the last of the horse drawn engines and trucks were replaced by motorized apparatus. A third platoon was formed on January 1, 1959 allowing Troy’s firefighters a 56 hour workweek. Also in 1959 the fire alarm telegraph system was removed and replaced with telephone boxes. On February 4, 1973 a fourth platoon was formed, reducing the firefighters workweek to 40 hours. The telephone boxes were removed from the street corners on February 15, 1982. April 1st 1981 saw the TFD take over emergency medical response in the city and on October 9, 1995 emergency medical transport was taken over by the TFD.


 

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TROY



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Troy firefighters are represented by Local 86, IAFF.






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TROY


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Work on a new memorial to fallen Fire Department members at Firefighters Park began in 2018 and was officially dedicated June 26. The new memorial was built to honor those who have died after serving in the department for 10 years or more.

Photo by Brendan Losinski


Troy dedicates new firefighter memorial​

By: Brendan Losinski | Troy Times | Published June 29, 2022

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Nearly the entire Fire Department, their families, and several community leaders gathered to honor Troy’s fallen firefighters — the focus of the department’s new memorial.

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The mayor, the City Council and leaders of the Fire Department cut the ribbon on the new Firefighter Memorial at Firefighters Park June 26.
Photo by Brendan Losinski


TROY — Troy firefighters,
their families and members of the community gathered June 26 for the dedication of the new firefighter memorial at Firefighters Park in Troy.
The new memorial lists the names of all of the department members who have died after serving in the department for 10 years or more on six stone tablets, one for each of the department’s stations. It also contains a statue of fire equipment and a set of flag poles.

“I think it’s a beautiful testament of our support for our firefighters and that our firefighters are our neighbors and friends,” said Troy Mayor Ethan Baker. “Now there is a formal place where people can come to pay their respects to those who have fallen who have been part of our department.”

Firefighters Park, established in 1991, had long been home to less formal memorials to members of the Troy Fire Department. Now this permanent memorial will be able to stand the test of time.

“Here at Firefighters Park, originally we would plant trees in honor of volunteers who had given their time and passed on,” explained Fire Chief Peter Hullinger. “There would be a plaque put at that tree, but over the years, the trees might die or the plaque might get overgrown, so we decided we needed a more permanent memorial for those who gave so much to the community of Troy.”

Hullinger said the memorial was designed to be a part of the park where visitors will see it whenever they use the park’s pathways.
“This memorial was built to be a part of the park with the pathway going through the memorial,” he said. “This will be here for everybody who comes to the park, whether it is someone specifically coming to check out names on the wall or just coming through here to enjoy the park with their kids or to go for a jog.”

“The other thing I love about the memorial is that the path through the park goes right through it, so families just enjoying the park can take a moment to see the memorial and take in the names of our firefighters and pay tribute to those who have made our city so great,” added Baker.
Several supporters of the department, including family members of department members, began the process for building the new memorial.
“This began in 2018 when we approached the city and got approval for this. We began the development over several months. We were going to start the construction right as COVID hit, so that delayed everything,” Hullinger said. “The total cost for the project was approximately $250,000. The city contributed $100,000 to the project, and then the rest was provided by fundraising done by volunteers.”

Baker believes that Troy’s Fire Department is set apart from most others due to both its size and the fact that it is an all-volunteer department.
“We are the largest city in Oakland County, so we have the largest fire department in Oakland County. We need such a large department because we have the third or fourth most assets per city in the state,” he said. “We’re unique in that we have a department that is this big and that it is an all-volunteer department. That has grown organically over the last 80 years. It’s not something that a community, now, could just decide to do. We have families who have served before them. The strength of it is the firefighters who have these stories of living and working in the city of Troy. All of our members live within 3 miles of each station, so they know the community and they know how to react most quickly. They are protecting their own community.”

Hullinger said that if not for one of the names on the memorial, he probably never would have joined the department.
“I have a friend whose name is on the wall … Steven Splan,” explained Hullinger. “He’s why I joined the department 29 years ago. (Splan) dropped by my house and told me he had just joined and said I should come and check it out. I went to training night, saw what it was all about, and decided I wanted to join the department. I was a volunteer for many years, and then there was an opportunity to go full time, and now I’m the chief of the department. We still take pride in the fact that many people are here because of friends or that they are third- or fourth-generation volunteers.”

Splan worked 16 years with the Troy Fire Department before taking a full-time position with the Bloomfield Hills Department of Public Safety, where he had a fatal heart attack while on duty in 2020.

City officials at the event said it was a very deserving memorial for a group of individuals who put their lives and safety on the line to keep the community safe.

