Fireboats of New York City

From Citizendium
Revision as of 09:25, 17 July 2022 by George Swan (talk | contribs) (add image)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

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]

some fireboats of the FDNY[1]
image name commissioned retired dimensions pumping
capacity
notes
[[]] 1865 1875 A chartered tug that provided firefighting prior to city purchasing a fireboat.[4]
FDNY fireboat William F. Havermeyer.jpg William F. Havemeyer 1875 1901 106'x22'x10' 6000 gpm The first fireboat owned by New York City.[5]
FDNY fireboat Zophar Mills in 1882.jpg Zophar Mills 1882 1934 120'x25'x12' 6000 gpm
Brooklyn fireboat Seth Low.jpg Seth Low 1885 1917 99'x24'x9' 3500 gpm Brooklyn FD
(King1893NYC) pg545 FIRE-BOAT 'NEW-YORKER' AT CASTLE-GARDEN BULKHEAD.jpg 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
Fire Boat, 'Abram S. Hewitt', during the 1905 Terminal Fire, Hoboken, N.J. Postmarked May 9, 1908.jpg 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'
Fireboat William J. Gaynor, in 1915 - MNY224077.jpg 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 P66a cloudy jeh.jpg John J. Harvey 1931 1999 130'x28'x9' 18,000 gpm now a private excursion vessel
Firefighter-nhl.JPG Fire fighter 1938 1999 134'x32'x9' 20,000 gpm Now a museum ship
Smoke 1938 1955 53'x7'x3.5'
McKean fireboat jeh.jpg 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
Gov Alfred E Smith fireboat.jpg Governor Alfred E. Smith 1961 2015 105'6"x27'x9' 8000 gpm
Washington DC - DCFD fireboat John H Glenn Jr 02 - 2010-09-16.jpg 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
Fireboat Bravest -a.jpg Bravest 2011 - 64'x17' 6000 gpm fastest fireboat of its size[6]
Fire fighter 2.jpg Fire Fighter II 2010 - 50,000 gpm one of the largest fireboats in North America[6]
Peter Stehlik - FDNY Three Forty Three - 2012.05.17.jpg 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. 1.0 1.1 Clarence E. Meek (July 1954). Fireboats Through The Years. Retrieved on 2015-06-28.
  2. Brian J. Cudahy. Around Manhattan Island, Fordham University Press, 1997, pp. 83, 86. Retrieved on 2015-06-29.
  3. 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.”
  4. Edward Hudson. Fireboats on job in city a century, New York Times, 1972-10-29, p. 63. Retrieved on 2017-11-09.
  5. 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. 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.
  7. 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.”