My first experience with Fire Engines and Firefighters came when I was three years old, when in the middle of the night there was a fire in the small apartment building across Jarvis Street in the Rogers Park section of Chicago..
I could not believe what I was seeing. Who were these creatures, who looked like aliens from Outer Space, and their strange rigs in the street, the smoke, the NOISE, the chaos and the excitement when they came into our building to make sure WE were all all right...My older brother, who knew more, could have told me, but he was too busy jumping up and down in his pajamas and out of his mind with excitement about it all..My parents shrugged it off the next day. They had seen a lot of fires...and known a lot of firefighters. They didn't think too much about it.--That is part of the problem of our Society, we take Firefighters so much for GRANTED, and then it is an incredible struggle to get something like the Zadroga Bill passed and then extended.But I still think of that and how later in life I was to have so many damn run ins with fires and firefighters as well as seeing them set off the Fireworks every year at Fourth of July celebrations. And how many times I kept wondering if I had made a terrible mistake letting other people and circumstances push me out of a path that would lead to fighting fires...
Oh, I am not a pyromaniac although I am excited and fascinated by fire. You don't have to grow up in a firefighting family to maybe have some gene or something that makes you identify with firefighters all the time...but I am SO aware of the risks now that I am older I also can see that maybe so what we all have to do is do what we can in Life as it is dealt to us and that's that.
Our cub scout group ( my mom was den mother) visited the local firehouse in the town of Wilmette when I was older. All I wanted to do was to get behind the wheel of a fire truck..How can kids grow up without fire trucks? I noticed the Hess Truck this last Christmas was a fire truck...My heart still races and I light up every time a fire engine goes by on the street even if the horn and siren and lights are not there.
If you have ever been around a fire when it starts, you know fast they can spread and how that smoke ( light at first such as above) quickly becomes--with today's synthetic materials-- this choking black horror--
Perfect setting for an Upper West Side Fire-- Trash Build Up such as after the Last Blizzard...
My galaxy of childhood heroes of course included other figures, cowboys and later astronauts and especially Commando fighters such as I saw in war movies..My sister's best friend in high school was the daughter of a fireman.He was extremely pleasant and worked in Cos Cob, CT,-- my family was living in Greenwich then while I lived and studied at NYU. We talked a little about his work but he didn't seem all that eager to talk about it ( a lot of heroes aren't).Some of my relatives are firemen too, especally by marriage ( my cousin's wife's brothers were Chicago firemen and also Loyal Sons of Mayo....amazing how many firefighters in America are Irish-American, and also Italian-American,...now, of course, there is a push for more diversity which has brought all kinds of disputes and lawsuits and a lot of raised hackles...I am sure it will all be ironed out in the long run, as will the issue of women in the Fire Service ( I taped a fascinating interview at the Fire Museum with Harriet Duren, the first female member of the FDNY, which, however, she has asked not be posted on the internet ( damn! It is SO good). Likewise the interviews with other NYC Fire Museum docents John Kenny and Gary Howard ( both John and Gary are veterans of The War Years and wow do they have tales to tell. Gary is also a member of the NYC Fire Bell Club and has a son who is now a FDNY firefighter in Manhattan.-- one last remark-- I have avoided the whole topic of September 11 here ( it is just too much to get into)But am going to the Fire Museum on Feb 20 to see their presentation of the Anne Nelson play "The Guys," which deals with the aftermath of Sept 11 and particularly one FDNY Fire Captain who has to give eulohgies to men who worked under him who died at the World Trade Center).As retirement came upon me and I was living in Kips Bay/Murray Hill in New York, I discovered how friendly the local firemen were at Eng 16 L 7 and wrote about them for my blog ( reprinted here).Since then I have visited and taped the NYC Fire Museum of which I am now a member and find that the local firehouse up here on West 100th Street near where I live is also a great place to visit. ( They are an extremely busy company, and I hear them late at night all the time, as well as see them pulling in or out so many times when I pass their Firehouse next to the 24 th Precinct Police Station on West 100 Street.I am past the age when i want to go chasing fires like classic Fire Buffs do, but if you read this blog you know how much I like to know what is going on in the Fire World, and not just in the United States either.Following article covers more on exactly what a classic Fire Buff is..Do you know what a "Fire Buff" is?
- 06-10-2001, 09:28 PM#2ENG 6511Firehouse.com Guest
- 06-10-2001, 09:56 PM#3daysleeper47Firehouse.com Guest
- 06-19-2001, 04:45 PM#4bkeFirehouse.com Guest
- 06-19-2001, 04:48 PM#5bkeFirehouse.com Guest
- 06-20-2001, 10:00 AM#6daysleeper47Firehouse.com Guest
- 06-20-2001, 10:53 AM#7RookieFireFighterFirehouse.com Guest
Putting my experiences of Life In NYC in a more personal perspective, and checking in with international/national, tech and some other news
Translation from English
Sunday, January 31, 2016
More on Fire Buffing and My Career as a Fire Buff
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered