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Fire departments in the state of North Carolina, United States. Pages in category "Fire departments in North Carolina" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
Port Henry Fire Department Building, Port Henry, NY, NRHP-listed [15] Putnam and Mellor Engine and Hose Company Firehouse, Port Chester, NY, NRHP-listed [15] Rescue Hook & Ladder Company No. 1 Firehouse, Roslyn, NY, NRHP-listed [15] Rochester Fire Department Headquarters and Shops, Rochester, NY, NRHP-listed [15]
Two firefighters are among a crew of more than 150 who have been struggling to contain the Collett Ridge Fire in the far southwestern corner of North Carolina. Dry, warm weather has helped sustain ...
The Louisville Fire Department is the third oldest all-paid staff fire department in the nation. The first fire brigades established in Louisville were in 1780, two years after the city's creation. The first firehouses in Louisville were volunteer fire departments scattered throughout the city until June 1, 1858, when the city took control and ...
The $8.6 million facility will be built on vacant land at 1010 S. Chapel St. that the city bought from the Louisville City School District in 2021. Louisville rescue: How paramedics, cops ...
Great River Fire Department; Long Beach Fire Department (New York) Mount Sinai Fire Department; New York City Fire Department; Oceanic H&L Company No. 1; Plandome Fire Department; Rescue Hook and Ladder Co.1 Haverstraw NY; Richmond Engine Co. 1; Sayville Fire Department; Schenectady Fire Department; Wantagh Fire Department; Yonkers Fire Department
The fire was reported around 10:25 a.m., Capt. Donovan Sims, spokesperson for the Louisville Division of Fire said. No injuries were reported and no rescues were made, he said.
The most prominent of the firehouses built in the 1890s was the Fire Department Headquarters built in Downtown Louisville at 617 W. Jefferson Street in 1891. It is Richardsonian Romanesque in style, as it was designed by the McDonald Brothers , who also designed the Kentucky National Bank and Norton's Warehouse buildings in downtown Louisville.