Fireboats of New York City: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
George Swan (talk | contribs) (ce) |
George Swan (talk | contribs) (more details) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
! image || name || commissioned || retired || dimensions || pumping<br>capacity || notes | ! image || name || commissioned || retired || dimensions || pumping<br>capacity || notes | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[File:FDNY fireboat William F. Havermeyer.jpg|75px]] || [[William Frederick Havemeyer (fireboat)|''William F. Havemeyer'']] || 1875 || 1901 || 106'x22'x10' || 6000 gpm || | | || [[]] || 1865 || 1875 || || || A chartered tug that provided firefighting prior to city purchasing a fireboat.<ref name=NYTimes1972-10-29/> | ||
|- | |||
| [[File:FDNY fireboat William F. Havermeyer.jpg|75px]] || [[William Frederick Havemeyer (fireboat)|''William F. Havemeyer'']] || 1875 || 1901 || 106'x22'x10' || 6000 gpm || The first fireboat owned by New York City.<ref name=NYTimes1944-07-24/> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| [[File:FDNY fireboat Zophar Mills in 1882.jpg|75px]] || ''[[Zophar Mills]]'' || 1882 || 1934 || 120'x25'x12' || 6000 gpm || | | [[File:FDNY fireboat Zophar Mills in 1882.jpg|75px]] || ''[[Zophar Mills]]'' || 1882 || 1934 || 120'x25'x12' || 6000 gpm || | ||
Line 77: | Line 79: | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist| | {{Reflist|refs= | ||
<ref name=NYTimes1972-10-29> | |||
{{cite news | |||
| url = https://www.nytimes.com/1972/10/29/archives/fireboats-on-job-in-city-a-century-sometimes-aid-new-jersey-as-they.html | |||
| title = Fireboats on job in city a century | |||
| work = [[New York Times]] | |||
| author = Edward Hudson | |||
| date = 1972-10-29 | |||
| page = 63 | |||
| archiveurl = | |||
| archivedate = | |||
| accessdate = 2017-11-09 | |||
| deadurl = No | |||
| quote = | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=KingstonWhig2015-08-06> | <ref name=KingstonWhig2015-08-06> | ||
{{cite news | {{cite news | ||
Line 161: | Line 178: | ||
January 2013: seven 33-foot boats, two 31-foot medical response | January 2013: seven 33-foot boats, two 31-foot medical response | ||
boats and one 33-foot SCUBA boat. | boats and one 33-foot SCUBA boat. | ||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=NYTimes1944-07-24> | |||
{{cite news | |||
| url = https://www.nytimes.com/1944/07/24/archives/james-h-ford-99-cinil-war-neterah-drummer-boy-in-61-captain-of.html | |||
| title = James H. Ford, 99, Civil War Veteran: Drummer Boy in '61, Captain of City's First Fireboat, Dies —Once a Texas Ranger | |||
| work = [[New York Times]] | |||
| author = | |||
| date = 1944-07-24 | |||
| location = [[Englewood, New Jersey]] | |||
| page = 15 | |||
| archiveurl = | |||
| archivedate = | |||
| accessdate = 2017-11-09 | |||
| deadurl = No | |||
| quote = | |||
}} | }} | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 08:40, 17 July 2022
As one of the busiest ports in the world authorities have long maintained a fleet of Fireboats of New York City.[1] For much of the late 19th and early 20th Century New York maintained a fleet of ten fireboats.
