Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2019)
Early Days
The first firemen at Hove were stationed in
Brunswick Town and were under the management of the surveyor. The
service dated back to 1831 and the firemen were based in Brunswick Street West. They operated with one fire engine and two water carts;
but access to water was always a problem because the water main was
at a distance from the Brunswick area, and then the turncock had to
be located and asked to turn the water on for them.
On 20 June 1863 Hove Police Commissioners resolved
to form their own fire brigade, which would consist of one foreman
and seven men at an annual cost of £30. The Police Commissioners
purchased the fire escape belonging to the Brunswick Square
Commissioners for £12, plus the hose and reel belonging to the West
Hove Improvement Commissioners for £20. In addition they wanted to
purchase another fire escape from Messrs Merryweather (the same model
that was awarded a prize medal in the Great Exhibition of 1851) and a
60-ft hose reel. The first firemen appointed were as follows:
William Jeal of Brunswick Street West
George Gladman of George Street
William Willmer of Providence Place (the site
being east of where Hove Library was later built)
On 6 June 1864
there was a fire at the Norfolk
Hotel, Brighton,
that was attended by Hove firemen and constables – the bill for
their services came to £6-10s.
In 1874 Hove firemen were as follows:
James
Bridger, foreman, - he earned £4-12s
a
year
Ebenezer Dean
George Carpenter
George Gladman
John Grave
James Terry
William
Willmer – these firemen earned £3-12s
a
year.
Their headquarters were at 8 Victoria Terrace.
Their headquarters were at 8 Victoria Terrace.
Fire Station at George Street
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An early 1900s photograph with Hove Fire Station in the background in George Street. |
In 1879 Superintendent Pedlar was in command of Hove Volunteer Fire Brigade and Hove Fire Station was located at 85 George Street.
The brigade consisted of the following:
2 foremen
1 superintendent of the fire escape
1 conductor of the fire escape
2 sub-engineers
26 firemen
4 messengers
It is not clear under what terms or pay these men
were employed.
In 1889 the Chief Officer requested that Hove
Council should install a hydrant near the fire station in order that
the fire engine might be washed more easily. The council obliged with
a new service pipe leading from the water main in George Street to
the rear of the fire station at a cost of around £26.
In May 1898 Stationmaster Coombes, newly installed
in the post, was presented with a fine marble clock on the occasion
of his marriage.
By 1914 the premises in George Street contained
the engine house on the ground floor – where the motor pump and
steamer were kept – and behind there was a two-stall stable. On the
first floor there were four rooms occupied by the Stationmaster. The
place was always too cramped for comfort. In 1908 a small extension
designed by Lainson & Son was added to provide a watch room, and
a recreation room for the volunteer firemen.
In 1923 it was stated that the premises cost £50
a year in rent. There were now five permanent members of the fire
brigade but there was no space for quarters for them. It had always
been a problem harnessing the horses to the fire engine in such a
narrow street, but the situation worsened when more modern vehicles
were used. It was stated that the ‘situation in George Street
renders the exit with the modern heavy motor fire engine, of which
the Council now has two, extremely awkward and dangerous.’
Some Incidents
In
May 1879 a fire broke out in the basement of the Sackville
Hotel, and
the following report appeared in the Hove
Echo:
‘Stationmaster Wilcox of the Hove Fire Brigade,
received the call at 9.55 p.m. and immediately set out for the
conflagration in company with Captain Hackett, Engineer Coombes,
Escape-Superintendent Dumbrill (sic), Sub-Engineer Coombes, Conductor
Smith and twelve firemen. Owing to the promptitude with which water
was brought to bear on the flames, the fire was got under control
within the course of a few minutes.’
The reporter miss-spelt Dumbrell; in fact Owen
Dumbrell was to have a long connection with the service, becoming
Chief Officer in 1902 and continuing in the post until 1942 when his
son Harry Dumbrell became the next Chief Officer. There was also a
problem with the spelling of Coombes – it could be spelt without
the final ‘e’ or finish with ‘er’ instead.
