During the last two decades
of the 19th century, the village of Pittsford had been struggling with the idea
of installing a water works to provide water to its residents and to provide
water for emergencies such as fire fighting. In August 1881, the paper made
note of the fact that “The air in Pittsford was black with smoke from fires
burning along the railroad.” It had been a hot and dry month, and the paper
recognized Pittsford’s lack of an organized fire brigade for dealing with
fires.
One of the worst fires of the
last century in Pittsford destroyed the Crump block at the four corners of the
village in early July of 1886. The ‘Crump Opera House’ had recently been
renovated, complete with a third story stage where many social events were
held. The fire occurred during the day and volunteers removed much of the
inventory, including the contents of the safe. Not only was the store
destroyed, but two houses owned by the Crump family were also lost. There were
also three other homes which had their roofs burned off and about 40 fruit and
shade trees had to be cut down. Construction of a new building was started
immediately and finished in November. It still stands on that corner as the
Wiltsie & Crump (R. J. Hunter’s Village Pharmacy) building.
On April 5th, 1894, the west
building of the Agate malt house was destroyed by fire. Starting at about four
o’clock in the morning, the fire took slightly more than two hours to destroy
the structure. Warehouses across the canal were ignited by sparks, but were
extinguished. The loss was estimated at $40,000. On April 6th, 1894, the paper
reported that the northern part of Pittsford was enveloped in thick smoke due to
the heaps of barley and malt still burning and unless some heavy rain fell, it
was expected to continue for five or six more days.
On the 23rd of February in
1897, there was a meeting in the Town Hall to discuss the advisability of
establishing a water works in the village. After much discussion, pro and con,
over the next few months, a vote on May 6th, 1897 approved the proposition to
build a water works by a slim margin of 44 to 39. In today’s age, it is of
notable historic interest that one of the concerns of the ladies of the Village
was that, even though they had a vested interest in the outcome of the
controversy, they could not vote. The water works was to be installed at a cost
not to exceed $12,000. It was originally suggested to draw the water from
springs on the Lusk farm, however, a well was sunk at what is now 60 Rand Place
and a pump house erected over it. The water was then pumped to a reservoir,
which was indeed located on the Lusk property approximately one mile south of
the village. There would be 43 hydrants installed, with the water pressure
ranging from 60 to 90 pounds. The system was to be completed by late summer.
That water system was eventually abandoned around 1913. The pump house was
converted to a residence by Irving Gaskin who still resides there.
It was clear by now that a
formal group was needed to respond for fires and other emergencies. Having
installed a system of water supply and seeing the tragic losses of fire, at a
Pittsford Village Board meeting on the 21st of November, 1898, a resolution was
passed authorizing the formation of a volunteer fire brigade.
On Tuesday evening, the 29th
of November in 1898, about 25 men assembled for the first meeting of the
Pittsford Village “Active Hose Co. No. 1” and elected its first set of
officers. G. William H. Doane was installed as the first President. L. G.
Tousey was elected the Foreman, a position we now call Chief, and C. B. Emmons
was made the Assistant Foreman.
A few days later, on the
evening of December 7th, 1898, about 23 men assembled for the first meeting of
the “Iroquois Hose Co. No. 2” and elected the following officers. George A.
Goss was to be their first President. They chose Fred Hegendorfer as their
first Foreman and, as his Assistant Foreman they selected Samuel Hooker. The
Iroquois Hose Co. No. 2 was sometimes simply referred to as Pittsford Hose Co.
No. 2.
The dues of the organization
were one dollar per year. To this day, they remain one of the all time bargains,
as they are still one dollar per year.
The charter members of
Pittsford Fire Department are:
Hose Co. No. 1: Wm. Agate, B.
C. Eaton, John Schoen, C. B. Emmons, Chas. Spellman, John Stull, George A.
Hicks, J. C. Hinterleiter, Chas. Schoen, Harry Stalter, Lewis Curtis, Geo.
