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Fireboat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Firefighting vessel
This article is about the firefighting vessel. For a ship deliberately set on fire, seeFire ship.
London Fire Brigade fireboat,River Thames, London
Toronto FireboatWL Mackenzie
Onboard view of FireboatJohn J. Harvey inTauba Auerbachdazzle camouflage performing a water pumping demonstration inOyster Bay, New York with artificialrainbow visible
Italian fireboat CLASS M
A fireboat of the fire department ofFrankfurt, Germany
HKFS fireboatExcellence
San Francisco fireboatPhoenix
Deluge, retired fire fighting tug
Tokyo Fire Department'sAriake fireboat
TheEdward M. Cotter of Buffalo, New York, considered the world's oldest active fireboat

Afireboat orfire-float is a specialized watercraft with pumps and nozzles designed for fighting shoreline and shipboard fires. The first fireboats, dating to the late 18th century, weretugboats, retrofitted with firefighting equipment.[1]Older designs derived from tugboats and modern fireboats more closely resembling seafaring ships can both be found in service today. Some departments would give their multi-purpose craft the title of "fireboat" also.

They are frequently used forfighting fires ondocks and shore sidewarehouses as they can directly attack fires in the supporting underpinnings of these structures. They also have an effectively unlimited supply of water available, pumping directly from below the hull. Fireboats can be used to assist shore-based firefighters when other water is in low supply or is unavailable, for example, due to earthquake breakage of water mains, as happened in San Francisco due to the1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.

Some modern fireboats are capable of pumping tens of thousands of gallons of water per minute. An example is Fire Boat #2 of theLos Angeles Fire Department, theWarner Lawrence, with the capability to pump up to 38,000 US gallons per minute (2.4 m3/s; 32,000 imp gal/min) and up to 400 feet (122 m) in the air.

Fireboats are most usually seen by the public when welcoming a fleet or historical ships with a display of their water moving capabilities, throwing large arcs of water in every direction.

Occasionally fireboats are used to carry firefighters,Emergency Medical Technicians, and a physician with their equipment to islands and other boats. Some may be used asicebreakers, like theChicago Fire Department'sVictor L. Schlaeger which can break 8 to 12 inch ice.[2]They may also carry divers or surface water rescue workers. Passengers from ships in danger can be also transferred to various kind of rescue boats. Rescue boats may be used also for oil and chemical destruction on rivers, lakes and seas. For example, the Helsinki Rescue Department inHelsinki, Finland has different types of boats for various kind of firefighting, rescue, and oil destruction tasks.[3]

Alsohydrocopters,rigid-hulled inflatable boats,fanboats and evenhovercraft andhelicopters are used in fire, rescue and medical emergency situations.

Cities with fireboats are usually located on a large body of water with port facilities. Smaller fire departments lacking resources will use arigid-hulled inflatable boat or borrow boats from local rescue agencies (EMS, Coast Guard, military).

History

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The first recorded[citation needed] fire-float was built in 1765 for the Sun Fire Insurance Company in London. This was amanual pump in a small boat, rowed by its crew to the scene of the fire. A similar craft was built inBristol by James Hillhouse for the Imperial Fire Insurance Office in the 1780s. All fire fighting in Bristol was carried out either by private insurance companies or the Docks Company until the formation of the Bristol Fire Brigade as a branch of the police in 1876. In New York City, a small boat with a hand-pump was used to fight marine fires as early as 1809.[4] By the middle of the nineteenth century, self-propelled steam-fire-floats were beginning to be introduced. The FDNY leased thesalvage tug John Fuller as the city's first powered fireboat in 1866.[4] Prior to the "John Fuller", as early as the late 1700s, the FDNY used hand-pumpers mounted to barges and large rowboats. The first purpose built steam driven boats were introduced byBoston Fire Department (William F. Flanders) and FDNY (William F. Havenmeyer) in 1873 and 1875 respectively. The first European fireboat to appear in Bristol was theFire Queen, built byShand Mason & Co., London, in 1884 for service in the city docks. The 53 ft. (16.61 m.) long craft was equipped with a three-cylindersteam pump supplying two large hose reels; one of these was replaced with a monitor, orwater cannon, in 1900.Fire Queen served until 1922.

