Boston Fire Department
The Boston Fire Department provides fire services and first responder emergency medical services to the city of Boston, Massachusetts. It also responds to such incidents as motor vehicle accidents, hazardous material spills, utility mishaps, floods, explosions, and construction accidents among others.
The Boston Fire Department was established as the first paid fire department in the United States, and is the largest municipal fire department in New England serving approximately 685,000 people living in the area of the city proper. Additionally, it actively participates in MetroFire, the fire services mutual aid system which serves it and 35 other fire departments in the surrounding area.
In and around Boston, firefighters are sometimes referred to as Jakes.
History
1631−1678
The Boston Fire Department traces its roots back to 1631, a year after the city was founded, when the first fire ordinance was adopted. In what then was the Massachusetts Bay Colony of the Kingdom of England, the city banned thatched roofs and wooden chimneys. However, it wasn't until 1653 that the first hand engine was appropriated to provide pressure for water lines.1678−1837
In 1678, the city founded a paid fire department, and hired Thomas Atkins to be the first fire chief. On February 1, 1711, the town appointed a group of Fire Wards, each responsible for the operation and maintenance of equipment assigned to a region of the city. The grandfather of Herman Melville, Thomas Melvill, served as a town fire ward from 1779 to 1825; his great-grandfather, Allen Melvill, served as a firefighter from 1733 to 1761. It was not until 1799 that the first leather fire hose was used, after being imported from England.1837−1910
The department underwent its first reorganization in 1837 when the hand engine department reorganized, reducing the number of active engines to fourteen. By December 31, 1858, the department had 14 hand engines, 3 hook and ladder carriages, and 6 hydrant carriages. On November 1, 1859, Engine Co. 8 began service as the first steam engine in the department. The reorganization of 1859-60 replaced the department's 14 hand engines with 11 new steam engines. The organizational structure of the department, as it still exists today, developed in that same period.The department was the first in the world to utilize the telegraph to alert fire fighters of an emergency, installing the system in 1851. The first fire alarm was transmitted via the fire alarm telegraph system on April 29, 1852. The famous Boston fire of 1872 led to the appointment of a board of fire commissioners. The Boston Fire Department also provided assistance in the Great Chelsea Fire of 1908 and the Great Salem Fire of 1914. The department purchased its first steam fireboat in 1873, and installed fire poles in the stations in 1881.
Equipment changes, 1910−present
On July 29, 1910, the department purchased its first motorized apparatus. From 1914 until 1923, horse drawn engines as well as steam and motorized engine companies were in use in Boston. Ladder 24 was the last company to replace its horses in 1923 when it became motorized. In 1925, the last fire horses were retired. It wasn't until 1926 that the last steam engine was converted to a motorized engine. The department first started using radio communication in 1925, installing radios in the fireboats, chiefs' cars, and rescue companies.By 1960, the department operated 48 engines, 29 ladders, one rescue, and two fireboats. By the end of the decade, the standard ladder trucks were replaced by aerial ladders with tillers.
In the 1970s, the department experimented with lime-green colored apparatus, but reverted to the traditional red in 1984, when the department made the switch to E-One fire apparatus. In the early 1980s, an arson ring caused over 600 fires, many reaching multiple-alarm status. The group was ultimately caught and convicted.
Also in the early 1980s, the department experienced a dramatic number of cutbacks due to budget cuts. The number of Engine Companies dropped from 43 to 33, the Fire Brigade was disbanded, the number of Ladder Companies went from 28 to 21, and one of the two Tower Companies was disbanded and reduced to a regular Ladder Company. Rescue 2 was disbanded, but reorganized in 1986.
2007 Boston bomb scare
On January 31, 2007, the department, Boston Police, and the United States Department of Homeland Security removed LED advertisements resembling the mooninite characters of the Cartoon Network show Aqua Teen Hunger Force for its movie which had premiered at the time, Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters. The advertisements, dispersed throughout the city by two individuals hired by Turner Broadcasting, Interference, Inc., and Cartoon Network, were mistaken for homemade explosives. A civil settlement was eventually reached with Turner, Interference, and Cartoon Network for some portion of the costs incurred by Boston Police and Department of Homeland Security in responding to the events. One of Cartoon Network's managerial staff also resigned in the aftermath.2013 Boston Marathon Bombing
On June 3, 2013, Chief Steve Abraira resigned citing public criticism from his deputies over his response to the Boston Marathon bombing.Harassment and gender and racial imbalance
After sexual harassment complaints by several women, the Boston Fire Department agreed to improve conditions for women under the terms of the 1996 Hansford Decree, including providing gender-separated bathrooms and sleeping areas.In 2018, firefighter David Sanchez sexually assaulted a fellow firefighter in a firehouse on Centre Street in Jamaica Plain. The victim, Nathalie Fontanez, later said that the other men in the firehouse sided with the assailant, that she had been hazed and discriminated against because she was female and Latina, and that she had been retaliated against for reporting sexually inappropriate behavior. She cited the example of being denied a transfer to the Fire Investigation Unit on the grounds it was for more senior firefighters, only to see the job go to a white man who started in the department on the same day. The city reached a $3.2 million settlement for the complaint and launched a retraining initiative. Other female firefighters also reported inappropriate comments, theft of equipment, finding their beds urinated in, inappropriate use of a cell phone app to locate an off-duty female firefighter, fears of being video recorded while naked, and a sexual assault that resulted in no disciplinary action.
The Boston Globe reported that in 2018, out of about 1,500 firefighters, only 16 were women of whom 12 were African American or Hispanic. The City of Boston was estimated to be 23% African American and 20% Hispanic in 2017.
Organization
The Boston Fire Department has six divisions:;Fire Suppression and rescue services
;Fire Prevention
;Training
;Personnel
;Emergency Planning and Preparedness
;Special Operations Command
Fire Commissioners
- Henry S. Russell: 1895–1905
- Patrick J. Kennedy : 1905
- Benjamin W. Wells: 1905–1908
- Samuel D. Parker: 1908–1910
- Francis M. Carroll : 1910
- Charles Dudley Daly: 1910–1912
- John H. Dunn : 1912
- Charles H. Cole: 1912–1914
- John M. Minton : 1914
- John Grady: 1914–1919
- John R. Murphy: 1919–1921
- Joseph P. Manning : 1921–1922
- William J. Casey : 1922
- Theodore A. Glynn: 1922–1926
- Thomas F. Sullivan : 1926
- Eugene Hultman: 1926–1930
- Edward F. McLaughlin: 1930–1933
- Eugene M. McSweeney: 1933–1934
- Edward F. McLaughlin: 1934–1938
- William Arthur Reilly: 1938–1945
- John I. Fitzgerald: 1945–1946
- Russell S. Codman Jr.: 1946–1950
- Michael T. Kelleher: 1950–1953
- John F. Cotter: 1953–1954
- Francis X. Cotter: 1954–1959
- Timothy J. O'Connor: 1959–1960
- Henry Scagnoli: 1960–1961
- Thomas Griffin: 1961–1966
- Henry A. Scagnoli : 1966
- William J. Fitzgerald: 1966–1968
- James H. Kelly: 1968–1975
- George Paul: 1975–1985
- Leo Stapleton: 1984–1991
- Martin E. Pierce Jr.: 1991–2000
- Dennis DiMarzio : 2000–2001
- Paul Christian: 2001–2006
- Kevin P. MacCurtain : 2006
- Roderick Fraser: 2006–2014
- John Hasson : 2014
- Joseph E. Finn: 2014–2020
- John Dempsey: 2020–2022
- Paul Burke: 2022–present
Ranks
| Title | Dress collar insignia | Dress sleeve insignia | Notes |
| Fire Commissioner and Chief of Department | The positions of fire commissioner and chief of department were combined in 2014. | ||
| Chief of Operations | There are 2 chiefs of operations. | ||
| Deputy Chief | - | ||
| District Chief | - | ||
| Captain | - | ||
| Lieutenant | - | ||
| Firefighter | - |
Firehouses and apparatus
The Boston Fire Department operates two Divisions and is split into ten Districts total. Division 1 is responsible for the northern part of Boston and is split into five districts while Division 2 commands the southern five districts. Each Division is commanded by a Deputy Chief and each District is commanded by a District Chief, similar to a Battalion chief, who supervises 3–5 or more firehouses and their respective fire companies and units. There is also a Safety Chief, who serves citywide as the Incident Safety Officer at fires and large-scale incidents.The Marine Unit of the BFD is located at Burrough's Wharf in the North End and houses the three Fireboats or Marine Units. The Marine Unit responds to approximately 500−600 emergency calls annually. The Boston Fire Department also operates a High-Pressure Pumping Station at 175 Kneeland St. in Downtown and contains of underground piping throughout the Downtown area. The system can provide pressurized water to the many pressurized fire hydrants in the Downtown area.
