Bower Hill Volunteer Fire Department provides fire protection and emergency response services to the residents of Scott Township, in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. We are dedicated to the preservation of life and the protection of property in our service area. We render assistance to surrounding communities when requested by the fire and emergency service agencies in those communities. We promote social fellowship and good will among the members of the department, and we strive to promote and preserve the the safety, affordability and desirability of our community as a comfortable and pleasant place to live and work.
Bower Hill Volunteer Fire Department was chartered in 1924 to answer a public outcry for Scott Township to provide fire protection to southern portions of the township. It was only with the threat of incorporation as a borough and secession from the township that the township commissioners reluctantly agreed to allow a fire department and provide a public water supply to the area. From an initial membership of twelve, the department grew rapidly, and five years later, 54 men, or nearly 20% of the adult male population of the community, were members. The department's first firefighting apparatus was an ex-World War I, U.S. Army Surplus hand-drawn hose cart, but this was soon replaced by a motorized Chemical and Hose Car. The department enjoyed great support from the Bower Hill community and continued to grow and prosper as Bower Hill, formerly a small coal mine and mill town, became a residential suburb of Pittsburgh. The Bower Hill VFD survived the depression years and World War II with limited resources but great resourcefulness. The department accepted its first female member, Esther Padgelek, during the war years. After the war, the residential housing boom changed the balance of power in the township government, and the department finally began to see support from township officials.
As the community grew, the department moved from its single-garage building in the heart of the "old" Bower Hill neighborhood to a new building on the other side of the railroad line, closer to the burgeoning suburban neighborhoods. Bower Hill VFD began to provide ambulance service in 1956, and this service soon comprised the majority of the department's call volume.
By 1983, Bower Hill VFD was the Advanced Life Support ambulance provider for the township, and EMS responses were approaching 500 calls per year. The population of Scott Township peaked in the 1960s and '70s. By this time, nearly all possible building sites were occupied, and in subsequent decades, the population would fall as young adults with families were no longer able to find housing in the township.
EMS crew on standby at an Our Lady of Grace School football game in 1984.
The Junior Fire Brigade, launched unofficially in 1957 and officially organized in 1969, trained many young people in firefighting and EMS skills, and many of the Junior members would later become the leaders of the department, though many others would take these skills elsewhere as they moved out of the community to find work and raise families. By the 1990s, the fire department faced the double problem of a decreasing pool of young adults willing to become firefighters and EMS providers, and an aging population that needed more care. In 1997, Bower Hill joined with Glendale Hose Company No. 1 to form Scott Township EMS to provide continuous ALS ambulance coverage to the township. The department maintained its aggressive "hands-on" firefighting approach with continuously improved equipment and regular training.
In its 80-year history, Bower Hill has owned 22 firefighting and emergency vehicles. From the single hand-drawn hose cart in 1924, the department now operates three Engines, one Squad, and one Command vehicle, and supplies one ALS Ambulance to Scott Township EMS. Though no comprehensive membership roster exists, from existing rosters we know that at least 400 men and women have served as members over the years. At present, Bower Hill has about 30 firefighting members and about 60 supporting members, as well as about 35 members who are currently inactive. The department continues to focus on Engine Company operations, since this is the greatest need in the service area. Mutual aid agreements and cooperation with neighboring departments provide for Truck Company, Rescue Company and other services. Bower Hill, in cooperation with Glendale, provides Rapid Intervention Team (RIT, sometimes known as "Go Team") response to neighboring departments.