There is an interesting entry in the Hove Police
Minutes for 4 January 1882 when it was stated that the paid Fire
Brigade had been disbanded. It seems that they had been operating at
the same time as the Hove Volunteer Fire Brigade, and the Hove
Commissioners must have concluded that they did not need to keep
their paid firemen. All the same, it was thought advisable that
policemen should be instructed in hose-reel drill and fire-escape
drill as an extra stand-by. One fire hose was stored at George
Street, and there was another at the Commissioners’ Stores in
Brunswick Street West. It was recommended that a spare hose should be
purchased because it would allow a wet hose to be cleaned and dried:
at that time a hose was made of a heavy canvas material, which took a
long time to dry out.
On 21 June 1888 a contract was drawn up between
the Hove Commissioners and the Hove Volunteer Fire Brigade under
which the Commissioners agreed to pay the brigade £120 a year for
their services: the brigade was composed of the following men:
Chief Officer H. Rolt
2nd
Officer B. C. H. Rolt
Superintendent C. Ellis
Stationmaster W. Stevens
Engineer F. Coombes
Sub-engineer G. Borrer
Fireman J. Maxwell
Fireman O. Dumbrell
Fireman B. Pearson
Fireman G. Olliver
Fireman W. Mills
Fireman H. Stevens
Fireman H. Young
Fireman H. Stevens, junior
Fireman W. Willard
Fireman H. Smith
A Parade
When Hove Recreation Ground was officially opened
on 2 May 1891 Hove Fire Brigade formed part of the long parade that
wended its way from Hove Town Hall to Old Shoreham Road. Those taking
part included:
Captain Ellis, superintendent
W. Mills, engineer
H. Young, conductor
Firemen B. Pearson, J. Godley, S. Smith, J.
Mitchell, S. Mills, H. Stevens, W. Kent, H. Wilcox, and G. Clayton
Kingston Fire Escape-Superintendent
Channel Laundry Fire
In
1894 there was a fire at the Channel Laundry in Arthur Street. It was
attended by Stationmaster Wilcox, Lieutenant Hackett, and Engineer
Coombes. Also present were firemen Gumbrill, Dumbrell, Coombes and
Coombes. (Does the alliteration in the last sentence remind anyone of
the firemen from the children’s favourite TV show Camberwick
Green? –
namely, Pugh, Pugh, Barney Mcgrew, Cuthbert, Diddle and Grubb?).
Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee
On 21 June 1897 Captain Hackett and fourteen Hove
firemen attended a special service at All Saints Church in The Drive
to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee.
Level Crossing Hiatus
In September 1897 Hove Fire Brigade was called out
to attend a fire. Unfortunately, they were delayed upon arrival at
the level crossing in Portslade by a goods train slowly trundling
past. By the time the horses were hurried across, the firemen arrived
at the scene too late to save seven greyhounds from the flames –
two of which were valued at over £350.
The Brigade in
1898
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Members of the Hove Fire Brigade in 1898
|
Hove Commissioners were still paying Hove Fire
Brigade £120 a year for their services, the same sum that had been
paid ten years previously when there were just fifteen men. However,
in 1898 there were 24 men. In addition, Hove and Aldrington had
amalgamated in that year and so the Fire Brigade had a larger area to
cover. Consequently the Watch Committee recommended that the fee
should be increased to £220 a year. An interesting fact was that
many of the firemen earned their living in the building trade, and
therefore they were accustomed to ladder work. Hove Commissioners had
considered forming a Police Fire Brigade, but dismissed the idea on
two considerations – the extra cost (naturally) and also the
realisation that there were too few policemen to rely on in the event
of a fire.
