Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Titled "Fire Station # 2–3" in the 1980s [19] [20] 2015–present Station 3 Mitchell J. Brown Fire Station 222 Greenlawn Avenue In use Built on the site of CFD's administration building, training academy, maintenance building, and communications department. [19] 4 1874–1892 Flowers Engine House 479 N. High Street Demolished
The department also oversees 39 medic companies. [4] There are 1,592 uniformed and 70 civilian professionals serving the citizens of Columbus, Ohio. [6] The department is accredited by the Committee on Fire Accreditation International, granted in 2007. At the time, it was the second-largest fire department with the accreditation. [7]
Albany Fire Department (New York) Binghamton Fire Department; Brentwood Fire Department; Briarcliff Manor Fire Department; Buffalo Fire Department; East Fishkill Fire District; East Meadow Fire District; Fire Alarm, Telegraph and Police Signaling Building; Fort Johnson Volunteer Fire Company; Gordon Heights Fire Department; Great River Fire ...
This page was last edited on 12 February 2023, at 00:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
An explosion led to a fire at an Excelsior Springs auto shop Wednesday afternoon, killing one person and injuring another. The Excelsior Springs Fire Department responded around 1:17 p.m. at Hart ...
The station c. 1894 Map of the fire station being built, 1891. Engine House No. 5 was constructed in 1894 to serve as a fire station for the South End, at a time when fire engines were horse-drawn. [6] The station was designed by John Flynn and cost $15,000. [3] It was constructed at a time when fire stations were needed every few blocks.
Summers are typically very warm to hot, springs and falls are temperate, and winters are cool with a slight dusting of snow and/or frost. Hot, dry summers make Valley Springs fire-prone; however, three fire stations, lake water, and adequate road access assist in extinguishing fires expediently. [8]
The station is part of the fire department's Battalion 5, one of five stations in the battalion that serves the city's west side. [23] It is Franklinton's only fire station. [4] The station has three emergency service vehicles: Engine 10, a 2009 Ferrara; Ladder 10, a 2001 Sutphen 95' Platform; and Medic 10, a 2008 Int'l/Horton. [26]