“This memorial is a beautiful tribute to our fallen firefighters, and it is meant to have people walk through it, and I want people to bring their families through and take a look at the names,” said Baker. “Linda McIntosh from the Somerset Collection said it best the evening of the fire there (on June 13): It’s what so many of us in the community already know, and that is that our Troy firefighters are rock stars, and it truly is a testament to the wonderful work they do.”

Hullinger added that department members are pleased with how the memorial has turned out and that the project has finally come to fruition.
“The department is very excited right now,” he remarked. “We are very proud of this memorial, and they are very honored to have it. We had a huge turnout from the Fire Department here today. Every firetruck in the city is here.”





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mack

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TROY


Line of Duty Deaths


12/16/1844 FF Peter Dunn




8/6/1845 FF William F. Bradley

FF Bradley, Engine 1, slipped when backing the hose cart into quarters after a run. He was brought home where he died from and died from head injuries.



12/25/1851 FF Thomas H. Pierce

After several hours of battling an early-morning fire that destroyed a frame grocery store, three firemen were manning a hoseline in the doorway of the gutted building, wetting down the smoldering debris. The storeowner asked Fireman Pierce, who had the nozzle, to wet down the iron safe that contained the stores account books in an attempt to cool it. Fireman Pierce, a student at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, surveyed a wall that was still standing and stated, "If that wall falls, I shall never finish my course at the institute." Only minutes later, the wall fell, burying the three men. Two of the men suffered minor injuries in the collapse, but Fireman Pierce was pushed through to the cellar and crushed to death under at least six feet of rubble



2/1/1860 FF Thomas Graham



5/3/1868 FF Davis Blakely

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7/22/1873 FF William S. Wilkes



6/22/1890 Engineer Michael Gillen


Fireman Gillen, Engine 4, overexerted himself while responding to an alarm and suffered an apparent fatal heart attack.



7-27-1900 FF Charles A. Cook

Fireman Charles Cook, Ladder 3 was operating in close quarters at a barn fire when he was killed when struck in the neck with a pike end of an axe.



12/2/1910 FF Anthony Vielkind

The Record "Sunday, Dec. 4, 1910. Fireman Anthony Vielkind, who died while responding to a false alarm last Friday, is laid to rest today at St. Jean Baptiste cemetery, The Record reports. Vielkind, a callman for the city’s paid fire department, slipped on icy pavement while trying to board a horse-drawn fire truck near the intersection of Ida and Third streets. Grabbing a crosspiece near the vehicle’s rear wheel, he was dragged more than 100 feet. He passed away in a nearby home shortly afterward. “The funeral was one of the largest ever held in this city,” our reporter observes, “the volunteer and paid members of the department turning out in large numbers to do honor to one whose life was blotted out while he was in service.” Vielkind’s body is taken from the family home at 198 Hill Street to St. Lawrence’s Church, where attendance “was so large that hundreds had to be turned away” from the funeral service conducted by Rev. Andrew Duplang. The coffin is taken from the Vielkind home to a hearse by a firemen’s guard of honor. The firemen lead the procession to the church as the bells of St. Lawrence toll in memory of Vielkind. Duplang describes Vielkind as “a model young man and one whom it was a pleasure to know. “While this young man lies dead,” he adds, “the miscreant who sounded the false alarm is still able to repeat his nefarious acts.” Investigators believe that the fatal false alarm was sounded by the same person who was nearly caught trying to break into another alarm box a few minutes earlier. A patrolman caught only a distant rear view of the suspect as he fled the scene of his first attempt. Recalling Vielkind again, Duplang says, “The young man to whom you do honor to-day was always waiting for the call to duty. He was, moreover, a good church member and always on hand at church just the same as he was at the engine house. He was never addicted to the use of profanity. He will be sadly missed by all. https://www.troyrecord.com/2010/12/04/this-day-in-1910-in-the-record-dec-4-1910/


1/26/1911 LT Edward J. Butler

Lieutenant Edward Butler, 32, Ladder 2, was operating at a two alarm fire that destroyed a commercial building and a 5 & 10 store. Lieutenant Butler was killed when the building collapsed.


4/29/1913 FF Henry P. O'Brien



4/17/1917 BC William Bailey, Jr.


Three Troy, New York firefighters died “while operating at a two-alarm fire involving a four-story market, they were killed when a tremendous ammonia explosion leveled the building. Nine other firefighters were injured, two seriously.

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4/18/1917 FF William J. Hoar

FF Hoar died from injuries received 4/17/1917 at the Mohican Grocery Company.



4/18/1917 FF Albert DeCourville

FF DeCourville died from injuries received 4/17/1917 at the Mohican Grocery Company.



