The editor of the
newspapers I work for asked me for a fire service related article for our Fire
Prevention Week insert last week, and this is what I came up with:
It’s
not easy to say how a first generation volunteer firefighter like me got into
the business.
For
many of us, firefighting becomes such a part of our lives that we bleed fire
engine red. Okay, bad example. But if your father was a volunteer, and maybe
his father before him, it’s easy to see what turned your blood from red to, um,
red. In Albion, if you’re a Lock, or a Beckley, or a Jacob, for instance, your
family has been in the business for a good portion of the town’s history. I’ve
fought fires beside more father-son combos than I can count … and some
father-daughter combos, too.
I was
first generation, and for many years before joining I was clueless. How many
years is open for debate. Early in life I attended Scout gatherings in the
basement of a building that I only later realized was the Albion Fire
Department. I was a newbie in every sense of the word.
But
one day I saw a big (it wasn’t really that big) beautiful lime green fire
engine (honestly, it really wasn’t that beautiful—except to me) go by on its
way to extinguish a motorcycle fire. Later a grass buggy rolled out of the fire
station on its way to a brush fire, while I stood staring from across the
street, ignoring my lawn mowing job. By the time I turned eighteen, I was
inhaling any information I could get about the fire service.
And
then, before I knew it, I jumped in with both feet. Well, actually I just stood
there in the AFD meeting room, trying to overcome my painful shyness. Does
fighting fires require courage? The most courageous thing I did in my career
was walk into that room full of strangers and ask to become one of them.
My
initial impression, in that windowless upstairs room, was that everyone smoked.
(It was 1980.) Pipes, cigars, cigarettes—there was no need to test the fire
station’s smoke alarm, as it got set off during business meetings. And who
cared? This was a time when protective breathing apparatus was a mild
suggestion. They included heavy steel tanks, and we only had about eight of
them on the entire department. The first time I crawled into a burning
building, my protective ensemble consisted of hip-length boots, blue jeans, and
a windbreaker. Did I mention it was 1980?
A
firefighter crawling into a burning home inhaled as much bad smoke in five
minutes as he did smoking for a year. Luckily, these days we have much better
breathing protection, and a lot less tobacco.
To my
shock, about a year later I got a check. We got paid for this! For
volunteering! Two bucks an hour! It almost made up for the scorched clothes and
empty gas tanks.
Now we
get $7.50 an hour at fires, and that’s not too shabby for a volunteer job. Of
course, we don’t get paid for responding to accidents or medical runs, or for
training, or business meetings, or fund raisers, or parades, or maintenance
duties, or cleaning details.
But at
least we have good working conditions. I remember once, when we had this
January fire at about 3 a.m., and I fell asleep leaning against a truck because
my clothes were so frozen I couldn’t bend over …
Never
mind.
Volunteer
firefighters bring unique skill sets to the job. When I first joined, only
three of our seven trucks were actually designed to be fire trucks. The
volunteers put hundreds of man-hours into the other units, formerly fuel trucks
and delivery vans. They did electrical work, sanding, painting, designed
storage compartments, installed emergency lights, sirens, and radios, which
brings me back to electrical work.
We had
professional electricians on the department; construction workers; mechanics;
and farmers, among many others. (In my experience, farmers can do just about
anything.) When we needed to put an addition on the fire station, we gathered
the materials and did it ourselves.
By
which I mean, they did it, and I watched. It turns out that, while I can use
firefighting tools to tear things open and apart, I’m not too good at actually
putting stuff together. Searching for a way to contribute, I learned how to use
the department’s complicated 35mm camera and became the AFD’s photographer. I
also became the public information officer because, according to some, I have a
bit of writing ability.
By the
time I’d been on for several years, I began to suspect the department’s one
hundredth anniversary was coming up. It turns out my incipient powers as an
historian were on track, and I began writing the story of the Albion Fire
Department as a Centennial present to the town.
I
finished it just in time for the AFD’s 125th anniversary. Luckily,
I’ve since become much better at deadlines.
Now
I’m slowing down a bit. I’ve had chronic back pain since wearing one of those
old steel air tanks at an all-nighter downtown fire in the early 80’s. I’ve
developed a chronic cough, and had a cancer scare a few years ago. After I go
to bed, there’s a good chance I’ll snooze right through the fire page until
I’ve put three or four hours of sleep behind me. Sometimes I think that book, Smoky Days and Sleepless Nights: A Century
or So with the Albion Fire Department, should be my coda. The sales go
straight to the department, so after 34 years of service I could kick back with
the knowledge that I did my part.
But I
can’t let it go. I suspect, if I ever do hang it up, I’ll offer to stick around
as the department photographer, or maybe have myself displayed at fund raisers
wearing 19th Century gear. Any chance to soak in the atmosphere for
a little while longer.
It’s the blood, you see. Fire engine red."A fire? Where? Where?" |
I've known someone who works in a volunteer department. He always has someone else working in his hardware store in case he gets called out.
ReplyDeleteGood idea! In the old days, at least in small towns, if a fire broke out they'd just shut the business down. Everyone in the community was at the fire, anyway.
DeleteTake care of that back. I understand the camaraderie and the desire to help, but being the photographer and historian should keep you in the red, or group.
ReplyDeleteProbably, but here's the dark secret: Fighting fire is fun. Well, at first it is, until you get to the really dirty, hot, exhausting part later on.
Delete