A still from Williamson’s historic film of
Hove Fire Brigade in
action
|
A Pioneering Film
In
1901 the famous film pioneer James Williamson made a short film
entitled Fire!
starring
members of Hove Fire Brigade. The film started with a shot of the
Fire Station in George Street with two lovely white horses about to
be harnessed to the fire engine. The fire engine was later to be seen
rattling down St Aubyns at a great pace with the gallant firemen on
board, decked out in their splendid brass helmets. Their uniform
jacket was double-breasted and fastened by twelve buttons. There was
a high collar with a large ‘H’ inside a circle. The film also
showed a jumping sheet being used. The ‘fire’ was staged at
nearby Ivy Lodge, now demolished.
This film may be viewed at Hove Museum where the
Hove Film Pioneers are rightly celebrated. Local people like to
stress that Hove was up and running in the film industry long before
Hollywood had even been heard of.
Drills and Competitions
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove Police & Fire Brigade sports day at Wish Park (Marine Park) 9 September 1908 |
Hove Fire Brigade used to hold their annual drill,
competition and sports at Hove Recreation Ground, which drew an
admiring crowd of people. In 1908 the event took place at Wish Park, Aldrington.
By 1904 Hove had won the Challenge Shield of the
National Fire Brigade Union Hose Truck Competition for Sussex in two
successive years: the trophy was on display at Hove Library for a few
weeks afterwards.
Hove Fire Brigade continued with the tradition of
being a winning side because they won the One-man Dry Drill no less
than ten times between 1949 and 1966.
Fire Brigade in the News
Hove
Fire Brigade was in the news because of a fire that broke out on 24
December 1907 at Hove
Lawns Hotel in
Waterloo Street. The proprietor Mr Mayhead, his wife, three children,
plus the cook and the barman, managed to escape onto the balcony at
the front of the building. From there they clambered down the large
hanging lamp and onto the pavement with the assistance of PC
Aldridge. It seems the fire brigade was late in attending the scene,
which led to questions being asked at a Hove Council meeting on 9
January 1908. Councillor W. J. Fraser tabled the question, ‘What is
the explanation, if any, and apparently unnecessary, delay which took
place in the arrival of the Steam Fire Engine at the recent fire …
after receiving notice of such fire, and whether any effective means
can be devised for enabling the engine in question to be present at
any future fire immediately after receiving notice thereof.’
The answer was simple – the horses. It was a
delay in the arrival of horses to be harnessed to the fire engine
that led to their late arrival. A report was soon forthcoming on 29
January 1908, which led to new measures being taken to secure access
to horses more quickly. The report also gives a fascinating glimpse
into the equipment available to Hove firemen in 1908.
Equipment itemised in the Report of 29 January
1909
Fire Station, George Street
1 Fire Engine, capable of discharging 300 gallons
of water a minute
1 55-ft horse curricle (a two-wheeled vehicle
needing two horses harnessed abreast)
1 Kingston fire escape
1 hose cart
2 fire extinguishers plus other equipment
Farm Road
1 hose reel cart
Scaling ladders
1 canvas jumping sheet
1 60-ft escape
Tools such as nozzles, spanners, hatchets,
crowbar, lamp, leather bucket and rope
Hove Town Hall
1 60-ft escape
Hove Park
1 hose-reel cart
1 hydrant key and bar
Lengths of rope etc
Additional Hose-reel carts stored at:
Boundary Road plus other equipment
Electricity Generating Station, Davigdor Road
110 Westbourne Street
Dupont’s Riding Academy, Waterloo Street
Fire Alarm Posts:
Cambridge Road
Hove Park Villas
Montefiore Road
Palmeira Avenue
Ruskin Road
Sackville Gardens
St Leonard’s Road
Action Taken
Arrangements
were made with Robert Wilson of 18 Westbourne Place to supply two
horses at any time of the day or night at a cost of £52-10s
a
year. Mr Wilson would either deliver the horses personally, or send a
man with them between 7 p.m. and 9 a.m. - at any other time the
brigade would have to supply their own driver. A private wire and
bell were fixed to his premises – the same device that was also to
be found in the homes of the firemen.
