Run Card for New Hope Woods Fire

Here’s the run card for New Hope Fire Department’s major woods fire last week, on Wednesday, May 29.

Some 50 acres were involved, and threatened some residential structures. The resources included 60 firefighters, 34+ pieces of apparatus, and a complete EMS box alarm with 16+ EMS personnel. 

The first units were dispatched at 5:02 p.m., with a fast-moving outside fire found in the area of an electric power transmission line easement, between Mitchell Mill and Old Milburnie roads. 

Command was located the Old Milburnie side, with New Hope Car 1 as Incident Commander, Rolesville Car 2 as Accountability, and Eastern Wake EMS District 6 as Medical Branch command.

Rolesville 203 was Operations Command, near the center of the fire. Wake Forest Car 6 and Battalion 3 were Aviation Branch, providing drone support starting about 60-70 minutes into the incident. 

Within 90 minutes into the incident, staging was moved to nearby New Hope Station 2. Medical monitoring and rehab was also established at that location. The New Hope FD Ladies Auxiliary also provided food and drinks to the weary firefighters. 

See photos from Legeros, of the support operations at the fire. He arrived about 45 minutes the incident started.

Run Card

New Hope FD
Engine 4 – Structural protection in Greenbrook subdivision
Engine 1 – Moved to Station 2, for staging/coverage
Tanker 9
Brush 7
ATV 31
Car 20 – Personnel transport
Car 1 – Incident commander 

Eastern Wake FD
Brush 6
Brush 7
ATV 

Hopkins FD
Tanker 227 – Water supply, Mitchel Mill side

Raleigh FD
Engine 28
Engine 22 – Staging/coverage
Mini 2
Mini 3

Rolesville FD
Engine 151
Pumper 152 – Water supply/Mitchell Mill
Tanker 157 – Water supply/Mitchell Mill
Brush 154
Brush 159
ATV 15
Car 2 – Accountability
203 – Operations Command

Wendell FD
Engine 115 – Staging/coverage
Tanker 117 – Water supply, Old Milburnie Road
Brush 115 – Staging/coverage

Wake Forest
Engine 1 – Staging, coverage
Tanker 2 – Water supply, Mitchell Mill Road
Brush 2
Battalion 3 – Aviation Branch (drone)
Car 6 – Aviation Branch (drone)

Zebulon FD
Tanker 98 – Water Supply, Mitchell Mill Road
Brush 99 – Staging

North Carolina Forestry
1190
1191
1195
11×95 (plow)

Wake County EMS + Eastern Wake EMS
EMS 10
EMS 16
EMS 38
EMS 61
EMS 66
EMS 67
EMS 68
Medic 92 – Rehab Group Supervisor, at NHFD Station 2
District 3 – Northside Medical Group Supervisor
District 9 – Medical Branch Director, with command
Chief 102 – Checked in with command
Logistics – Staging/rehab
Truck 1 – Staging/rehab

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New Pierce Pumper and Ladder for Zebulon

Here are factory photos of the Zebulon Fire Department’s new Pierce Pumper 91 and Ladder 9. The ladder truck arrived on Tuesday, May 28. It’s a 2019 Pierce Enforcer PUC Ascendant, 1500/500/107-foot. The engine is due soon. Download the uncropped versions on the company’s Flickr site, https://www.flickr.com/piercemfg.

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New Ladder for Northern Wake

Northern Wake Fire Department took delivery on Monday, May 21, of their new Ladder 35, a 2019 Pierce Impel PUC Ascendant, 1500/500/107-foot. 

Once in service, it’ll be housed at Station 3 on Norwood Road. It replaces a 1999 Pierce Dash rear-mounted aerial ladder, 1500/200/20/105-foot. 

It’s one of three incoming 107-foot Pierce quints in Wake County, with two more coming to Zebulon (any day now) and Garner (in production).

Photo by Lee Wilson. Visit his Flickr site for more pictures. 

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Black Auxiliary Firemen in Raleigh, 1942

Found this neat piece of Raleigh history this week, with more details on black auxiliary firemen during World War II. Previously on the Legeros Channel, just a bit of this was known:

“A company of black auxiliary firefighters was suggested, or asked about. Some black citizens served as auxiliary firemen, as cited in the September 3, 1942, minutes of the Raleigh Fire Firefighters Association, Local 548. The minutes reference a meeting of ‘all auxiliary firemen, both white and colored.'”

This News & Observer story below, from May 5, 1942, greatly expands on that information. Memo to self, incorporate into these pages and documents:

etc.

