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Today we take it for granted that
when there's a fire, the fire department will come. It's hard to
imagine a time when Smithfield didn't have a fire department, and
home fire protection consisted of a leather bucket kept by the door.
But such a time did exist - for almost 140 years! What follows is
the story of how Smithfield obtained its first fire engine.
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Photo from Smithfield
Historical Society |
On the night of June 20, 1870, a
terrific storm swept across the area. Lightning flashed and thunder
boomed as rain pelted the ground. About eleven o'clock, as the
inhabitants of Greenville waited out the storm secure in their
homes, the cry of fire went out through the village. Lightning had
struck Messrs Whipple & Co.'s wheelwright shop located in the heart
of Greenville.
Volunteers rushed to the scene with
their buckets but it was no use. The fire had gotten a good head
start and the business was soon engulfed in flames. The fire then
spread to the building next door which contained a business operated
by William Tobey, and it soon became apparent that this building
would be lost too.
When it was over, both buildings
had burned to the ground. The wheelwright shop, although a total
loss amounting to $8.500, was partially insured. Mr. Tobey's
business was not insured, and his losses were estimated to be
$5.000. But fortunately most of his goods were saved, although
somewhat damaged, having been carried from the building by the
volunteers before the flames could reach them.
One man was seriously injured at
the fire when he fell from a ladder.
Shortly afterward, it became
apparent to the citizens of Greenville that something more in the
way of fire protection was needed to prevent such an occurrence from
happening again. Within a month, the town had purchased a hand-pump
fire engine with 500 feet of hose at a cost of $1000.
Primitive by today's standards, and
obsolete even for 1870, but a great improvement over bucket
brigades, the "new" fire engine needed a team of strong and hearty
men to operate it. The engine had two long poles or handles running
along each side. At a fire, a suction hose would be dropped into a
water source such as a pond or cistern. Then, several men would line
up on each side of the engine and begin "pumping" by uniformly
moving the poles up and down. The up stroke would draw water up into
the tub portion of the engine and the down stroke would shoot the
water into another hose which would be operated by other firemen
aiming it at the fire. This required teamwork as well as stamina,
for it didn't take long for fatigue to set in and those on the
engine would need relief.
The new fire company was dubbed
"The Rescue", and a suitable, centralized location was found to
house the apparatus. Andrew B. Whipple was appointed the foreman,
and Martin Mann and Ethan C. Thornton were appointed first and
second class foremen. Today these ranks are known as chief, and
deputy chief.
In a news release published in the
Woonsocket Patriot July 29, 1870, on page 2, it was stated, "The
community may feel assured of a security from danger by fire which
they have never before enjoyed."
By August, Messrs Whipple was in
the process of rebuilding his business but on a much larger scale.
When completed, the new building measured 40 by 40 feet, two stories
high, with a 24 by 80 foot one story ell attached. This "new"
building is no longer standing.
The Rescue Fire Company later
became the Greenville Fire Company, which later became the
Smithfield Fire Department.

Greenville Fire
Company - c.1936
Photo contributed by Kenneth A. Brown, Sr.
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