Subsequently, the Fire Station at George Street
was enlarged so that two horses could be stabled on the premises; a
new steamer and appliances were purchased for £547. However, these
improvements put Hove Fire Brigade in financial difficulties with the
money owed to the building firm Messrs Parsons being overdue. Not
unreasonably, Hove Council was asked for the sum of £250 but
refused. But they did agree to increase the annual grant.
Merryweather
In the summer of 1913 a deputation went to London
to watch a practical demonstration of one of Messrs Merryweather’s
motor fire engines. If one were to be procured, the fire brigade
could dispense with keeping two horses on the premises, which would
save at least £60 a year. The loose boxes could then be utilised as
a store or a workshop. The existing fire engine would be retained in
case of a breakdown of the new fire engine, or in the event of two
fires occurring at the same time, and there would have to be a
contract in place to supply two horses in such a scenario.
Hove Council agreed to raise the grant to the fire
brigade by £100 so that the purchase of the Merryweather fire engine
could go ahead. In December 1913 it was stated that Messrs
Merryweather were willing to sell an engine on the following terms -
£450 to be paid on delivery, then £100 each year for the following
five years: interest on the balance was set at 4 per cent.
Initially, Hove Council agreed to pay £400 to the
brigade to complete the purchase. But then the councillors must have
had a fit of the vapours at the thought of all that money being
outside the council’s control. At any rate, in January 1914 Hove
Council rather meanly required the brigade to pay back the £400
because the council would purchase the motor fire engine for £950,
which would remain the property of the corporation.
The gleaming new fire engine arrived at Hove on 17
February 1914 amid a great deal of public interest.
A Municipal Fire Brigade
The next logical step was that a fire brigade
should no longer be a private matter but ought to be under the
control of Hove Council. This idea had already been thrashed out back
in 1903 when a sub-committee had advised that steps should be taken
to establish a municipal fire brigade and in addition a site should
be purchased on which to build a new fire station. The report also
stated ‘One of the chief advantages of having a brigade formed of
those in the employ of the Corporation is that during the day the
Firemen are engaged at work within the Borough or in the immediate
neighbourhood.’
A different sub-committee came to the same
conclusion in July 1914. However, they could not recommend such a
re-organisation until a new fire station was built.
It was proposed that the new fire brigade should
consist of the Chief Officer, driver, mechanic, and one fireman on
full-time pay with fourteen auxiliary firemen. The matter was
referred back to the watch committee. Finally, it was decided that
the brigade would be taken over on 1 November 1914
but the men would all retain their posts for three
months to enable the council to decide what re-organisation was
necessary.
The council had already decided on Owen Dumbrell’s
future ‘who for thirteen years had held the post of Chief Officer
of the Hove Fire Brigade with such conspicuous ability and zeal.’
He would become Chief Officer of the new brigade.
The outbreak of the First World War prevented
drastic re-organisation, mainly because of the lack of accommodation.
But in March 1915 it was proposed that three men should always be on
duty, and that therefore it was necessary for another full-time man
to be employed. The man would need to be a competent motor mechanic
and the pay would be 50/- a week.
In April 1915 Tilling’s, the bus company,
offered to provide a pair of horses, harness, and a man to drive them
ready for every occasion when required for the fee of two guineas.
By
this time the firemen were becoming increasingly unhappy at their
treatment, and grumbled that the only time they heard anything in
relation to the fire brigade was what they read in the Sussex
Daily News. In
April 1915 a special meeting was held at the fire station so that the
men could air their grievances. Several men were under the impression
they would receive a retainer fee when the council took over the fire
brigade, while twelve men were out of pocket because there had been
no collection at Christmas, and some men were in debt to the tune of
£2-10s.
However, the watch committee still insisted on
having only three permanent staff with volunteer firemen being used
as before. One of the permanent staff was Harry Dumbrell, son of the
Chief Officer; Owen Dumbrell also acted as a relief driver, and
because he had gained some experience as a motor mechanic, he was
paid 15/- a week. There was also the matter of ownership of pieces of
equipment to sort out. For example, some of the appliances remained
under the control of the Chief Constable.
