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During WWII, Fort Worth had difficulty replacing its older fire apparatus as the military had preference for all heavy equipment purchases. The city had been able to purchase some new equipment in the years before the US entered the war, but with 21 stations and the city expanding to 100 square miles, the department's resources were stretched thin.
Fire stations on the National Register of Historic Places in Oklahoma (2 P) This page was last ...
Fire Alarm, Telegraph and Police Signaling Building; Fort Johnson Volunteer Fire Company; Gordon Heights Fire Department; 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 ...
Fort Worth Fire Department spokesperson Craig Trojacek said the exam isn’t mandatory, but they’re hoping to get around 200 firefighters through. As of around 11 a.m. Tuesday, 175 firefighters ...
Fort Worth City Council members entered a building with live fire, crawled through smoke and learned about the different types of fire trucks at the six-hour event.
A city of Fort Worth employee was fired Tuesday after being arrested for arson and drug possession. An investigation by the city’s fire department pointed to Frederick Lamond Harris as being ...
The Fort Worth City Council voted Tuesday to approve the transition from MedStar ambulance service to fire department-based EMS. MedStar has been the sole ambulance provider for Fort Worth and the ...
With its daily service to Fort Worth, the Heartland Flyer provides access to the nation's rail network and has given Oklahoma City yet another option for inter-state transportation. There were plans in the early 1990s to build a light rail system for the city as part of the MAPS urban redevelopment program, but the project stalled repeatedly on ...