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Colored Firemen’s Association Organized in 1890

Found the correct date for the creation of the state colored firemen’s association, formally known as the North Carolina Volunteer Firemen’s Association.[1]

It’s been previously cited on my site, and in my writings, as “1888 or 1889.” That is incorrect. The year was 1890. The evidence is a pair of period newspaper articles:

  • Greensboro North State
    August 28, 1890
    “The colored firemen of the state will hold a tournament in this city, Sept. 10-11. The principal object is the formation of a state association of colored firemen…”
     
  • Greensboro North State
    September 18, 1890
    “Wednesday and Thursday of last week the colored fireman met in the city and perfected a State Association. Greensboro, Durham, Raleigh, Wilmington, Monroe and Charlotte were represented. The meeting was a pleasant one and the following officers were elected…”

This discovery aligns with a closer examination of other news stories of the period. There’s no prior mention of a formal organization or organization name prior to 1890. But after that time, the Association is mentioned.

Legeros has started updating and annotating his various web pages. As well as his pages of notes about his book projects, if the “1888 or 1889” date was committed to print in his Arcadia books or Raleigh FD history books.

Learn more at the Association, and read some vintage proceedings, at https://legeros.com/history/fa. And, of course, dive into the late Chuck Milligan’s research on the state’s black firefighters at https://legeros.com/history/ebf.

[1] Or even more accurately, they were incorporated in 1891 as the State Volunteer Fire Association of North Carolina. Read incorporation act at https://legeros.com/history/fa/documents.

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Vintage Civilian Defense Handbooks

https://www.legeros.com/history/library

For your reading pleasure. Vintage Civilian Defense Handbooks from 1942. Extracted from this hardcover compilation, via the Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/14021300R.nlm.nih.gov. Its missing a couple, notably Auxiliary Policemen. Will scan and add my copy of that one, at a later date.

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Air King Rescue Squad History Book – 1974

For your Friday reading, here’s a bit of Forsyth County rescue history. Found on eBay a year or two ago. Vintage, 24-page “yearbook” of the (all-black!) Air King Rescue Squad.

https://www.legeros.com/history/library/

They operated from 1962 to 1981, previously as Citizens Radio Club, and subsequently as Southeast Winston Rescue Squad. They ceased operation in 1993.

Some (short) history here, scroll to bottom: https://legeros.com/history/stories/ncsf1

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Fire Commission Meeting Cancelled – May 16

Be advised. There are no pending items for business for the May 16, 2019, regular meeting of the Wake County Commission. The meeting is thus cancelled. The next meeting is July 18, 2019, 7:00 p.m., at the Emergency Services Training Center on South Rogers Lane. That is all.

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Durham Fire Department History Book – 1995

For your Monday reading. Here’s another vintage North Carolina fire department history book that I’ve scanned. Slowly building a digital library for everyone.

More to come: CFD, GFD, WSFD, etc. They’re PDF copies and a bit reduced in size. Large but not voluminous.

https://legeros.com/history/library

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Meet the Vendors – 1987

During the combined meeting of the North Carolina Firemen’s Association and the North Carolina Association of Fire Chiefs, held at the Hilton Hotel in Greenville, NC, on August 6-8, 1987, the vendors were invited to introduce themselves at the conference participants. Here’s who they were and what they said, as recorded in the printed proceedings:

I am Candy Frye with Motorola. We have several Motorola representatives who are at lunch. We all have to eat sometime.

This is David Hyer with Coastal Electronics. We invite you to stop by our booth. We have a whole line of portable radios we would like to talk with each one of you, and I think you know that.

I am Ernie Gunnaman, Zimmerman Evans, Greensboro. We are delighted to be with you.

This is Mark Gunther and Jake Faircloth, and Bennie Mobley. Thanks for your support of a good conference.

I am Jack Slagle, the old man of Slagle Fire Equipment, 26 years, based in South Boston, Virginia, with a branch office at Columbia, South Carolina. I would like to thank you for your support. I think I am one of the older fire equipment representatives. I have Mike Turner here, from Western North Carolina. John Slagle, Central North Carolina, and I think the rest of them are at lunch. We appreciate your support. We represent FMC, trucks built of steel, aluminum stainless steel, and round pumps. We appreciate your buying the fire equipment, too, and we thank you in North Carolina for it.

I am David Lee, Lee Fire Equipment and Supplies from Kinston, representing Pierce Manufacturing. This is our salesman, Pete Dixon, or Milton Dixon, along with other names he has been called, too. We appreciate your support, we appreciate your business, we appreciate the opportunity of being here with the group. Thank you a lot.

Good afternoon, my name is Holden Barrett, Harshley Equipment, rescue tools and air bags. It is a privilege to be here, and if we can be of any help, let us know.