5/1/1922 FF Joseph P. McCann & LT William J. Christopher

LT Christopher, FF McCann died as a result of injuries sustained when the second floor of the building collapsed while fighting the fire at the Rome and Cohen Rag Shop in Troy. FF Charles VanDeCar was also seriously injured in the collapse.



8/30/1922 FF Charles H. VanDeCar

FF VanDeCar died 8/30/1922 as a result of injuries sustained 5/1/1922 when the second floor of the building collapsed while fighting the fire at the Rome and Cohen Rag Shop in Troy.



10/11/1928 FF J. Kenneth Flinton

FF Kenneth Flinton, Squad 1, died as a result of injuries he sustained while operating at a fire prevention drill.



10/28/1928 Capt Matthew W. Casey

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5/3/1944 FF William J. Walsh



2/4/1946 Capt James L. Fitzgerald

Captain John Fitzgerald - Engine 12 suffered a heart attack due to overexertion while operating at a fire in bitter cold temperatures.


4/18/1956 Capt John T. Dwyer



12/7/1967 Capt Edward J. Driscoll


Captain Driscoll died in the performance of his duties while operating at an alarm.
 
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WATERVLIET

Watervliet Fire Department Mission Statement​


The mission of the City of Watervliet Fire Department is to minimize the hazards of fire through fire prevention education. It is also the mission to deliver professional response to the citizens’ needs for fire suppression, all emergency medical needs, and hazardous material spill mitigation.


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Services Provided by the Watervliet Fire Department​

  • Fire Suppression and Control
  • Fire Prevention and Public Relations
  • Fire Investigation
  • Hazardous Material Incident Response
  • Emergency Medical Service Response (EMT and PARAMEDIC)
  • Emergency Transportation
  • Natural Gas, Carbon Monoxide and Electrical Emergency Response
  • Emergency Rescue Response
  • Mutual Aid to Neighboring Communities
  • Non-Emergency Service for Public Assistance

The Watervliet Fire Investigation Task Force was created in 1991 and is a synergy between the Watervliet Fire Department and Watervliet Police Department. The team is comprised of three Fire Officers and two Police Investigators. All members of the Task Force are certified by the New York State Office of Fire Prevention and are all graduates of the Arson Investigation Academy at Montour Falls, New York. Any inquiries regarding the Fire Investigation Task Force should be forwarded to Fire Chief Tom Garrett.

Fire Department Organization and Operations​


The Watervliet Fire Department is the Fire and Emergency Services branch of the City of Watervliet municipal government and has been housed in the Thomas M. McCormack Fire Headquarters on 2nd Avenue and 13th Street in the City since 1970. The Department consists of professional firefighters and operates under a four-platoon system. The on duty work schedule is a twenty-four hour shift.

The Fire Department is National Incident Management System (NIMS) compliant. The Incident Command System (ICS) is a coordinated effort that brings together the major elements of an operation – specifically, command, operations, planning, and logistics under a unified command. The ICS is the backbone of Emergency Services response in the City of Watervliet.

The first alarm response consists of one engine and an aerial tower manned by platoon members on duty. Greater alarms are responded to by recall of off duty personnel via the County’s page/radio monitoring system and additional mutual aid or special call response. Emergency Medical certifications are held by all members of the firefighter staff. The EMS program is overseen by a medical doctor and Firefighter Tom Corcoran.

The City of Watervliet Fire Department also operates an ambulance service staffed by our firefighters who have been trained as paramedics. The service operates an Advanced Life Support (ALS) unit and a Basic Life Support (BLS) unit. This service is provided 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.




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Fire Chief
Thomas Garrett


Fire Station/Fire Headquarters

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Thomas M. McCormack Fire Headquarters
116 13th Street

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Apparatus

Car 1 - 200? Dodge Durango 4x4

Engine 1 (36-21) - 2006 Sutphen (1500/1000)

Tower 1 - 2009 Sutphen (1500/300/95' mid-mount)

Engine 3 - 2009 International DuraStar 4400 / Sutphen (1250/500)

Medic 8 - 2008 Ford E-450 / PL Custom

Medic 10 - 2010 Ford E-450 / PL Custom

Engine 36-25 - 1987 Pierce Lance (1250/1000) (SN#E3796)


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WATERVLIET


HISTORY


Fire:

by Watervliet Historical Society

The first fire engine, Old Niagara #1 was commissioned in 1829. The old fire departments of our village consisted of three hand -engines and two Hook and Ladder Companies including The Rip Van Winkle Engine Co #1, Protection Engine Co #2, and Conqueror Engine Co #3 ; Hercules Hook and Ladder Co #1 and Spartan Hook and Ladder #2.

