Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Boston Fire Department was established as the first paid fire department in the United States, and is the largest municipal fire department in New England serving approximately 685,000 people living in the 48.4-square-mile (125 km 2) area of the city proper. Additionally, it actively participates in MetroFire, the fire services mutual aid ...
Fire departments located in the state of Massachusetts, United States Pages in category "Fire departments in Massachusetts" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
The Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) is a public authority in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts that provides wholesale drinking water and sewage services to 3.1 million people in sixty-one municipalities and more than 5,500 large industrial users in the eastern and central parts of the state, primarily in the Boston area.
The Boston tunnel has 40 pump stations throughout, according to Gulliver. "None of those pump stations failed," he said. Instead, the flooding was caused by a clog near the main catch basin that ...
The fire station at 941 Boylston, which is still active, houses Boston Fire Department Engine Company 33 and Ladder Company 15. The police station, 955 Boylston, was home to Boston Police Department Division 16 until 1976.
U.S. War Department adopted a standard Quartermaster's Department fire hose coupling, that proved troublesome and was abandoned even while the standard was still in effect. (1917 proceedings of the NFPA) 1904 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-inch ID, 3 + 1 ⁄ 16-inch OD, 7.5 tpi 3, 6 tpi 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-inch 7.5 tpi 4 + 1 ⁄ 2-inch, 4 tpi
The dam controls the surface level of the river basin as well its tributaries upstream, including the Back Bay Fens and Muddy River and to prevent sea water from entering the Charles River freshwater basin during high tides. It replaced the 1910 Charles River Dam upstream, now the site of the Boston Museum of Science. The 1910 dam includes two ...
The pumping station’s Leavitt and Worthington Engines. In the 1850s, Boston began modernizing its water supply, which at the time was a combination of wells, pond water, and downhill piping from a Natick reservoir. [3] In the 1870s, Boston city leaders decided the city needed to scale up its water filtration and pumping and began looking into ...