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FDNY: "Fire in the City" 1951.

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2015
  • Oldie from 1951 featuring E58/L26 detailing fire in NYC. Thanks to FDNY Chief JK (68jk09) for sending along this classic video!

Комментарии • 46

  • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
    @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking Месяц назад

    This video cries out for restoration, and upscale. TY for the upload!

  • @tomh3652
    @tomh3652 7 лет назад +12

    Now they were real firefighters no frills like power steering, air conditioned rigs. They had open cab rigs and limited gear compared to today. Great video.

  • @thomass.8127
    @thomass.8127 4 года назад +4

    I was on the job when the bells were still being used and the alarm assignment cards. I remember my DAD standing on the running board of a truck going down Metropolitan Ave.

    • @bohemoth1
      @bohemoth1 4 года назад

      Ladder Company 128?

    • @azul8811
      @azul8811 Год назад

      @@bohemoth1 L-140 perhaps?

  • @davidspiro1325
    @davidspiro1325 6 лет назад +9

    The dangers never change. RIP FF Michael Davidson, killed two days ago while fighting a fire on a movie set in Harlem.

  • @MrJim723
    @MrJim723 6 лет назад +3

    My brother was a Minneapolis Fireman who was born and raised in NY. He would have enjoyed this video.

  • @Cashcrop54
    @Cashcrop54 6 лет назад +9

    When you get right down to it firefighting hasn't changed all that much. Alarm, Respond, Work Hard, Take up, return & wait for the next one. More techno today but the men haven't changed either. Brave, strong and dedicated!

  • @sully801
    @sully801 6 лет назад +5

    I love the old exhaust whistles.

  • @Sereno44
    @Sereno44 4 года назад +3

    Hard times in New York with aging buildings and population growing up (the famous baby boom after WWII) ... and those Firemen were heroes, using rubber boots, leader helmets, and going hanging on the Engine or Ladder... no air protection ...

  • @michaelswinehart2788
    @michaelswinehart2788 3 года назад +2

    I remember wearing the rubber, felt lined coats when i first started up. Just like the brothers are wearing in this video. Showin' my age !!!

  • @firefighterfan2010
    @firefighterfan2010 Год назад +2

    The real firefighters are good today!🚒👨‍🚒

  • @vartilaknovehestum4947
    @vartilaknovehestum4947 7 лет назад +2

    That ladder company reminds me of Ladder Company 128 hand cranking the ladder with Engine Company 259 during the 60s when I was an Auxiliary Fire Captain. Then I got drafted and went into the Navy.

  • @THEMAJESTIRIUM1
    @THEMAJESTIRIUM1 8 лет назад +9

    VERY NICE VINTAGE VIDEO! ;o)

    • @jimmypearce9323
      @jimmypearce9323 8 лет назад +3

      I must agree....since that video and I are the same vintage!!
      I was kicking the slats in my cradle when that was filmed...

    • @THEMAJESTIRIUM1
      @THEMAJESTIRIUM1 8 лет назад

      HEHEHE! ;o)

    • @JB91710
      @JB91710 7 лет назад

      Jimmy Me too! While my father and grandfather were doing that in Stamford, Ct.

    • @bohemoth1
      @bohemoth1 5 лет назад +1

      @@jimmypearce9323
      I was still in my moms' womb.

  • @thereal420zzz
    @thereal420zzz 8 лет назад +5

    Great video

  • @johnhintz4760
    @johnhintz4760 8 лет назад +3

    So the F.D.N.Y. Used Exhaust Whistles till at Least till the early 60's.This is Good Footage!..🚒

    • @bxbuff
      @bxbuff 8 лет назад +1

      +John Hintz
      No...the exhaust whistles were long gone by then. But the media used them (from the old days) to give some "noise" to their otherwise silent news films.

    • @bxbuff
      @bxbuff 6 лет назад +1

      The exhaust whistles were done away with in the late 40s, after WWII, which is why they had them in the first place. They couldn't have sirens during the War, because they didn't want them to be confused with air raid sirens. The whistles did a lot of damage to the motors on the rig, since they prevented exhausted from exiting the engine itself. The whistles in this video were added on by the production company who made the video, which was a common practice in TV news in those days.

  • @michaelswinehart2788
    @michaelswinehart2788 4 года назад +1

    Put enough water in it, until the piano floats out the front door !!!!!!! An old saying my dad would say sometimes fightin fires.

  • @Vladimir-Putin-
    @Vladimir-Putin- 2 года назад +1

    10:00 they still teach us to raise 2 or 3 fly ladders like that at the academy

  • @tyronesandoval2348
    @tyronesandoval2348 4 года назад +1

    God bless FDNY

  • @bohemoth1
    @bohemoth1 5 лет назад +9

    September 11, 1951
    September 11, 2001
    Both in Manhattan New York City?

  • @spenner3529
    @spenner3529 3 года назад +1

    the Fire Factory in action

  • @joespag26
    @joespag26 2 года назад +1

    They Just Don’t Move That Fast Anymore !!

  • @Justanunderaveragekyle
    @Justanunderaveragekyle 6 лет назад +1

    Does anybody know what company house that is they show the engine and truck responding out of? 7:00

    • @bxbuff
      @bxbuff 6 лет назад +2

      E.58, L. 26, their old house, where the projects are today

    • @MichaelSheehy75
      @MichaelSheehy75 6 лет назад +1

      Yes E58, L26, old quarters. Company is known as the “Fire Factory”. Also, Box 1359 is ST NICHOLAS AVE at W 113 ST.

  • @skipd9164
    @skipd9164 5 лет назад +1

    I have great respect for men and women firefighters. But in those days u needed big b#lls. Not only to fight fires but to drive to them. Why were the apparatuse not covered cabs like regular trucks . Can anyone tell me

    • @JS-kz9xl
      @JS-kz9xl 3 года назад +1

      Traditionally there were NO cabs at all ( horse Drawn early Motorized era) having NO roof To Obscure your view ALLOWED the members To SEE where the fire/SMOKE and People Hanging out windows were, Inside A CAB that's Impossible, also Before You arrive at the scene One can often smell WHAT was burning What type of Fire for example Food on the stove Vs a Room and contents or Multiple Apartments or Gasoline (accelerant) or Natural Gas leaking and so sometimes that indication as you pull up... rather then waste Time walking around Looking for some indication Especially with Buildings over 2 storys

    • @slackjawedyokel1
      @slackjawedyokel1 2 года назад +2

      also to look for overhead obstructions -and many times the captain would stand to check intersections and also help see where to spot the apparatus and a little quicker sizeup of the whole scene -

    • @skipd9164
      @skipd9164 2 года назад +1

      @@slackjawedyokel1 also firefighters road on the back . They just hung on

    • @blainenodes8182
      @blainenodes8182 6 месяцев назад +2

      born1947 St Paul... every rig/ ladder/ squad was open cabs in MN 🥶❄️🌬️⚡... 1st enclosed cab came in 1963😮

  • @MusicLoverPearson
    @MusicLoverPearson 3 года назад +1

    Wow they weren't wearing oxygen masks to fight the fire that's when they were called Smoke Eaters?

    • @TorontoJediMaster
      @TorontoJediMaster 3 года назад +4

      SCBA's weren't common until at least a decade later. Even then, they weren't as commonly used like they would be today. Dennis Smith's famous memoir, "Report from Engine Co. 82", about firefighting in The Bronx of the early to mid 1970's, recounts rushing in with a hose, WITHOUT wearing a mask in order to get water on the fire quickly. They were then relieved by firefighters who had masks.