Stull, Geo. Smith, Elliot Crump, W. Grant Wadhams, W. H. Doane, Henry Spiegel,
Wm. Slocum, Chas. Sutherland, Robert Rand, A. N. Finucane, L. G. Tousey, John
Barker, L. E. Harscher, and Samuel Hutchinson.
Iroquois Hose Co. No. 2: Fred
Hegendorfer, C. M. W. Rand, Henry Kiel, Wm. Hetzer, A. Francis, John Steve, Mort
Thomas, R. E. Gaskin, Geo. Cady, Samuel Rand, Geo. Hooker, F. Jones, A. H.
Whitlock, E. McGrath, Samuel Hooker, Wm. Ford, B. N. Wiltsie, Fred Zornow, W. W.
Johnson, Frank Wiltsie, G. T. Vought, and Geo. A. Goss.
Using donations and moneys
received from the Village, the fire department was able to acquire two American
LaFrance hose carts, hose, buckets, and a few basic tools such as an ax, a
shovel, nozzles and etc. The equipment was stored in different locations within
the village. When the alarm wheel was rung, the volunteers retrieved the
equipment, pulled it to the emergency, and fought the fire. The Pittsford Fire
Department still has these original hose carts.
A ladder cart was acquired
within a few years and this was also pressed into service. Unfortunately and
ironically, this piece of equipment was destroyed in a fire.
A February 5, 1901 inventory
listed the following: stored at the Methodist Church were a ladder cart, five
poles, five ladders, one ax, and 69 pails; stored in J. M. Wiltsies shed were
one hose cart, one nozzle, one ax, a bar, 16 pails, tools and hose; and kept at
Dr. W. W. Johnson’s were one hose cart, hose, two nozzles, an ax, a bar and
tools. Before the water system had been installed, two hand-operated pumps of
very simple design had been in use by the village. These pumps were part of the
fire department inventory after its formation.
Pittsford Fire Department
first celebrated Memorial Day, known then as Decoration Day, by marching in the
parade on May 30th, 1899. The following month in June, the department ordered
the first dress uniforms, 44 of them at $5.65 each. The practice of decorating
the firefighter’s graves for Decoration Day was started in 1907 by the
department. We still decorate our past members graves and participate annually
in the Pittsford Memorial Day parade to honor our past firefighters and
veterans.
Although the fire department
has a proud history of volunteerism, even a century ago people had busy lives,
which made it difficult to find the time to do all the necessary tasks
associated with running a fire department. The minutes from the 1906 election
of officers shows that George Smith was nominated to run for secretary, but he
declined. Then George Hicks was nominated for the position, but he also
declined. Thomas J. Heaver was then nominated for the position, and when he
respectfully declined, the department simply overruled him and elected him to
the position anyway. It was not uncommon during the infancy of the department
to have to cancel a meeting due to a lack of a quorum. This eventually led to
an amendment to our by-laws requiring members to attend one half of the
regularly scheduled meetings per year.
The first fire hall was built
in 1907 and dedicated in May of 1908 on a lot purchased from Robert Bryant.
This lot was bought for $1,000 on April 1, 1906. The Village Board presented
the fire department with a flag for the pole on top of the hose tower at the
dedication ceremony. Prior to having the fire hall, the department held their
meetings in the Cole building (which is the building on the southwest corner of
Main and Monroe at the four corners in the village) and later in the Masonic
Hall.
A Ford Model T truck was
purchased in 1920 using donations from the residents of the community. It was
referred to as the “chemical truck.” It carried a large, truck mounted, water
type fire extinguisher, and the “chemicals” were the soda and acid, which were
mixed to provide the pressure that propelled the water. It was in service until
1937. In 1925, a pumper truck was delivered from American LaFrance at a cost of
$6507. It boasted of a 750 gallon per minute pump and a 50 gallon booster
tank. The American LaFrance pumper was purchased in response to hydrant testing
in 1924 done by the State Underwriters Association. Those tests showed
inadequate hydrant pressures putting Pittsford in an unprotected class with
corresponding increases in insurance rates. Proudly, we still have “Old Betsy”
as the 1925 has affectionately been called over the years, and you can still see
it smoothly rolling down the street following our members in the line of march
in many of the local parades. This truck was “in service” until the mid 1950’s
and was pressed into service in 1963 during local flooding. She pumped water
for a week straight, being shut down only to change the oil and clean the pump.