List of famous fireboats

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This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(April 2015)

Departments with fireboats

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This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.(November 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(April 2015)
DepartmentTotal # of boatsDetails
Abingdon (MD) Fire Company1
Albany (NY) Fire Department1
Alexandria (VA) Fire Department1
Annapolis (MD) Fire Department1
Anne Arundel County (MD) Fire Department3
Atlantic City (NJ) Fire Department2
Audubon (NJ) Fire Department1
Baltimore City Fire Department3
Bayonne (NJ) Fire Department2
Bellingham (WA) Fire Department1
Bonita Springs (FL) Fire Department1
Boston Fire Department2
Bowers (DE) Fire Company1
Bowleys Quarters (MD) Volunteer Fire Department4
Brevard County (FL) Fire Department1
Bridgeport (CT) Fire Department1
Broward County (FL) Sheriff's Office Fire Rescue1
Buffalo Fire Department1
Camden (NJ) Fire Department1
Cape Coral (FL) Fire Department3
Carteret (NJ) Fire Department1
Charlotte Fire Department1
Charlotte County (FL) Fire Department3
Chicago Fire Department2
Cincinnati Fire Department3
Clearwater (FL) Fire and Rescue Department1
Cleveland Fire Department1
Contra Costa County(CA) Fire Protection District1
Cranston (RI) Fire Department1
Daytona Beach (FL) Fire Department1
Detroit Fire Department2
Duluth (MN) Fire Department1
Dunedin (FL) Fire Rescue1
East Providence (RI) Fire Department1
Elizabeth (NJ) Fire Department1
Edgewater (NJ) Fire Department1
Estero (FL) Fire Department1
Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department21 frontline, 1 reserve
Fairfield (CT) Fire Department\1
Fall River (MA) Fire Department1
Fort Lauderdale (FL) Fire Rescue3
Fort Myers (FL) Fire Department1
Greater Naples (FL) Fire Department2
General Fire Brigade of Guangdong1
Georgina Fire and Rescue1uses aYork Regional Police patrol boat equipped with water nozzle
Haletown (TN) Fire Department1Refurbrished US Army Corps of Engineers Survey Boat, Cruiser 1 "The Blansett"
Harrisburg (PA) Bureau Of Fire1
Hartford (CT) Fire Department1
Hendersonville (TN) Fire Department1
Hillsborough County (FL) Fire Department2
Hoboken (NJ) Fire Department1
Hong Kong Fire Services/Hong Kong International Airport128, and 4 support vessels (command, 2 diving units, speedboat)
Honolulu Fire Department1
Iona-McGregor (FL) Fire Department1
Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department3
Jersey City (NJ) Fire Department2
Kearny (NJ) Fire Department1
Key West (FL) Fire Department1
Lake Ozark (MO) Fire Protection District2
Linden (NJ) Fire Department1
London Fire Brigade2
Longboat Key (FL) Fire Department1
Los Angeles Fire Department5
Macau International Airport Fire Services1
Malaysian Fire and Rescue Department1
Marbury (MD) Fire Department1
Marco Island (FL) Fire Department1
Marseille Naval Fire Battalion2
Massachusetts Port Authority3[11] with third delivered September 2011.[12][13][14]
Matlacha (FL) Fire Rescue1
Miami (FL) Fire Department4
Miami Beach (FL) Fire Rescue1
Miami-Dade Fire Rescue DepartmentArchived 2011-08-12 at theWayback Machine2
Mid-County (MO) Fire Protection District2
Milwaukee (WI) Fire Department1
Nagasaki (Japan) Fire Department1
Narragansett (RI) Fire Department1
Nashville (TN) Fire Department1
Newark (NJ) Fire Department2
New Haven (CT) Fire Department1
New Orleans (LA) Fire Department1
New York City Fire Department (FDNY)103, plus two reserve, two spare, as well as three smaller boats activated during the summer months
Newport News (VA) Fire Department1
Niceville (FL) Fire Department1
Norfolk (VA) Fire Department1
North Charleston (SC) Fire Department1
North Collier County (FL) Fire Department1
North Hudson (NJ) Regional Fire & Rescue2
North Point Edgemere (MD) Vol. Fire Department1
Norwalk (CT) Fire Department1
Osage Beach (MO) Fire Protection District1
Palm Beach County (FL) Fire Rescue1
Palm Harbor (FL) Fire Department1
Panama City (FL) Fire Department1
Pensacola (FL) Fire Department1
Perth Amboy (NJ) Fire Department1
Philadelphia Fire Department2
Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire1
Port Alberni Fire Department (BC)1
Port Canaveral (FL) Fire Department1
Port of Houston Authority Marine Fire Department3
Portland (ME) Fire Department1[15][16]
Portland (OR) Fire & Rescue2
Portsmouth (VA) Fire Department1
Poulsbo Fire Department (WA)/ Kitsap County Fire District #181
Prince George's County (MD) Fire/EMS Department1
Prince George's County (MD) Volunteer Fire Department2
Providence (RI) Fire Department1
Red Bank (NJ) Fire Department1
Rochester (NY) Fire Department1
San Bernardino County (CA) Fire Department4
San Francisco Fire Department3
Safety Harbor (FL) Fire Department1
San Diego Fire Rescue Department6
Sandusky (OH)Fire Department1
Sanford (FL) Fire Department1
Sanibel Island (FL) Fire Department1
São Paulo (Brazil) Firefighting Corp.2
Scappoose (OR) Fire District1
Sea Isle City (NJ) Fire Department1
Seattle Fire Department31 reserve
Secaucus (NJ) Fire Department1
Seward (AK) Fire Department1
Seoul Metropolitan Fire and Disaster Management Department01 on order[17]
Singapore Changi Airport Airport Emergency Services Sea22 hovercraft used for marine rescue and firefighting
St. Louis Fire Department4
South Australian Metropolitan Fire Service1
Stamford (CT) Fire Department1
Susquehanna Hose Company of Havre de Grace (MD)1
Syracuse (NY) Fire Department1
Tacoma (WA) Fire Department2
Tampa (FL) Fire/Rescue Department4
Tarrytown (NY) Fire Department1
Toronto Fire Services32nd boat is a light utility boat and third built fitted to replace current utility boat. SeeFireboats of Toronto.
Tinicum (PA) Fire Department1
Tokyo Fire Department10[18]
Trenton (NJ) Fire Department1
Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services5
Virginia Beach Fire Department1
Warwick (RI) Fire Department1
Washington (D.C.) Fire Department3
Westville (NJ) Fire Department1
Wilmington (DE) Fire Department1
Water Witch (MD) Fire Company1
Wilmington (NC) Fire Department1
Woodbridge (NJ) Fire Department1
Yonkers (NY) Fire Department1

