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Governor
Peter
Stuyvesant |
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When Peter
Stuyvesant, the governor of New
Amsterdam, appointed four fire
wardens in 1648, the history of
organized firefighting in America
began. In a stroke of political
savvy, Stuyvesant named two Dutchmen
and two Englishmen to the posts.
These original fire wardens - Martin
Krieger, Adrian Geyser, Thomas Hall
and George Woolsey - were able and
honest citizens, and politically
correct public servants of their
time.
Krieger owned
and operated a tavern across from
Bowling Green. Later, when the city
was incorporated, Krieger became a
member of the governor's Executive
Council and held other important
posts until the British took
control. Geyser worked for the Dutch
West India Company, founder of New
Amsterdam. He later served as a
member of the Executive Council.
Hall was an Englishman who had been
taken prisoner by the Dutch and
released on parole. He developed
strong ties to Dutch power brokers
and his popularity grew. Hall owned
a large farm near what is now the
corner of Beekman and Spruce
streets, and held a number of civic
offices. Woolsey, the second English
fire warden, was the agent of a
leading Dutch trader.
The wardens
were empowered to visit every house
between the Fort (the Battery) and
the Fresh Water (Manhattan's largest
natural spring-fed freshwater pond,
also called the Collect). The fire
wardens were to inspect all chimneys
and see that they were swept clean.
They were also to insure that no
wooden chimneys were built between
the Fort and the Fresh Water. If
they found a chimney dirty or
clogged, they could levy a fine of
three gilders. The fines were to be
used to purchase and maintain fire
ladders, hooks and buckets. The
wardens could also fine up to 25
gilders if a house caught fire due
to negligence or from the
homeowner's own fire in the
fireplace.
In 1657, New
Amsterdam incorporated, streets were
given names, the 1648 rules were
again ordered to be followed and
four new wardens were appointed.
They had the same mission as the
first group, fire prevention.
The Dutch
Burghers (the colony's governing
body) did not stop there. After a
fire burned down a small log house,
they designated a group of eight men
to walk the newly paved streets
after dark. These men watched for
fires and stopped anyone who looked
suspicious. They carried large
wooden rattles to sound an alarm if
a fire was seen. Officially they
were known as the "Rattle Watch."
The citizens, however, had a
less-flattering nickname for the
men. They called them "The
Prowlers."
Later in 1657,
the Burghers realized the city
needed leather fire buckets (there
were none up to this point), so a
tax was collected to procure them.
But true to the speed of government,
the buckets were not received until
January 1659.
A short time
later, "The Prowlers" were increased
in number to 50, with two men being
appointed in each ward. The city
fathers provided 250 buckets, hooks
and small ladders to this "fire
company." The rattles gave way to
bells and by 1697 four men known as
the "Night Watch" were walking the
streets with their bells at the
ready. They rang their bells and
announced the time and weather every
hour. The addition of City Hall at
the head of Broad Street in 1700
gave the city a new focal point.
In 1731, the
ship Beaver arrived from England
carrying two Newsham hand fire
engines. This foundation led to the
formation of what would become the
New York City Fire Department. For
generations America's firefighters -
first volunteer, then paid - would
risk their lives to protect the city
and its citizens from the danger
they knew all too well...FIRE!
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