To this day, it will pump water right along side of the big, modern pumpers.
The next truck to be used by
the department was a 1935 American LaFrance pumper on a Ford chassis, which was
received in September of that year. It was the “Little Ford”. It carried a 500
gallon per minute pump and a 150 gallon booster tank. In 1949, a donation of a
1933 Buick hearse from the Zornow Funeral Home in Pittsford provided a vehicle
the fire department would use for first aid and similar emergency calls. Many
of the more senior members of the department today recall the 1952 American
LaFrance, Ford chassis pumper as engine one-one-two. It was the “Big Ford.” It
had a 500 GPM pump and a 500 gallon tank. It also had high-pressure fog stream
capacity. In early photographs, it is lettered Engine 3. In 1953, the
department purchased a Chevrolet Equipment Truck and used it to transport rescue
and emergency medical equipment. In the fall of 1970, a Seagrave 100 foot
aerial truck was delivered at a cost of approximately $78,000. It replaced our
first aerial device, which also had a small pump on board, making it similar to
a “Quint.” It was a 1959 American LaFrance on a Ford chassis and it had a 75
foot ladder. It was originally purchased for around $25,000.
Pittsford Fire Department
started as two independent hose companies. At the request of the Village Board,
on January 25, 1901, the two companies joined under one organization as the
Pittsford Fire Department. With the acquisition of ladder equipment and then a
chemical truck after the turn of the century, the companies of the Department
expanded to include a Ladder Company and a Chemical Company. During the 20’s
however, the four companies of the Pittsford Fire Department were combined into
one, and the organization remains this way today. Since that day in 1901, the
only change to the name has been to add the word volunteer to make it the
Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department. In 1917, badges were ordered which were
labeled Pittsford Vol. Fire Dept. The group of people who are the members of
the department belong to the Pittsford Volunteer Firemen’s Association, Inc.
Pittsford was one of the first
departments to enter into a mutual aid agreement with a neighboring community.
On October 5th, 1909, we agreed with the Despatch Hose Company, now the East
Rochester Fire Department, that on request, each department would respond to
assist the other. Monroe County is known as the home of mutual aid with the
concept being firmly entrenched here by the early 1950’s, and today mutual aid
is a way of life with fire departments everywhere. Pittsford Fire Department
regularly responds to our neighboring communities including an occasional visit
to the City of Rochester to help with emergencies. We are fortunate that we can
also rely on our neighbors any time we ask.
The methods employed for
dispatching the members of the department have evolved over the years. In the
beginning, the department had a steel wheel from a railroad car, which would be
rung for an emergency. The men would then run to where the equipment was
stored, be told of the call and location, and respond. This wheel was actually
the exterior rim of the driving wheel of a steam locomotive, about five feet in
diameter. When struck with a heavy steel bar, it was said that it could be
heard in all parts of the village. When telephones became available, the local
Pittsford operator would receive a report of fire, then start the fire alarm,
and then call the fire hall or the Chief to report the information. With the
advent of radio technology, the firemen were issued home receivers so the call
could be dispatched from a central location by radio. Today, all members of the
department are issued portable voice pagers, which they carry with them at all
times. A centralized dispatch office in the city activates the pagers when
necessary, and verbally announces the location and nature of the emergency.
Our equipment inventory has
changed significantly over the years as well. Starting with a couple of hose
carts and some buckets, we now have a new fire hall in the village, right next
to the location of the original fire hall. It was dedicated on October 4th,
1987, and it has five truck bays as well as a meeting/training room, a lounge, a
physical fitness room, a kitchen area and offices upstairs. Recently, the Fire
District acquired the property behind Station I for future expansion. We also
have Station II located across from Pittsford-Mendon High School on the
Pittsford-Mendon Road. It was constructed in 1972 and has four bays for trucks
as well as a meeting room and kitchen downstairs. Station II also has a small
lounge and a training room. Of course, both fire halls are fully equipped with
radio dispatch facilities including computer aided dispatch showing address
locations and other significant information. This includes data such as hydrant
locations, water and gas shut off valves, alarm information and other pertinent
information like family pets, invalids who may reside there, residents who may
be on oxygen, and other special needs.