In 1864 the first steam fire engine companies were organized including James Roy #1, James Duffy #2 and Martin Tierney #3. These steamers remained in service until 1878 when a public water works system was introduced.

The village then consisted of four hose companies and one hook and ladder co ; Oswald Hose Co #1 1859, Michael Kelly Hose Co #2 1870, Thomas McIntyre Co #3 1873, Protective Hose Co #4 1878 and S.J. Gleason Hook and Ladder Co #1 1872.

The Gleason/Oswald were situated on the same site on Broadway and served as the last fire station until 1969 at the east side of Broadway north of 15th street when the new Station was built on the south side of 13th st between 1st and 2nd avenue.

Three former fire department buildings are still present in Watervliet, the McIntyre in Port Schuyler, Protective Hose on 23rd St and Michael Kelly on 21st St.



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WATERVLIET


2013





2017




2019 - Auto Extrication




2022






Watervliet Fire Incidents

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WATERVLIET



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About Watervliet Professional Firefighters Local 590

I.A.F.F. Local #590 The Watervliet Fire Department is made up of 25 members, which includes a Fire Chief, 4 captains, 4 lieutenants, and 16 firefighters. The department operates under a four platoon system, each consisting of four firefighters, under the command of a captain and a lieutenant. Each platoon works under a 24 hour shift rotation.

The department offers an array of services including Fire Suppression and Control, Fire Prevention and Public Relations, Fire Investigation, Hazardous Material Incident Response, Emergency Medical Service Response (EMT and Paramedic), Emergency Transportation, Natural Gas, Carbon Monoxide and Electrical Emergency Response, Emergency Rescue Response, Mutual Aid to Neighboring Communities, Non-Emergency Service for Public Assistance.

The Watervliet Fire Department has been housed in The Chief Thomas M. McCormack Fire Headquarters on 2nd Avenue & 13th Street in the city since 1970. The Fire Department is National Incident Management System (NIMS) compliant. The Incident Command System (ICS) is a coordinated effort that brings together the major elements of an operation - specifically, command, operations, planning, and logistics under a unified command. The ICS is the backbone of Emergency Services response in the city of Watervliet. Emergency Medical certifications are held by all members of the firefighter staff. The EMS program is overseen by a medical doctor.


 

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WATERVLIET ARSENAL


Watervliet Arsenal Fire Department


Watervliet Arsenal firefighters are federal firefighters that protect the Watervliet Arsenal.



Watervliet Arsenal



The Watervliet Arsenal is an Army-owned-and-operated manufacturing facility and is the oldest, continuously active arsenal in the United States having begun operations during the War of 1812. It celebrated its 200th anniversary in July 2013.

Today's arsenal is relied upon by U.S. and foreign militaries to produce the most advanced, high-tech, high-powered weaponry for cannon, howitzer, and mortar systems. This National Historic Registered Landmark has an annual economic benefit to the local community in excess of $100 million.



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Fire Chief
John Whipple


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Fire Station
1 Buffington St. (Bldg. #22)

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Apparatus


Chief 41-01 - 201? Ford Police Interceptor Utility AWD


Engine 41-20 - 1994 Pierce Arrow (1500/500/60' Tele-Squrt) (SN#E8296)

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Engine 41-21 - 2020 Pierce Saber (1500/750) (SN#33929-01)

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Rescue 41-40 - 2015 Ram 3500 walk-around


Ladder 41-70 - 2011 Pierce Arrow XT (2000/350/105' rear-mount) (SN#24147) (Ex-Truck 1)

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Ambulance 41-80 - 2012 Ford F-450 / Wheeled Coach


TSU 1 - 200? Ford F-350 4x4


2004 Pierce Contender pumper (SN#16125-05113470)



 

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mack

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WATERVLIET ARSENAL


History


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Myers reports that the Watervliet Arsenal (established in 1813), had its own horse drawn steam operated pumper by 1827: “The Arsenal engine, intended for exclusive use by the post, and manned by the employees when duty required it, was always ready to respond when assistance was required outside, either in the village (West Troy) or in Troy; the foreman of the company was he who first arrived and captured the trumpet that hung on the machine! The services of that engine has been many times required and at Troy’s large fires their presence was absolutely required. It had its day of usefulness. It was relegated to the scrap heap in 1880.” In recent years a truck of the Arsenal Fire Department has continued to respond to calls in Watervliet. If Myers’ date is accurate, the Watervliet Arsenal Fire Department has been operating for 190 years!





Watervliet Arsenal Fire Department 1918

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