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The two million fire calls that American fire departments respond to each year represent the highest figures in the industrialized world. During the average year between 2008 and 2017, 3,190 civilians died, 16,225 were injured, and property damage reached $14.7 billion dollars.
The first known female firefighter, Molly Williams, took her place with the men on the dragropes during the blizzard of 1818 and pulled the pumper to the fire through the deep snow. Fighting a fire in New York City, 1869 illustration. On 1 April 1853, Cincinnati, Ohio featured the first career fire department made up of 100% full-time employees.
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Salvage bags were used to quickly collect and save valuables, and bed keys were used to separate the wooden frame of a bed (often the most valuable item in a home at the time) into pieces for safe and rapid removal from the fire. [13] The first American attempt at fire insurance failed after a large fire in Charlestown, Massachusetts in 1736.
Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1974; Fire Chief (magazine) Fire Corps; Fire Fighter Fatality Investigation and Prevention Program; Fire marshal; Fire police; Fire Protection Publications; Fire Research and Safety Act of 1968; Fire Service Exploring; Firefighter's Combat Challenge; Firemen's Memorial (Boston) FIRESCOPE
The Bootleg Fire, in southern Oregon, burned more than 413,000 acres and destroyed 200 homes, while the Dixie Fire, in Northern California, which is only 41 percent contained, has scorched more ...
The Palisades fire and two other blazes nearby -- Eaton fire north of Pasadena and the Hurst fire in San Fernando Valley -- forced 70,000 Angelenos to abandon their homes and left at least five ...
The Grass Fire (1908) by Frederic Remington depicts Native American men setting fire to a grassy plain. Native American use of fire in ecosystems are part of the environmental cycles and maintenance of wildlife habitats that sustain the cultures and economies of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Indigenous peoples have used burning ...