In November 1915 the tenancy of 177 Westbourne
Street was terminated. This was where the old manual engine, the
Kingston escape, and a hose cart were stored – instead they were to
be removed to the Sackville Road depot or the depot at Errol Road.
The house had also provided accommodation for a fireman.
War Hero
In 1915 there came news that Sergeant G. Wood of
the Royal Sussex Regiment, and formerly a member of Hove Fire
Brigade, had been decorated for bravery. He was awarded the DCM for
conspicuous gallantry by leading his bombing party across open ground
under heavy machine-gun fire to capture an enemy trench.
Strangely enough, his name does not appear under
‘Distinctions’ in Hove’s Roll of Honour – perhaps the
authorities did not deem him to be a native of Hove.
Out With the Old
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove's steam pumper fire engine on an excercise drill in Wish Park, Aldrington |
In February 1920 it was decided to dispose of the old steam fire engine because there was considerable difficulty in arranging for horses to be present, and besides the motor fire engine could reach any part of the town within a short space of time.
By June 1920 the brigade had their eye on
acquiring a motor fire tender from Messrs Dennis Brothers of
Guildford. At that time, escapes had to be drawn by hand to the scene
of a fire, whereas a motor fire tender would be able to carry it. The
only drawback was the cost of £1,360. When the new vehicle did
finally arrive at Hove it was given the quaint name of ‘First Aid’.
Staff Increase
In 1923 the number of permanent staff was
increased to six men. Perhaps it was the result of there being 33
fires during 1922. In December 1923 the brigade received the welcome
gift of a £5 Christmas box from Messrs Joymanco of Cambridge Grove
‘in recognition of their services, and particularly in regard to
the smart manner in which they dealt with the outbreak on our
premises about this time last season.’
Fire Station at Hove Street
copyright © J.Middleton This image of the Fire Station was sketched in the 1970s |
In 1923 the prospect of building a new fire station began to be considered because of the awkward position of the one in George Street, its small size, plus the fact that the lease was due to expire in 1928. It seems the new site in Hove Street was an accidental bonus for the fire brigade because Hove Council originally only wished to purchase a small strip of land there in order to build a converter and transformer station with which to supply electricity to the residents of Aldrington. However, the land in question belonged to the Vallance Estate whose trustees insisted that the whole site must be purchased for around £1,210. This deal provided enough land to build the sub-station, fire station, living quarters and yard, while the land surplus to requirements was sold off in plots.
Hove councillors had recently been on a visit to
Bromley’s new fire station and had been much impressed, and so they
had some idea of what was necessary.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove The entrance to the Hove Street Fire Station's excercise yard in the 1930s |
The
well known local architects, Clayton & Black, were commissioned
to design the new fire station, which was built by James Barnes &
Sons of 99/100 North Street, Brighton, for £10,497. But the final
cost, including the boundary wall, paving and roadway, brought the
bill up to £11,098-3-9d.
The
work included a 55-ft tower.
The building was (and is) an elegant structure
with two large arched openings for the fire engines, and a charming
bell-cote on the roof that recalled the bell-cote on the roof of Hove Manor. The Mayor of Hove, Councillor H. E. Close, officially opened
the new fire station on 2 June 1926. The names of the architects,
builders, some councillors and the town clerk were recorded on a
large brass plate embellished with the Hove coat-of-arms. This brass
was kept so highly polished that by the 1970s the coat-of-arms was
becoming somewhat blurred.
copyright © J.Middleton These two photographs were taken in September 2019 – note the Hove coat-of-arms above the doorway |
This building was in good use for 50 years and did not close until 1976. Fortunately, the building was not demolished but instead converted into seven flats plus a three-bedroom mews house. Architectural consultant Denis Hawes drew up the plans, and the development was finished by 1981. The flats were priced at £21,500 and the mews house at £69,500.
Today the building goes under the curious name of
Regency House.