We have a trailer used for
fire prevention and education, a squad truck (387), a heavy rescue truck (388),
a 105 foot ladder truck (381), a quint (pumper and 75 foot ladder truck, 380),
and three full size pumpers (383, 384, and 385). We have a very impressive
inventory of hose, rescue equipment, emergency medical equipment, self contained
breathing apparatus, ladders, foam application equipment, water and cold water
rescue equipment, buckets and axes and shovels and tarps and saws and hand tools
and, well you get the idea. Each member of the department is issued a personal
set of turnout gear. This is the protective clothing that the firefighters wear
when fighting fires or doing emergency work.
Of course, the methodology of
fire fighting and training have changed dramatically over the years. A century
ago, the men would respond to an emergency and do what seemed right under the
direction of their officers. Once in a while, they would gather for some
training exercise. Today, we meet regularly for training on Monday evenings.
We are constantly updating and renewing our knowledge and skills via national,
state and local training courses. We have developed specialized in-house
training for those activities and procedures, which are specific to our own
organization. We now have to comply annually with mandated federal, state and
local agency required training. These would include fire hall safety, hazardous
materials training, infectious materials training, SCBA (self-contained
breathing apparatus) air pack training, nuclear radiation training, CPR and
First Aid, emergency vehicle operation, as well as other specific training
topics. In addition to the classroom type of instruction, you shouldn’t be
surprised to see us out in the community on a Monday evening practicing and
refreshing our skills.
The demographics of the
department have had at least one significant change over the years as well. Of
course we still have members who are lawyers and law enforcement officers and
farmers and engineers and truck drivers and any other type of person you can
imagine. But, we also have wives and moms and daughters and sisters. Not
unlike the rest of society, the volunteer fire service has progressed to include
the valuable skills, resources, time and dedication that the female half of our
population has to offer.
Over the past century, some
565 men and women have selflessly volunteered countless hours of their time and
energy in service to the residents of Pittsford and the surrounding
communities. Some forty-seven of those have served in the capacity of Chief,
and fifty-three have held the position of President. Eight of those have served
in both capacities. The department answered only a few alarms its first year of
service, and now averages more than seven hundred calls annually. From our
membership of up to eighty firefighters, we annually choose six Line Officers
who are responsible for all firematic aspects of the department including
training, and ten Civil Officers who are charged with overseeing the business
aspects of the department. We are proud that members of Pittsford Fire
Department have held positions in the county and state organizations. Barry
Sens is a Past President of the New York State Chiefs Association. Thomas
Eiswerth is the President of the Volunteer Firemen’s Association of New York
during our centennial year, and James Burdett is the President of the Monroe
County Past Chiefs Association this year. We also have had other members who
have held various elected county, regional and state positions over the years.
In spite of today’s demands on personal time and the changing nature of the
Pittsford community, we are proud of the fact that we are still a one hundred
percent volunteer organization.
On August 20th, 1913,
Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department joined the Northern Central Firemen’s
Association and, in March of 1935 we joined the New York State Firemen’s
Association. The primary purpose of these organizations is to be a conduit for
information relating to the emergency fire services organizations. As the
organizations matured, especially the state association, they have become very
active and in tune with legislative developments in Albany and actions in the
legal community which may have impact on firefighters and fire departments.
In early 1949, past members of
the Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department organized the Exempt Firemen’s
organization. Today the Exempts are still active holding monthly dinner
meetings, and many of them continue to march with the department in parades
during the summer. Recently the by-laws of the exempts were amended to allow
membership by active firefighters who have satisfied the requirement of
obtaining their state Exempt Certificate. An exempt certificate is issued to a
volunteer firefighter after the completion of five years of service.
