Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 19, 2006
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Thursday, January 19, 2006
Pelham Manor's Earliest Fire Fighting Equipment
After a series of fires suffered by homes in the Prospect Hill section of
the Town of Pelham (now part of the Village of Pelham Manor), residents of
the area decided something had to be done. They began to organize a fire
fighting organization in early 1890. Even though the Village of Pelham
Manor had not yet been incorporated, owners of fifty of the fifty-three
homes located in the area agreed to pay an "assessment" of $30 per home to
fund the purchase of firefighting equipment, among other things.
Among the first equipment the collective acquired were fourteen dozen hand
grenade extinguishers for $84 and fifty-six racks for the hand grenade
extinguishers. Each homeowner who paid the assessment received a rack and
three grenades.
Fire grenades typically were glass globes or bottles filled with a
chemical fluid. When a fire broke out, the grenade was thrown at the base
of the fire, breaking the globe and spreading the chemical fluid to
extinguish the flames. An image of the widely-available "Harden Star Hand
Grenade" appears immediately below.

Such "equipment" provided little hope of fire safety, however. As Henry E.
Dey, one of the fire-fighting organizational leaders later noted, "A
meeting was called, someone suggested the fire-grenades, so we bought
them, but they offered only slim assurance".
To supplement such "slim assurance", the organizers acquired a "25-gallon
chemical tank mounted on two wheels". According to a transcription of
portions of the early records of the Pelham Manor Fire Department compiled
by Warren P. Lyon, the group ordered the new piece of equipment, which
cost $400, on April 18, 1890.
The sketch below depicts what was known as Pelham Manor's "Chemical Engine
No. 1" in action. Pulled by hand to the scene of a fire, the equipment was
part of the earliest organized effort to protect the lives and property of
residents of the area that soon became the Village of Pelham Manor.

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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:00 AM
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January 19, 2006.
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