The 1920s
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove's motor fire engine in the late 1920s |
At the same time the firemen’s wages were reviewed. It was decided that in lieu of the provision of fuel, an allowance of 1/- a week would be made to each of the married men – namely Coombes, Dumbrell and Lovell.
It appears that Chief Officer Dumbrell only
received pay for attending fires and drill, which in 1925 amounted to
£25. It was therefore proposed to pay him a retaining fee of £70 a
year.
Under the Fire Brigade Act of 1925 professional
firemen were entitled to retire and receive a pension after 25 years
of service at the age of 55. A deduction of 5 per cent was made from
the men’s wages, while Hove Council placed an equal amount in a
special fund.
The Gamewall fire alarm system was in operation at
Hove with bollard-style posts being installed at various locations.
Unfortunately, the posts proved to be an irresistible attraction to
certain sections of the community with the result that there was a
high number of false alarms, particularly in 1925. The watch
committee debated over whether or not to install glass panels in the
fire alarm boxes. But Dumbrell came up with another solution. This
was to despatch only one vehicle – namely the ‘First Aid’ - to
a reported fire plus the permanent firemen between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.
and if it was a genuine fire, then the volunteer section on the motor
pump could follow. But after 6 p.m. volunteers would be called out
with both vehicles.
In
December 1927 Chief Officer Dumbrell told Hove Council that six
professional firemen were no longer enough and he requested that two
more men should be added to their ranks. He stated that one man was
on leave every day, and another was on watch-room duty, which left
just four men to attend a fire with two vehicles. The watch committee
decided that one extra man was quite enough, and he would be given
quarters in the fire station and receive wages of £2-10s
a
week.
In
February 1928 it was decided to purchase some specialist equipment
from Messrs Siebe Gorman & Co for £52-7-6d.
This equipment consisted of two gas-masks fitted with automatic
reducing valves, spare oxygen cylinders, and oxygen resuscitating
apparatus.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Captain A. W. Hillman of Portslade Fire Brigade (centre) with Hove's Fire Chief Officer Dumbrell (right) at Hove Fire Station in 1937 |
A Test
In 1936 there were some criticisms concerning the
efficiency of Hove Fire Brigade. Councillor Captain Wales decided
that a practical demonstration was the answer to such comments.
Consequently, the Chief Constable William Hillier went to a public
telephone box at the top of Shirley Drive. In less than four seconds
he was through to the Fire Brigade, and in precisely four minutes and
seventeen seconds there was a fire engine on the spot. At this point
of Hillier’s narrative, there was a round of applause in the
council chamber.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Hove Fire Brigade anti gas fire drill. 11th September 1937
|
Second World War
In 1941 all fire brigades in the entire country
were nationalised; Hove became part of Fire Force 31 ‘A’
Division. The peace-time number of firemen was increased by
auxiliaries, and an auxiliary fire station was set up on the
sea-front opposite St Catherine’s Lodge.
Post War
On 1 April 1948 Sussex County Fire Authority took
over control. At the time Hove Fire Station had the following
vehicles:
One pump escape (dating from 1920)
One pump escape (dating from 1937)
One self-propelled pump (dating from 1929)
One 60-ft turntable ladder (dating from 1944)
One Austin towing vehicle (dating from 1942)
Fire Station at English Close
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove's new Fire Station in English Close under construction in the 1970s |
After 50 years in Hove Street the fire station was
closed in 1976. A new one was built in English Close, and cost
£421,620 – it became operational on 6 October 1976.
In 1979 some 50 men were based there with three
appliances:
One pump escape
One water tender
One foam tender
By October 2001 there were 61 fire-fighters based
at English Close (59 men and 2 women) with the following equipment:
One extended rescue pump
One water tender ladder
One aerial ladder platform
It was designated as Station 2
In 2019 the establishment was known as the Hove
Community Fire Station with the personnel employed being described as
‘wholetime’ rather than the more familiar ‘full-time’. The
station is open 24 hours, seven days a week, The equipment is as
follows:
One extended rescue pump
One high-volume pump
George Hammond
George
Hammond joined Hove Fire Brigade in 1965, and rose through the ranks
until he became the Operations Commander of East Sussex Fire Brigade.