On September 12, 1950, a Council meeting voted
to authorize the formation of a Ladies Auxiliary to the Pittsford Fire
Department. This had been requested by many of the wives of the members of the
department. The Council was the former body we now refer
to as the Executive Committee. Early documentation shows that the Ladies
Auxiliary was officially started on September 21st, 1950. For many years, the
Ladies Auxiliary would have food ready for the hungry firefighters returning
from an extended call, and they also prepared and served a number of dinners for
the department to be enjoyed prior to a department meeting.
In the fall of 1974, a
Pittsford Fire Explorer Post was formed, sponsored by the Fire Department as
part of the Boy Scouts of America. The Chief at that time, Charlie Cline, was
instrumental in the organization of the post. At the February 4th, 1975
department meeting, Past Chief Cline introduced the following Charter Members of
the Post: Brent Coleman, Matt Utz, Paul Schuyler, Brian Wierich, Tim Hyland,
Brad Klotz, Ross Shepherd, Mark Cavanaugh, Don Schwartz, John Cavanaugh, and Rob
Cline. The Explorers have been active since that time training and learning
about fire fighting as well as responding to fire scenes to assist the
firefighters with safe exterior functions such as lighting, changing of air
packs, and clean up following a fire.
The Explorers are a valued
part of our organization. During our Centennial year, it is worth noting that
all three of the current Chiefs of the Department are charter members of the
Pittsford Fire Department Explorers Post. One of the leaders of our Explorer
Post bears special mention. Paul Muir, although never having been a member of
Pittsford Fire Department, has devoted many years of leadership to the Pittsford
Explorer Post and for his service to our youth and his contribution to our
department, was voted an Honorary member of Pittsford Fire Department.
Over the years, many problems
have had to be overcome by the officers and members of the department in order
to provide service to the community. During WWI, the department offered the use
of our facilities to the Red Cross for their work. On April 1st, 1919, the
department meeting was adjourned so that members could join in the celebration
of returning soldiers. Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department marched in the
Fourth of July parade at East Rochester for the first time in 1919 and invited
all returning soldiers to join in the line of march. Fire department member
dues had been suspended during WWI and were reinstated on April 8th, 1921 at the
old rate of $1.00 per year.
The minutes of a department
meeting of December 1941 state that the department was under Army rules and that
Fire Wardens and Special Police had been appointed. During the Second World
War, gasoline, metal, rubber for tires, and many other commodities were in short
supply. Even though gasoline rationing was in effect, the firefighters still
had to be able to get to the emergency in order to be effective. As shown in
the meeting minutes dated October 6th, 1942, arrangements had to be made with
the Pittsford Village Mayor and the Fire Commission to obtain vouchers, good for
100 miles per month worth of gas, for the volunteers as well as the fire
trucks. The fire department was also involved in planning for Civil Defense
activities including blackouts and personal identification. Of course, one of
the problems war brings to a volunteer organization is that of manpower. In
late 1944, during World War II, The Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department listed
nine members as active Army, four members as active Navy and one member as
killed in action. Listed as killed in action on August 18, 1944, was Pittsford
Fire Department member, Marine Corporal Bruce A. Rylott.
One of the concerns of the
department in 1964 was the civil unrest being experienced by our country,
especially in the urban areas. Fire departments were included in the public
emergency plans for dealing with major civil unrest responses. There was also
the ongoing concern regarding public responses when the fire department was
involved in normal fire fighting activities. As has always been the case, the
department worked with the other emergency agencies towards mutually beneficial
plans to deal with any type of situation.
Fire fighting is an extremely
dangerous job. We in the Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department have been very
fortunate over the years due to the availability of first rate equipment, the
leadership of top rate officers, and the countless hours of training, that we
have had few serious injuries and only one death as a direct result of fire
fighting activities. After being taken home from a fire scene by other
firefighters because he was feeling ill, First Assistant Chief Harold F. Perkins
died of an apparent heart attack on December 27, 1955. He was 41 years old at
the time of his death and had been a member of the fire department since May 1,
1933.
