Seattle Fire Department
On June 6, 1889, 25 city blocks of the city of Seattle and every mill, wharf, and warehouse from Union to Jackson Streets were consumed in a firestorm that started when a glue pot tipped over. Both of the Seattle firehouses burned in the devastating inferno, and the result was the end of the volunteer fire department and the formation of the Seattle Fire Department. Seattle got its first fireboat in 1891, at a little fire station at the foot of Madison Street and Alaskan Way, and the department depended on horse-drawn equipment until 1924, when the last horse was retired. Boasting the oldest continuously operating medic unit in America, today's Seattle Fire Department is a proud organization with 34 fire stations and more than 1,000 uniformed personnel.
1108083521
Seattle Fire Department
On June 6, 1889, 25 city blocks of the city of Seattle and every mill, wharf, and warehouse from Union to Jackson Streets were consumed in a firestorm that started when a glue pot tipped over. Both of the Seattle firehouses burned in the devastating inferno, and the result was the end of the volunteer fire department and the formation of the Seattle Fire Department. Seattle got its first fireboat in 1891, at a little fire station at the foot of Madison Street and Alaskan Way, and the department depended on horse-drawn equipment until 1924, when the last horse was retired. Boasting the oldest continuously operating medic unit in America, today's Seattle Fire Department is a proud organization with 34 fire stations and more than 1,000 uniformed personnel.
24.99 In Stock
Seattle Fire Department

Seattle Fire Department

by Richard Schneider
Seattle Fire Department

Seattle Fire Department

by Richard Schneider

Paperback

$24.99 
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Overview

On June 6, 1889, 25 city blocks of the city of Seattle and every mill, wharf, and warehouse from Union to Jackson Streets were consumed in a firestorm that started when a glue pot tipped over. Both of the Seattle firehouses burned in the devastating inferno, and the result was the end of the volunteer fire department and the formation of the Seattle Fire Department. Seattle got its first fireboat in 1891, at a little fire station at the foot of Madison Street and Alaskan Way, and the department depended on horse-drawn equipment until 1924, when the last horse was retired. Boasting the oldest continuously operating medic unit in America, today's Seattle Fire Department is a proud organization with 34 fire stations and more than 1,000 uniformed personnel.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780738548678
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 01/31/2007
Series: Images of America Series
Pages: 128
Sales rank: 1,048,602
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.31(d)

About the Author

Author Richard Schneider has spent his life in the fire services, first in San Jose, California, and then in Seattle, where he retired in 1996 at the rank of lieutenant. In this new volume, Schneider has gathered together more than 200 rare vintage images from the archives of the Seattle Fire Department, the City of Seattle, and his own private collection to tell Seattle's unique fire history.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     6
Introduction     7
Volunteer Days     9
The Great Fire     13
Heyday of the Horse     19
The Motor Era Begins     37
The Depression and World War II     51
Postwar Growth     65
Paramedics and "Haz-Mat"     81
Maritime Firefighting     97
Into the 21st Century     111
The Chiefs     119
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