St. Louis Fire Department
File:St. Louis Fire Department Logo.png | |
"Justifiably Proud" | |
Operational area | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
State | Missouri |
City | St. Louis |
Agency overview[1][2] | |
Established | September 14, 1857 |
Annual calls | 63,388 fire 78,000 ems (2014) |
Employees | 776 (2015)
|
Annual budget | $57,468,076 (2015) |
Staffing | Career |
Commissioner | Dennis Jenkerson |
IAFF | 73 |
Facilities and equipment[3] | |
Battalions | 8 |
Stations | 30 |
Engines | 9 |
Trucks | 22 |
Tillers | 0 |
Squads | 2 |
Ambulances | 12 |
HAZMAT | 3 |
Fireboats | 4 |
Rescue boats | 2 |
Website | |
Official website | |
IAFF website |
The St. Louis Fire Department(STLFD) provides fire protection and emergency medical services to the city of St. Louis, Missouri. The department is also the second oldest paid fire department in the United States.[4][5] The STLFD is responsible for 62.5 square miles (162 km2) and has a population of approximately 321,000 with a daytime population over 1 million and with events going on.[1] The department is a division of the St. Louis Department of Public Safety.
Contents
Departmental History
The first organized fire department in St. Louis was created in 1822, had several volunteer fire department in the area. An ordinance was passed to purchase the equipment, which primarily consisted of leather buckets. When the alarm sounded, members of the department would fetch their bucket and rush to scene.[6] On September 14, 1857 the department transitioned to an all paid department. St. Louis Fire Department is the second oldest fire department, only second to Cincinnati. [7]
Ranks of the STLFD
Title | Insignia (shirt collar) | Insignia (dress jacket) |
---|---|---|
Fire Commissioner | 5 Gold Bugles / 5 arm sleeve bands | |
Chief of Fire Operations / Chief of EMS Operations / Chief of Training / Chief of Fire Prevention | 4 Gold Bugles / 4 arm sleeve bands | |
Assistant Chief / EMS Assistant Chief | 4 Gold Bugles / 4 arm sleeve bands | |
Deputy Assistant Chief/ EMS Deputy Assistant Chief | 4 Gold Bugles / 3 arm sleeve bands | |
Division Chief (Division Commander) / EMS Division Chief/Senior Chaplain | 3 Gold Bugles / 2 arm sleeve bands | |
Deputy Chief / EMS Deputy Chief (Deputy Commander to Division Chief or citywide EMS shift supervisor)/Department Chaplain | 3 Gold Bugles / 2 arm sleeve bands | |
Battalion Chief (Battalion Commander) | 2 Gold Crossed Bugles / 1 arm sleeve band | |
Battalion Chief | 2 Gold Crossed Bugles / 1 arm sleeve band | |
Captain (Company Commanding Officer, and commanding officer of the firehouse if assigned to an Engine or a Rescue company) / EMS Captain (EMS Station commanding officer or EMS Division shift supervisor) | 2 Silver Parallel Bugles* / 2 arm sleeve bands | |
Lieutenant (Company Officer) / EMS Lieutenant (shift supervisor, desk or conditions) | 1 Silver Bugles* / 1 arm sleeve band | |
Firefighter (5th through 1st Class, one class being achieved for each year of service after probation up to five years) / EMT / Paramedic | ||
Probationary Firefighter (often referred to as "Probie", as slang for probationary fire fighter) / Provisional EMT / Provisional Paramedic |
- Note: In place of Bugle(s) Captains and Lieutenants assigned to: Ladder Companies are signified by axe(s), Rescue Companies by Life gun(s), Squad Companies by crossed Ladder(s) and Stacked Tip Nozzle(s) and Marine Companies by Bugle(s) with Anchor.
Fireboats
As of 2013 there are four small fireboats operated in St. Louis.[8] The largest two are named.[9][10] The 27 feet (8.2 m) Jack Buck was commissioned in 2003 and the 44 feet (13 m) Stan Musial in 2013.
Stations and apparatus
As of May 2015[update], below is a complete listing of all Fire Station and Apparatus Locations in the city of St. Louis according to Battalion District.[11][12]
Notable Incidents
Great Fire of 1849
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On May 17 at 9:00 p.m. an enormous fire broke out in the heart of St. Louis.[13] A steamboat named "The White Cloud" sitting on Cherry Street was on fire. The Fire Department, which at that time consisted of 9 hand engines and hose reels, responded to the scene. The moorings holding the boat broke and the steamer floated down stream setting 22 other steamers on fire as it went.[13]
The flames leaped from building to building sweeping everything on the levee for four blocks.[13] The Firemen, after fighting for over eight hours, were completely exhausted. The entire business portion of the city appeared lost. In a last ditch effort to save the city, six buildings were spread with explosive powder and blown up. When the fire was finally contained after 11 hours, 430 buildings were destroyed, 23 steamboats along with over a dozen other boats were lost and 3 people had died including a Fire Captain.[13]
References
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- ↑ https://stlouis-mo.gov/government/departments/public-safety/fire/
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- ↑ https://stlouis-mo.gov/government/departments/public-safety/fire/firehouse-locations.cfm
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