I am Clint Gilly, Ashley Emergency Services. We have the 3D fire equipment line. I have been a fire fighter for 25 years, and a Chief of the fire department for 20 years. I would like to have an opportunity to have your business.

I am Tracy Melton, with Harold Sales and Services out of Marietta, Georgia. Rick Tyler is outside. We represent [Seagrave] fire apparatus; we have our own line we just started, the American Fire Fighter Apparatus. Please stop by our booth.

I am Charles Green with Unicess Corporation, and we are here this weekend showing computer hardware and software designed to make the paper work tracking a little easier for the fire service. We are real glad to be a part of the North Carolina Firemen’s Association, and I appreciate the chance to be here.

I am Tommy Osborn with Action Fire and Safety. I appreciate the opportunity to be here. We have a booth here, we appreciate your going by, and if you are in Charlotte come by and see us. Thank you very much.

I am John Hefrin, Burgess Fire Equipment in Lenoir. We represent a full line of fire apparatus and equipment. We would invite you to look at a truck, the Steelcraft, here in Farmville. We also represent Ward 79 Limited and Better Systems Lifting Bags. We appreciate the opportunity to be here, and we thank you for your support.

I am Don Hamm, President of Rainbow Production out of Charlotte. We are a photography fundraising company. We are currently raising $3,000,000 a year for fire departments and rescue squads. We thank all of you.

I am Sam Campbell with Fire Equipment Company in Burlington, North Carolina. We specialize in fire hose and hardware. I count it a privilege to be with you.

I am Don Davis with Adams Industrial Sales. We have the neon line of gas monitoring equipment. I appreciate the opportunity to be here.

I am Susan Morrison with the National Fire Safety Council. My husband, Ralph, and I are State Safety Coordinators of North Carolina, and  we produce the complete Learn Not To Burn program for children in the lower elementary grades. This is our third conference, it is so nice to see familiar faces.

I am Ed [Finch], with the Emergency Apparatus Company out of Durham, North Carolina. We represent Emergency One Fire and Rescue throughout North Carolina, with the exception of the Coastal States and some of the southern counties. We have a complete display outside and we are showing some booth space outside with the Piedmont. This is my son Dan behind me, who is trying to figure out how to get out that door without me introducing him. It’s been a real pleasure being here. Please stop by. We are offering demonstration rides in our new Hutch, and we are also giving a way a jacket at the booth. So please stop by and register.

I am the volunteer firemen’s insurance representative, Bob McGee, and Angela Prescott, who kinds of keeps us together. We do appreciate the support. We currently insure 844 fire departments in the State of North Carolina, and you guys keep us hopping.

I am Clois Anders, and Robert Boyd from New Bern, from Dixie Fire and Safety. Bill and myself and Warren from American LaFrance is here with us, and we have our new Century 2000 outside. We would like for you all to look at it. I am real proud to be associated with American LaFrance, and we are back on the road again. It is real nice to be here, especially this close to home, and I hope all of you have a good conference. Come by to see us and we really appreciate it.

I am Jim Sprayger, and we are with Alexander Battery Company. We appreciate your support, and anything we can do for you let us know.  

I am Bill Field with American Honda Motor Company. I am in charge of our equipment sales for North Carolina. We also have a lawnmower plant in Alamance County. We make 500 lawnmowers a day, and we are in the process of making 1,000. That helps me with the generators. We appreciate your support and thank you for the interest.

I am Darryl Newton of Newton Gear and Safety of Swepsonville. As most of you all know, my partner was supposed to be here, but he went out to eat about three days ago and I have not seen him since.

I am Dick Mclntyre with the North Carolina Society of Fire Service. We are the guys that distribute training manuals. After you buy all this equipment, come by and see us, we will sell you the books.

I am Tommy White with North Carolina Fire Master. We are the other E-One dealer. We are the Coastal Counties of North Carolina, and we cover the State of South Carolina for emergencies. We have a booth in the other room, and salesmen in the parking lot, and we also have a couple of other trucks, and, like he said, the hutch truck, please come by and see it. We enjoyed being here.

I am Tommy McNuff out of Asheville. We represent LTI, and this is Chris McDonald, Bob Huff, our Regional Manager of LTI is with us, and Steve Brown with Triad. We represent Drum and Emergency Products, and LTI Snorkel.

I am Jim Edwards, C. W. Williams and Company. We are not giving away anything. This is A. T. Hall, Bernard Brown, we are delighted to be here. Williams is having a birthday, we are celebrating our 31st year providing fire equipment to the Fire Service in North Carolina and South Carolina.

I am Jim Kemtrock from Wake County. Next year we start our two hundredth year making fire hoses. We employ about 200 people in Wake County, and we appreciate any business you can give us. Thank you.

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