Government and military with fireboats

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Japan Coast Guard patrol boat with water cannons discharging

See also

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References

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  1. ^James Delgado (1988)."Duwamish Fireboat: National Historic Landmark Study".National Park Service.Archived from the original on 2009-05-05.
  2. ^"The Schlaeger".Chicago Fire Department. 2008. Archived fromthe original on 2021-04-27. Retrieved2009-11-24.
  3. ^"Pelastuslaitos".Helsingin kaupunki.
  4. ^abc"Fireboats: Then and Now"(PDF).fireboat.org. 2003. Retrieved2023-06-27.
  5. ^"Boatyard Ruins – Photographs by Shaun O'Boyle". Oboylephoto.com. Archived fromthe original on 2012-02-11. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  6. ^"San Francisco Fire Department Museum ~ Fireboats ~ Governor Irwin". Guardiansofthecity.org. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  7. ^"San Francisco Fire Department 1906 Earthquake and Fire Operations". Sfmuseum.org. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  8. ^":::: Bay Crossings ::::". Archived fromthe original on 2006-08-25.
  9. ^ab"Navy Firefighting Operations". Sfmuseum.org. 1906-04-30. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  10. ^"USFS Chicago 1906 Fire Operations". Sfmuseum.org. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  11. ^"Massport Boston Boat". Capecodfd.com. 2011-11-23. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  12. ^CA."Meteghan company building fireboat – Fisheries – The Vanguard". Thevanguard.ca. Archived fromthe original on 2012-03-25. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  13. ^"5.3 Million Dollar Massport Airport Fireboat Ready to Launch – CNN iReport". Ireport.cnn.com. 2011-09-06. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  14. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2012-04-02. Retrieved2011-09-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^"A.F.Theriault". A.F.Theriault. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  16. ^CA."Shipyard builds fireboat for Portland – Manufacturing". Nova News Now. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  17. ^"Firefighters to get uncapsizable boat" (in Korean). Koreaherald.com. 2011-01-05. Retrieved2012-03-08.
  18. ^|消防装備

External links

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