Some of the more memorable
emergencies that the Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department has had to cope with
are the fire that gutted the Lincoln Avenue School (now the Spiegel Community
Center) on March 4th, 1916. On the 18th of October, 1930, Pittsford responded
mutual aid with Brighton to a fire at the Irondequoit Country Club. It was a
total loss. At 1:30 A.M.., two days before Christmas in 1936, Locust Hill Golf
Club suffered a total loss due to fire. The Pittsford Lumber Co. fire was at 3
A.M. on February 16th, 1941. The lumberyard, located in Schoen Place, was
completely destroyed in the blaze, and the estimated loss was $20,000. In 1962
there was a small airport and landing strip located on Marsh Road near the
current White Haven Cemetery. The department was called for an airplane crash
and upon arrival found that a small yellow plane had actually landed in a tree
and was still in the tree about twenty feet off the ground. A crane had to be
brought in to remove the airplane from the tree. One relatively recent fire
that many local residents can still recall is the fire that wreaked havoc on the
Pittsford Dairy Farms on North Main Street in the village in October, 1970. One
of our firefighters suffered a fractured neck from a fall during that fire. He
went on to a full recovery and eventually became Chief of the department, and
after retirement from the department, became a Fire District Commissioner.
Another memorable event was the Blizzard of 1966. Photographs show that the
fire department had members’ snowmobiles parked in the fire hall for emergency
responses.
Of course, more recently we
have experienced the ice storm of 1991 and the blizzard of 1993. During the
1991 ice storm, Pittsford Fire Department responded to some 750 calls in one
week. It was mentioned before that we have a strong mutual aid program in the
fire service and, during the ice storm of 1991, firefighters from Verona Fire
Department, near Rome, N.Y. showed up to help us with the disaster. The calls
were mostly for water problems, dangerous conditions and emergency generator
use, but we also had a few fires and medical emergencies during that week which
had to be handled. Two years later, a blizzard hit our area, which caused a
state of emergency to be declared and, once again, the department went into
action. More recently, in January of this year, we were able to return the
favor shown us during our ice storm in 1991. A group from Pittsford Fire
Department responded to St. Lawrence County to assist with relief efforts
required due to a major ice storm, which had caused disaster conditions in five
upstate New York counties.
It is easy to understand that
the fire department is today much more active responding to emergencies than it
has ever been. Not all of the data exists, and even that which does is not
always readily accessible, but a few data points will highlight why you are more
likely to see us responding lights and siren today than you might have in years
past. In 1929, Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department had 9 emergency calls. By
1937, the number of responses had grown to 37. During the 1950’s, the fire
department would answer around 70 calls for help each year. Around 1980, we
would respond to about 350 calls a year, and today we are on the road to service
the citizens of Pittsford and the surrounding communities around 750 times a
year. Although the number of serious fires have actually decreased over the
years, due in large part to our fire prevention activities, the number of other
types of calls have dramatically increased. As a result of population increases
and other reasons, a large part of our responses are for automatic alarms, water
problems, auto accidents, emergency medical, and other smaller scale
emergencies.
All of the members today know
the fire department band. Some of our members can recall when the band was
first formed. The Pittsford Fire Department Band has had a long history with
the department. The first mention of the band in any of the department records
occurred in the minutes of August 6, 1946. The department was in need of a
musical organization for marching, so a band was organized a couple of years
later under the direction of William Melville. Other than during the Korean
War, this band managed to maintain itself for many years until around 1971 when
August “Tito” D’Aurizio became involved in the management of the band. Since
then, Tito has lead the band to multiple State championships and the fire
department has continued to proudly parade behind one of the finest marching
bands in the state. Tito is one of our family and, as such, was voted an
Honorary Member of the Pittsford Fire Department.