His original ambition was to join the police but in those days there
was a height stipulation and he was just half-an-inch too short to be
accepted. Hammond was present at major incidents such as the
devastating fire at Hove Town Hall in January1966, and the occasion
when the IRA detonated a bomb at the Grand
Hotel on 12
October 1984.
In
November 2001 Hammond received the Queen’s Fire Service after 37
years of service.
Officers in Charge of Hove Fire Brigade
1879
– Superintendent Thomas Pedlar
1879
– Stationmaster Wilcox
1898-1902
– Chief Officer Coombes
1902-1942
– Chief Officer Owen Dumbrell
1942-1951
– Station Officer Harry Dumbrell
1951-1959
– Station Officer Charles Graham
1960-1966
– Station Officer Eric Lulham
1966-1969
– Assistant Divisional Officer William Holliday
1969-1971
– Station Officer Michael Turner
1971-1973
– Station Officer Walter Rigby
1973-1974
– Station Officer Robert Duplock
1974-1975
– Station Officer Malcolm Graham
1975-1977
– Station Officer Roger Smith
1977-1979
– Station Officer Frederick Sydney Simmons
1979-1988
– Station Officer Gerald Binstead
1988-1989
– Station Officer Lewis Laws
1989-1993
– Station Officer Colin Findlay
1993-1994
– Station Officer Michael Rogers
1995-2001
– Station Officer Alan Nicolls
2001
– Station Officer Graham Gray
Hove Fire Engines and Appliances
1879
– A fire escape was purchased from Shand, Mason & Co for
£66-10s.
1889
– A patent telescopic fire escape plus fittings was purchased from
Rose, Bray & Co for £88-7-6d.
A
month later, and from the same firm, a London Brigade hand-pump
costing £1-15s
arrived
at Hove.
In November 1889 the Chief Constable was
authorised to spend a sum of money not exceeding £20 in acquiring a
canvas hose and other articles.
It is interesting to note that the two-wheeled
escape was mounted on two large wheels and was manhandled to the
scene of the fire. When not in use there was nowhere to store it, and
so it rested against the east side of Hove Town Hall. It remained
there until 1915 when councillors decided it was too old to repair
and ought to be sold off.
1890
– A Kingston fire escape and hose cart to be purchased at a cost
not exceeding £35.
1896
– Two hose-reels, 800-ft of canvas hose, plus some tools were
purchased for £60-16s
from
J. Gibb & Co of 99 Fenchurch Street, London.
1897
– 1,000-ft of canvas hose to be purchased at a cost not exceeding
£35.
1898
–
The fire escape, which was kept at the fire station, was improved and
put in order by Rose & Co at a cost not exceeding £12.
1899
– The following items were purchased from Shand, Mason & Co:
1,000-ft of canvas hose, not exceeding £35
One
horse curricle 55-ft fire escape for £81-10s
plus
a brake for £5
Two Rex chemical extinguishers at three guineas
each
30
hose wrenches and sockets for 3/6d
each
3 breeching pieces for 40/- each
3 branch pipes for 45/- each
1900
– A set of harness was purchased for use with the new fire escape
was purchased at an estimated cost of £8-2-6d.
McGregor & Co of Dundee supplied 1,000-ft of
canvas hose of the same pattern as that supplied to the Metropolitan
Fire Brigade.
Hove Council erected a corrugated iron structure,
20-ft wide by 40-ft in length, at the Sackville Road Depot, in which
to store the fire escape.
copyright © Royal Pavilion & Museum,
Brighton & Hove Brighton & Hove Libraries describe this photograph as 'Hove Fire Brigade assembled in Hove Park for the Coronation Day celebrations on 22 June 1911' |
1913
–
In this year Hove Council purchased a Merryweather Fire Brigade
Petrol Motor Combination for £950, but the vehicle did not arrive at
Hove until February 1914.