In addition to the firehouses, the BFD also operates a Special Operations Command/Haz-Mat. facility at 155 Rivermoor St. in West Roxbury, a Communications/Fire Alarm Dispatch Center at 1 Fenway in Roxbury, and an Administrative Headquarters/Motor Pool Facility at 115 Southampton St. in Roxbury. The Fire Academy is located on Moon Island.
| Engine company | Ladder company | Special unit | Chief units | Address | Neighborhood | District | Division |
| Engine 2 | Ladder 19 | 700 E. Fourth St. | South Boston: Telegraph Hill | 6 | 1 | ||
| Engine 3 | Special / Lighting Unit | 618 Harrison Ave. | South End | 4 | 1 | ||
| Engine 4 | Ladder 24 | Car 3 | 200 Cambridge St. | West End | 3 | 1 | |
| Engine 5 | Car 1 | 360 Saratoga St. | East Boston | 1 | 1 | ||
| Engine 7 | Ladder 17 | Car 4 | 200 Columbus Ave. | Back Bay | 4 | 1 | |
| Engine 8 | Ladder 1 | 392 Hanover St. | North End | 3 | 1 | ||
| Engine 9 | Ladder 2 | 239 Sumner St. | East Boston: Maverick Square | 1 | 1 | ||
| Engine 10 | Rescue 1, Technical Support Unit 1, Collapse Unit | 125 Purchase St. | Downtown | 6 | 1 | ||
| Engine 14 | Ladder 4 | 174 Dudley St. | Roxbury: Nubian Square | 7 | 2 | ||
| Engine 16 | 9 Gallivan Blvd. | Dorchester | 8 | 2 | |||
| Engine 17 | Ladder 7 | Car 7 | 44 Winter St. | Dorchester: Meeting House Hill | 7 | 2 | |
| Engine 18 | Ladder 6 | 1884 Dorchester Ave. | Dorchester: Ashmont | 8 | 2 | ||
| Engine 20 | Dive Unit | 301 Neponset Ave. | Dorchester: Neponset | 8 | 2 | ||
| Engine 21 | 641 Columbia Rd. | Dorchester: Uphams Corner | 7 | 2 | |||
| Engine 22 | Haz-Mat. Unit, Rehab. Unit | 700 Tremont St. | South End | 4 | 1 | ||
| Engine 24 | Ladder 23 | Roxbury: Grove Hall | 7 | 2 | |||
| Engine 28 | Technical Support Unit 2 | Car 9 | 746 Centre St. | Jamaica Plain | 9 | 2 | |
| Engine 29 | Ladder 11 | Car 11 | 138 Chestnut Hill Ave. | Brighton | 11 | 1 | |
| Engine 30 | Ladder 25 | 1940 Centre St. | West Roxbury | 10 | 2 | ||
| Engine 32 | Ladder 9 | 525 Main St. | Charlestown | 3 | 1 | ||
| Engine 33 | Ladder 15 | 941 Boylston St. | Back Bay | 4 | 1 | ||
| Engine 37 | Ladder 26 | 560 Huntington Ave. | Fenway / Roxbury | 9 | 2 | ||
| Engine 39 | Ladder 18 | Decon. Unit 1 | Car 6 | 272 D St. | South Boston | 6 | 1 |
| Engine 41 | Ladder 14 | 460 Cambridge St. | Allston | 11 | 1 | ||
| Engine 42 | Rescue 2 | 1870 Columbus Ave | Roxbury: Egleston Square | 9 | 2 | ||
| Engine 48 | Ladder 28 | Brush Unit 48 | 60 Fairmount Ave. | Hyde Park: Cleary Square | 12 | 2 | |
| Engine 49 | 209 Neponset Valley Pkwy. | Hyde Park: Readville | 10 | 2 | |||
| Engine 50 | 34 Winthrop St. | Charlestown: Bunker Hill | 3 | 1 | |||
| Engine 51 | 425 Faneuil St. | Brighton | 11 | 1 | |||
| Engine 52 | Ladder 29 | 975 Blue Hill Ave. | Dorchester | 12 | 2 | ||
| Engine 53 | Ladder 16 | Car 12 | 945 Canterbury St. | Roslindale | 12 | 2 | |
| Engine 55 | Brush Unit 55 | Car 10 | 5115 Washington St. | West Roxbury | 10 | 2 | |
| Engine 56 | Ladder 21 | 1 Ashley St. | East Boston: Orient Heights | 1 | 1 | ||
| MV John S. Damrell, Marine Unit 1, Marine Unit 2, Marine Unit 3 | Burrough's Wharf | North End | 3 | 1 |
Note: Car 1 is the District 1 chief, Car 3 is the District 3 chief, etc.