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Hollis Fire Department

10 Glenice Drive
603-465-6001


History


Originally, Hollis had a bucket brigade. A bucket brigade consisted of men who would respond to a fire. They would line up and pass buckets of water to each other, hand to hand, down the line towards the fire and continue until the fire was out.

In the early 1800's, Hollis purchased a pump (hand engine). The bucket brigade became the engine men. This pump was a "Fire King". The engine men pulled the "Fire King" with hand ropes to the fire. There they could manually pump a stream of water about 75 feet. However, there was no suction line on this pump, so a bucket brigade had to bring the water to the pump! The hose used was a 2" diameter leather hose. When it was discarded, an amateur cobbler used the hose to make rugged full soles and half-soles.

A new fire station was dedicated in 1950. Centrally located, this station had three bays and was connected to the Town Hall by a meeting room. This served the Town of Hollis for many years. The department slowly outgrew it quarters and trucks that didn't fit were housed in the old town shed on Ash St.

Communication is very important in fire fighting. In the beginning, there was a fire horn that rang the alarm to alert everyone of a fire. With the telephone there came operator, who could contact just about the whole department in 1 minute. Then calls to a communication center allowed a dispatcher to utilize "quick call". Fire pagers, devices worn on the belt, would beep as an alarm to the fire fighter. A dispatcher would then send a message of location and type of fire and the fire fighter would know to respond.


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