Historic Pelham Blog Archive
August 1, 2005
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Monday, August 1, 2005
An 1896 Inspection and Drill of the Fire Department in Pelham
Long, long ago, the local fire departments that served Pelham were quite
different than the efficient and professional organizations that serve our
community today. The dedication of the volunteers, no doubt, was as strong
and selfless as the dedication of today's professional and volunteer
firefighters. Their proficiency, however, does not seem to approach that
of today's departments even remotely. A case in point -- a drill and
inspection held by one of the local fire departments on Friday, September
25, 1896.
A merciless report of that drill and inspection appeared five days later
in The Pelham Press, a local newspaper at the time. The report
suggested that the drill went so badly -- with the Relief Hook & Ladder
Company unable even to get their truck out of the building -- that one
bystander refused to make his horse available to help and, instead, told
the hapless volunteers to use a couple of goats and a pair of chickens
instead. The report appears below in its entirety.
“FIRE DEPARTMENT INSPECTION AND DRILL.
____
A drill and inspection of the Pelham Fire Department was held last Friday
night and presented a sad spectacle to those who witnessed it. The ‘fire
bell’ (which, by the way, was reconstructed so that the distance from
which it could be heard has been reduced several thousand feet) was rung
and the entire department responded. Liberty Hose was first to get under
way. They succeeded in getting out of sight before all of Relief H. & L.
Co.’s men arrived. Chief Heisser’s horse had a sore back and could not be
used. The five members put their shoulders to the wheels and pushed, but
they might just as well been trying to push the building for the truck
wouldn’t budge an inch. Chief Heisser asked Dr. Chas. Barker to donate the
services of his colt, but the doctor advised him to secure the services of
two of Francis McDermitt’s goats and a couple of Thos. Hewitt’s chickens
and make a tandem, but the motion was lost in the excitement. There was no
use; all they could do was to sit down and wait for Liberty to return. Up
to a late hour they had not returned, and it was unanimously agreed upon
that they had probably got stuck in one of the ruts in Wolf’s Lane. The
crowd was looking on pitilessly when the Press reporter left the scene.”
Source: The Pelham Press, Sept. 30, 1896 (Vol. I, No. 30), at 1,
col. 6.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:30 AM
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August 1, 2005.
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