1916
– Hove Council advertised the old ‘Fire Manual’ for sale and it
was purchased for £20 by Ditchling Volunteer Fire Brigade.
1920
– The brigade wanted to have the use of a ‘First Aid and Motor
Fire Appliance’. The lowest quote they received was from Dennis
Brothers of Guildford. This fire tender would accommodate 1,500-ft of
hose, and would seat four firemen on either side, with the driver and
officer in the front. It was fitted with a 40-gallon tank, a
hydraulic hose-reel, 120-ft hose with couplings and branch pipe
hydrant. The engine was the vertical type with four cylinders
developing 45 BHP.
copyright © P. Prior The arrival of the new fire engine at Hove on 23 September 1923 |
At the time the ‘Brigade has to rely solely upon
a Motor Pump and in the case of a breakdown of this machine or in the
event of two fires occurring at the same time, there is only a
hand-cart to fall back on.’
The old horse-drawn steam fire engine was
advertised for sale but the only offer came from Shand & Co, and
it was agreed that they should purchase it for £125. The following
items were also put up for sale:
One Shand Mason 55-ft fire escape (drawn by one
horse)
One pair of Stuart & Moore’s horse collars
One set of brown harness
One pair of collars
Three hose-reels
Shand Mason purchased the fire escape for £20,
and the three hose-reels for £10.
1921
–
The watch committee approved the purchase of a 300-ft canvas hose for
£154-14s
from
McGregor & Co of Dundee.
1927
– The Chief Officer considered that one fire pump was not enough,
and so it was decided to fix a turbine pump to the Dennis ‘First
Aid Machine’. Dennis Brothers then agreed to fix one 300-350 gallon
turbine pump with a 24-ft suction pipe, copper suction strainer,
three-way collecting head, and a direct suction adaptor plus other
refinements for £315.
1927
– A new pump escape was purchased.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove Fire Brigade in the 1930s |
1942
– An Austin towing vehicle was added.
1944
– A Home Office pattern 60-ft turntable ladder was purchased.
1977
– A
hydraulic platform was brought to Hove especially to deal with fires
breaking out in high-rise flats.
1995
– Hove Council purchased at auction a vintage fire engine – with
the assistance of the Science Museum – for £10,000. This vehicle
served Hove from 1923 to 1952, and during the Second World War it
served with the National Fire Service. In more recent times it was
owned by Flambards Village Theme Park in Cornwall. It was stated that
the fire engine had been acquired for Hove Museum, but would remain
for safe keeping at the fire station.
copyright © K. D. Towner The Dennis Fire Appliance restored to its full glory |
2001
The
following vehicles and appliances were located at the Fire Station in
English Close:
One extended pump rescue R741FYS
One water tender ladder J976FWV, which attends all
one-pump call-outs
One aerial ladder with a reach of 32 Metres
R778FWV. It entered service in November 1977 and is a Volvo FL10 /
Bronto HDT 32 / Angloco Aerial Ladder Platform. It replaced the
ageing ERF / Simmon SS263 hydraulic platform.
One multi-purpose appliance with equipment capable
of cutting, lifting, crushing and spreading. It can carry 1,800
litres of water, and the pump can deliver 2,250 litres per minute.
See also Portslade Fire Brigade
copyright © J.Middleton Georgie’s Cafe/Coffee Shop now occupy the Fire Station building. At the top of the building the former Hove Borough Council's coat of arms can still be seen. |
See also Portslade Fire Brigade
Sources
Argus
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Hove Council Minute Books
Hove Echo
Hove Gazette
Sussex Daily News
The Keep
DO/A1/2 – Hove Commissioners Minutes January 1874 to August 1881
DO/A1/3 – Hove Commissioners Minutes September
1881 to September 1888
DO/A1/8 – Hove Police Commissioners 1850s
Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
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