The Fire Department has a
history of involvement in various sporting activities. As early as the 1920’s,
Pittsford had a team that competed in a bowling league. We still have an active
bowling team in the local fire department league, and they compete in the state
tournament annually. We have had water ball teams over the years. The Explorer
post continues to play water ball regularly and occasionally will challenge the
department to a game, often ‘showing us how it’s done’. Softball has also been
an activity supported by the department. In addition, we are proud to sponsor
the Babe Nash Trophy for sports excellence to a local fire department annually.
We also participate in a number of golf outings every year including the Richard
Spiegel Memorial Golf Tournament.
Every department has its
characters, and Pittsford is no exception. Certainly, one of the best
remembered of these through several decades was Fred (Fritz) Milliman, a bluff,
good natured man who seemed to invite practical jokes and appeared to relish
being the victim. Possibly the best known story about Fritz took place at a
monthly meeting in the 1930’s, when the upcoming banquet was the principal
subject of discussion. One of the wags made the suggestion that Fritz be
appointed Toastmaster of the affair. Fritz leapt to his feet. “If you think,”
he loudly proclaimed, “that I’m going to make toast for all that bunch, you’re
crazy!” The meeting broke into a gale of laughter.
He was a good, hard working
fireman and, despite the constant ribbing he took, the Department honored him by
burying him in a Chief’s uniform complete with gold badge, this normally being
allowed only for Past Chiefs.
Before WW II, few suburban
departments found it necessary to have an emergency truck. As previously
stated, the Zornow Funeral Home donated an ambulance type vehicle to the
department in the late 1940’s. Carl Zornow was a member at the time. It was
painted red and used to transport smaller pieces of equipment.
After the war, many
departments bought small, delivery type vehicles to serve in that capacity.
Pittsford was no exception and, at a relatively small cost, we obtained a
Chevrolet step van. The county’s first vehicle numbering scheme assigned the
letter M to such vehicles and ours became M-20. However, because these types of
vans were commonly used for the delivery of things like laundry services, the
truck was most often referred to as “The Diaper Wagon”.
Depending on who you talk to,
be they a member of the department or the exempts, the memories are different.
At various times in the fire hall, you can hear conversations that begin with,
“Do you remember when _____,” or “Back when my dad was a member _____,” or “When
I was a little boy, there was ______.” Each of us has our own special memories
and we all remember it in our own special way. We remember calls, places,
people, events, parades, carnivals, Fourth of July celebrations, and so on. We
recall heartbreak and tragedy as well as triumph and success. They are all part
of the volunteer fire service.
As the history of the
Pittsford Volunteer Fire Department has been researched and written, we have
tried to be as accurate and as clear as possible in the details. Much of the
information is taken from written records, but it would not be complete without
the contributions from the memories of those who have lived it, and the creative
writings, which have preceded this one. It would be naive of us to think that
this work is error free. If you see deviations from your recollection or from
any documentation you may have, please make that information available to us.
We continue to have a goal of historical accuracy and anyone who may repeat this
task in the future will surely thank you for the input.
As we look forward to the next
millennium and look back on a century of dedicated volunteer service, it’s
difficult not to think about what the future will bring to the volunteer fire
service. The demands on a person’s time are ever increasing and usually leave
little room for those activities that are not necessary. Most families now have
both spouses working outside of the home. Where does volunteering fit in?
If you elect to join the
family of volunteers, you quickly learn that it’s not a small commitment.
Responding to emergencies takes time, but there are lots of other demands as
well. There are monthly department meetings and committee work as well as OSHA,
PESH, NFPA, District Requirements, and Department Requirements which all consume
your time. And there are many other demands. If it seems like a bleak picture
has been painted, then you don’t understand the satisfaction that comes from
helping your neighbors. The rewards of seeing that little girl’s face whose dog
you’ve just rescued. The enjoyment of being cold, tired and hungry, but knowing
that someone’s life is better for it. These are the intangible benefits of
belonging to the extended family we call the volunteer fire service.
We have proudly served for the
last 100 years, and we stand ready to serve for the next 100 years!
By Barry G. Rickett
(Written Originally
For the Pittsford Fire Department 100th Anniversary Book)