Fire Department Central Files
Scope and Contents note
Central file maintained by Fire Department administration. Combined with other record series from the department, the records present a very complete history of the Department, including changing technology and its local and national context. The change from horse-driven wagons to motorized vehicles is documented as well as the Departments’ participation in the Puget Sound Urban Search and Rescue group which traveled throughout the country in the 1990s to assist with various disasters. The Fire Department and its relationship to city government is reflected in the Administrative subseries, with annexations or with burn permits, and the Interdepartmental Subseries, where there is correspondence with most departments in the city, including the Mayor and the Office of Women’s Rights. Other municipal activities within the city can be researched in part by using records on building inspections, a charity ball for relief of the unemployed (1932), and fire investigations. Involvement at the federal level is documented through records relating to both World War I and II, the Urban Search and Rescue Team, civil defense activities, (including a black out exercise in 1942), the Federal Communications Commission and the National Fire Control and Prevention Administration, as well as professional activities. Internal operations are reflected in extensive files regarding equipment and apparatus, work day issues, safety, the Marine Division, and civil Service efficiency ratings. Fire prevention activities were an important aspect of the Fire Department. Captain Stephen Sanislo’s fire prevention activities are well documented from 1919 to 1949. Fire alarm systems, Fire Prevention Week and inspections are all included. Three photographs have been digitized and are available online.
Dates
- Creation: 1890-2003
Creator
- Seattle (Wash.). Fire Dept. (Organization)
Conditions Governing Access note
Records are open to the public.
Historical Note
The creation of the Seattle Fire Department (SFD) can be traced back to July 6th, 1876, when the all-volunteer Seattle Engine Company No.1 was organized by a meeting of citizens convinced of their growing town's need for a dedicated fire-suppression capability. The various fire companies that appeared in proceeding years were similarly equipped and administered on a private basis until 1883, when the City Charter was amended to create and fund equipment, but not staff, for a centralized municipal fire department. The first fire chief of this new volunteer organization, Gardner Kellogg, would also become the first chief of the professionalized department in 1889, as well as the first Fire Marshall in 1901. The volunteer-based system persisted into the late 1880s, when the Great Seattle Fire of 1889 destroyed over 30 city blocks and resulted in approximately $12-16 million in damages. Under pressure from the insurance industry and its citizens, the city council acknowledged the inadequacy of a part-time force to meet the city's expanding need for fire protection. The council passed Ordinance No. 1212 in 1889, which reformed Seattle's seven volunteer companies into a paid, professional unit of 32 men organized into five district fire stations.
The decades following the birth of the professional SFD brought rapid increase in size and resources commensurate with Seattle's explosive growth rate; from an 1890 population of 42,000, the city's inhabitants numbered over 237,000 by 1910. Prominent developments included the creation of a maritime fire unit with the deployment of the fireboat Snoqualmie in 1891; the complete transition from horse-drawn to motorized fire engines in 1924; and the development of firefighter-staffed, emergency response "aid cars" during the 1930s. The SFD also participated in the historic founding of the International Association of Fire Fighters in 1918; the department's Local 27 constituted one of the union's 218 charter members. While the rigors of the Great Depression necessitated the temporary dissolution of 14 of the SFD's 55 operational companies, recovery was hastened by the threat of new fire hazards posed by World War II-era industrialization. Associated incidents, such as the 1943 Frye Slaughterhouse fire caused by the crash of a B-29 bomber, would severely tax the department's limited resources during this time.
The postwar SFD experienced a wave of significant material and organizational changes, one of the first being the Local 27-sponsored institution of the 8-hour day and 48-hour week for firefighters in 1947. Other important developments included the installation of two-way radio communication in first-line vehicles in 1950, the 1958 upgrading of the aid car program with stretcher-bearing station wagons, and the 1959 adoption of a new Fire Code based upon national standards. Throughout this time, the SFD's institutional mandate continued to evolve beyond basic fire suppression. In 1970, the department's new Medic One program initiated the training and deployment of firefighters as first-response paramedic units throughout Seattle. In 1980, the specially trained and equipped Hazardous Materials Response Unit was deployed to respond to incidents involving dangerous chemicals, including fires, spills, and suspected drug labs. Some of the most consequential changes to the SFD at mid-century did not concern equipment but equality, as the department admitted its first African-American firefighter (Claude Harris) in 1959 and its first female firefighter (Bonnie Beers) in 1977. The ongoing commitment to the recruitment and training of under-utilized applicant pools substantially diversified the department's make-up; of the 49 firefighters enlisted in 1993, 9 were female and 11 of minority status.
As of 2010, the SFD contains 1,020 uniformed personnel organized into 5 Operational Battalions and one Medic Battalion, which are employed running 33 engine-equipped fire stations, 11 aid and medic teams, 4 fireboats, and a host of other emergency resources. Several specialized units are used for hazardous materials response, marine response, search and rescue, and other incidents requiring extraordinary expertise. Under the control of the Fire Marshall's Office, the SFD administers an array of fire prevention efforts, including Fire Code enforcement, inspection of building fire plans and safety systems, public education programs, and the regulation of hazardous materials storage and use. In addition, the department provides leadership and personnel to several regional incident response organizations, such as FEMA's Urban Search and Rescue Teams and the Puget Sound Marine Response Consortium.
Full Extent
80.2 Cubic Feet
Language of Materials
English
Subject
- Olympic Pipeline Company (Organization)
- Fire Fighters Union Local 27 (Organization)
- Brewer Chemical Company (Organization)
- Continental Motors Corporation (Organization)
- Sun Chemical Corporation (Organization)
- Seattle Firefighters Pension Board (Organization)
- Seattle 2000 Commission (Organization)
- Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). Fire Dept. (Organization)
- Port of Seattle (Organization)
- University of Washington (Organization)
- Boeing Company (Organization)
- Seattle Model City Program (Organization)
Geographic
Occupation
Topical
- Accidents -- Prevention -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Air Raid Drills
- Air pollution -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- American La France Fire Engines
- Arson
- Automatic Alarm Telephones
- Civil defense
- Duwamish (Fireboat)
- Duwamish Waterway
- Emergency Health Services
- Emergency Vehicles
- Explosions -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Fire Alarms
- Fire Apparatus
- Fire Codes
- Fire prevention
- Fire extinction -- Equipment and supplies -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Fireboats
- Fireworks
- Floating Homes
- Fort Lawton
- Good Samaritan Act (Initiative 230)
- Hazardous Materials
- Helicopters
- Hydrofoils
- Junior Fire Marshalls Program
- Medic I and II
- Mobile Intensive/Critical Care Unit
- Night Fire Patrol
- Radioisotopes
- Seafair
- Self-Serve Gasoline
- Snoqualmie (Fireboat)
- Telephone -- Emergency reporting systems -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Vietnam Harbor Fire Defense
- Waterfront Patrol
- Title
- Guide to the Central Files 1890-2003
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
- EAD Location
- http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv15130
Repository Details
Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository