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The Los Angeles Fire Department Museum and Memorial is located at Old Engine Co. No. 27, also known as Fire Station No. 27, on Cahuenga Boulevard in Hollywood. The museum houses old fire engines and fire apparatus, some dating from the 1880s. The museum also houses a reference library and fire safety learning center.
It was designed by Leon E. Dessez and completed in 1908. It originally housed Chemical Company 1, which served areas not yet connected to fire hydrants. On June 15, 1914, this company was replaced by Engine Company 27 which went in service with a 1906 American LaFrance Metropolitan 500 GPM steam fire engine and a 1903 American LaFrance 70 gallon double tank combination chemical/hose wagon.
Ithaca Fire Station. Albion Fire Station (1925–27) Balmoral Fire Station (1926–29) Coorparoo Fire Station (1935) Dalby Fire Station (1935) Ithaca Fire Station (1918–19) Nundah Fire Station (1936) Redcliffe Fire Station (1948–49) Wynnum Fire Station (1922–38) Yeronga Fire Station (1934)
The soon-to-be coffee shop is believed to have first been a gas station, built in the 1930s. The fire department took over in 1971 and stayed there until 1989. It housed a concrete company after that.
Fire Station No. 23 remained an active firehouse from 1910 to 1960. When it opened, it was staffed by fifteen firefighters and ten horses. The original equipment included a horse wagon, chief's buggy, and a pumper that used a vertical tube boiler. [4] The company's first major call was a fire in the old Byrne Building that took ten hours to ...
Fife could get a new fire station if that city’s voters approve Proposition 1 on the Aug. 6 primary ballot. ... Fife’s fire station is about 70 years old, he told The News Tribune. It has been ...
The film contained footage from a number of large authentic fires, a fire station, and firemen rushing to the fires and fighting the fires. No acknowledgment was given to the fire service. The unnamed city was Los Angeles as it was filmed at Fire Station 27 in Hollywood.
Fort Worth Fire Station No. 18’s annual “Countdown to 100” event started in 2013 following a neighborhood fire that left the community traumatized.