In recent decades technology has improved to where smaller boats can provide the pumping capacity that required a large boat in the past.[2] These smaller boats require smaller crews, and the crews themselves require less training. Like many other cities the FDNY operates a fleet with a smaller number of large fireboats, supplmented by a number of unnamed boats in the 10 meter range.[3]
image | name | commissioned | retired | dimensions | pumping capacity |
notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[[]] | 1865 | 1875 | A chartered tug that provided firefighting prior to city purchasing a fireboat.[4] | |||
William F. Havemeyer | 1875 | 1901 | 106'x22'x10' | 6000 gpm | The first fireboat owned by New York City.[5] | |
Zophar Mills | 1882 | 1934 | 120'x25'x12' | 6000 gpm | ||
Seth Low | 1885 | 1917 | 99'x24'x9' | 3500 gpm | Brooklyn FD | |
The New Yorker | 1890 | 1931 | 125'x26'x12' | 13,000 gpm | ||
David A. Boody | 1892 | 1914 | 105'x23'x7' | 6500 gpm | ||
William L. Strong | 1898 | 1948 | 100'x24'x12.6' | 6500 gpm | ||
Abram S. Hewitt | 1903 | 1958 | 117'x25'x10'6" | 7000 gpm | ||
George B. McClellan | 1904 | 1954 | 117'x24'x9'6" | 7000 gpm | ||
James Duane | 1908 | 1959 | 132'x28'x10' | 9000 gpm | ||
Thomas Willett | 1908 | 1959 | 132'x28'x10' | 9000 gpm | ||
Cornelius W. Lawrence | 1908 | 1955 | 104'6"x23'6"x9' | 7000 gpm | ||
Velox | 1907 | 1922 | 68'x11'6"x7' | |||
William J. Gaynor | 1914 | 1961 | 118'x25'x13.4' | 7000 gpm | ||
John Purroy Mitchel | 1921 | 1966 | 132'x27'x10' | 9000 gpm | ||
Captain Connell | 1922 | 1938 | 56'6"x12'x6'6" | |||
John J. Harvey | 1931 | 1999 | 130'x28'x9' | 18,000 gpm | now a private excursion vessel | |
Fire fighter | 1938 | 1999 | 134'x32'x9' | 20,000 gpm | Now a museum ship | |
Smoke | 1938 | 1955 | 53'x7'x3.5' | |||
John D. Mc Kean | 1954 | 2010 | 129'x30'x9' | 19,000 gpm | held in retired status | |
H. Sylvia A. H. G. Wilks | 1958 | 1972 | 105'6"x27'x9' | 8000 gpm | ||
Harry M. Archer M. D. | 1958 | 1994 | 105'6"x27'x9' | 8000 gpm | ||
Smoke II | 1958 | 2008 | 52'x14'x4' | 2000 gpm | ||
Senator Robert F. Wagner | 1959 | 1993 | 105'6"x27'x9' | 8000 gpm | ||
Governor Alfred E. Smith | 1961 | 2015 | 105'6"x27'x9' | 8000 gpm | ||
John H. Glenn, Jr. | 1962 | 1977 | 70'x21'x5' | 5000 gpm | Now serving in Washington DC | |
John P. Devaney | 1992 | 1994 | 70'x19'x5'4" | 7075 gpm | named after a firefighter who died in the line of duty | |
Alfred E. Ronaldson | 1992 | 1994 | 70'x19'x5'4" | 7075 gpm | named after a firefighter who died in the line of duty | |
Kevin C. Kane | 1992 | ? | 52'x16'x4'6" | 6500 gpm | ||
Bravest | 2011 | - | 64'x17' | 6000 gpm | fastest fireboat of its size[6] | |
Fire Fighter II | 2010 | - | 50,000 gpm | one of the largest fireboats in North America[6] | ||
Three Forty Three | 2010 | - | 50,000 gpm | one of the largest fireboats in North America[6] | ||
William M. Feehan | 2015 | - | 68' | 8,000 gpm | ` 40 knots (Expression error: Missing operand for round. kph)[7] |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Clarence E. Meek (July 1954). Fireboats Through The Years. Retrieved on 2015-06-28.
- ↑ Brian J. Cudahy. Around Manhattan Island, Fordham University Press, 1997, pp. 83, 86. Retrieved on 2015-06-29.
- ↑ FDNY Annual Report 2012, FDNY, 2012. Retrieved on 2015-06-30. “Additionally, FDNY expects to take delivery of the following 10 boats by January 2013: seven 33-foot boats, two 31-foot medical response boats and one 33-foot SCUBA boat.”
- ↑ Edward Hudson. Fireboats on job in city a century, New York Times, 1972-10-29, p. 63. Retrieved on 2017-11-09.
- ↑ James H. Ford, 99, Civil War Veteran: Drummer Boy in '61, Captain of City's First Fireboat, Dies —Once a Texas Ranger, New York Times, 1944-07-24, p. 15. Retrieved on 2017-11-09.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Peter Marsh. SAFE Boats International Delivers One of the World's Fastest Fireboats to New York: The 64-foot Bravest Made Its Debut in Seattle, NW Yachting magazine, February 2011. Retrieved on 2015-06-28.
- ↑ Peter Kennedy. Kingston-built fireboat immortalizes 9/11 victim, Kingston Whig Standard, 2015-08-06. Retrieved on 2015-08-10. “Just shy of 21 metres in length, the William M. Feehan is powered by a trio of Caterpillar C-18 engines, each capable of pushing out 1,150 horsepower, with twin fuel tanks splitting 4,500 litres. Running at a top speed of 40 knots (about 75 km/h), it can stop in two boat lengths.”