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diff --git a/26440.txt b/26440.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e578b58 --- /dev/null +++ b/26440.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6816 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Fire Prevention and Fire Extinction, by James Braidwood + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Fire Prevention and Fire Extinction + +Author: James Braidwood + +Release Date: August 27, 2008 [EBook #26440] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIRE PREVENTION AND FIRE *** + + + + +Produced by Bryan Ness, Diane Monico, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: Jas. Braidwood] + + + + +FIRE PREVENTION + +AND + +FIRE EXTINCTION. + + +BY + +JAMES BRAIDWOOD, + +FIRST SUPERINTENDENT OF THE LONDON FIRE-BRIGADE, AND ASSOCIATE OF +THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS. + + +INCLUDING + +FIRE-PROOF STRUCTURES, FIRE-PROOF SAFES, PUBLIC FIRE BRIGADES, PRIVATE +MEANS FOR SUPPRESSING FIRES, FIRE-ENGINES, FIRE ANNIHILATORS, +PORTABLE FIRE-ESCAPES, WATER SUPPLY + +WITH ILLUSTRATIONS, MEMOIR, AND PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR. + + +LONDON: +BELL AND DALDY, 186, FLEET STREET. +1866. + +[_The right of Translation is reserved._] + + + + +CONTENTS. + + +MEMOIR. + PAGE + +Introductory, Early Fires, Fire Engines, and Fire Brigades 5 + +Mr. Braidwood's birth and education 7 + +Great Fire of Edinburgh, and appointment as head of Brigade 8 + +Award of Silver Medal of Society of Arts, London; publication +of work on Fire Engines 11 + +Formation of London Fire Brigade; appointment as Superintendent 13 + +Testimonials received upon leaving Edinburgh 14 + +London residence and routine of duty 16 + +Valuable services of the Royal Society for the Protection of +Life from Fire 17 + +Statistics of Fires; improvement of Fire Engines 18 + +Introduction of ladders, hose reel, and hand pump 19 + +Floating Fire Engines, hand worked and steam; Land Steam +Fire Engine 20 + +Inspection of Government Dockyards and Public Buildings; +establishment of a standard hose coupling 21 + +Admitted an Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers; +award of Telford Medal; endeavours to restrain the erection +of immoderate-sized warehouses 22 + +His opinion as to the inadequacy of London Fire Brigade; +Great Tooley Street Fire 23 + +Death of Mr. Braidwood 24 + +Public funeral 25 + +Public and private character 28 + +World-wide esteem in which he was held 30 + +Poem--A True Hero 32 + + +FIRE PREVENTION, INCLUDING FIREPROOF STRUCTURES--CAUSES OF FIRES. + + +Inattention in the use of fires and lights 33 + +Advantages of a legal inquiry into the cause of Fires 37 + +Improper construction of buildings 37 + +Acts of Parliament for buildings in London 39 + +Results of improper construction of warehouses in Liverpool 41 + +Arrangements for the safety of the audience in theatres 42 + +Danger from furnaces and close fires 43 + +Danger from pipes conveying products of combustion 44 + +Spontaneous ignition; use of gas 45 + +Incendiarism; monomania 46 + + +FIREPROOF STRUCTURES. + + +What is fireproof construction 47 + +Use of cast and wrought-iron 49 + +Mr. Fairbairn's experiments 50 + +Danger to life from use of cast-iron columns 54 + +Report on warehouses 55 + +Covering timber with iron 56 + +Fireproof dwelling-houses 57 + +Fireproof safes 58 + + +FIRE EXTINCTION, INCLUDING FIRE BRIGADES, FIRE +ENGINES, AND WATER SUPPLY--FIRE BRIGADES. + + +Individual exertions for Fire Extinction 59 + +Fire Brigades on the Continent of Europe, in England, in America 66 + +Necessity for the control of arrangements by one individual 67 + +Proposal for a national system 68 + +Fire Engines at noblemen's and gentlemen's residences 70 + +Training and discipline of Firemen 71 + +General instructions for Firemen, and for the use of Fire Engines 72 + +Necessity for the water striking the burning materials 74 + +Inventions for elevating branch pipes considered 76 + + +LONDON FIRE BRIGADE. + + +General description of men and engines 79 + +Division of London into districts 81 + +General regulations 82 + +Conditions of entrance into the establishment 83 + +Outline of general duty 85 + +Duties of Superintendent 88 + + " Foremen 90 + + " Engineers 93 + + " Sub-Engineers and Firemen 94 + + +EDINBURGH FIRE BRIGADE. + + +Description of men selected 96 + +Mode of communicating with Firemen at a Fire 97 + +Dress and drill of Firemen 99 + +Gymnastic exercises 104 + +General regulations 106 + +Duties of Police 107 + + " Superintendent of Brigade 109 + + " Head Enginemen 110 + + " Firemen, and High Constables 111 + + " Magistrates, and Gas-Light Companies 113 + +Special regulations for Firemen 114 + +Means of escape from Fire 118 + + +FIRE ENGINES. + + +The application of manual power 123 + +Engines used by the British Government 124 + +Description of Brigade Fire Engine 126 + +Hand Pump; keeping Fire Engines in order 130 + +Selection of Engine House 132 + +Apparatus provided with London Brigade Engine 133 + +Leather hose 134 + +Hose couplings 140 + +Suction pipes 143 + +Jet pipes, proper shape 145 + +Fire annihilator 149 + + +WATER SUPPLY. + + +By pressure, from surface of ground, and by sunk tanks 150 + +Experiments with jets under a constant pressure 153 + +Fire plug used in London 155 + +Canvas cistern and stand-cock used with fire plug 156 + +Double fire-cock used in the Government Dockyards 158 + +Double hollow key fire-cock used in the British Museum 159 + +Supply by Water Companies in London 162 + +Supplying Fire Engines from fire-cocks, &c. 163 + + +APPENDIX. + + +Steam Fire Engines, progress in construction 166 + +Trials before the Jury of the International Exhibition, 1862 168 + +Trials at the International Competition, London, 1863 173 + +Steam Fire Engines in use by Metropolitan Brigade, May, 1866 181 + +Act of Parliament for Metropolitan Fire Brigade 182 + +Establishment of Metropolitan Fire Brigade 197 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + + + PAGE + +Portrait of Mr. Braidwood on steel by Jeens, +from a photograph by Williams Frontispiece. + +Longitudinal section of Brigade Fire Engine 124 + +Transverse section of ditto 125 + +Old coupling for hose 140 + +New ditto, ditto 141 + +Branch and jet pipe 145 + +Opening in sunk tank for suction pipe 151 + +Fire plug used in London 155 + +Fire plug with canvas cistern 156 + +Fire plug with stand-cock 157 + +Single fire-cock 158 + +Double fire-cock used at dockyards 158 + +Double fire-cock used at British Museum 159 + + + + +EDITOR'S PREFACE. + + +The appearance at the beginning of last year, in the Annual Report of +the Institution of Civil Engineers for 1861 and 1862, of a short +memoir of Mr. Braidwood, suggested the publication of a more extended +account of the life of the late head of the London Fire Brigade, +combined with his opinions upon the subject of his profession. + +These opinions are comprised in a work on "Fire Engines, and the +Training of Firemen," published in Edinburgh in 1830; two papers upon +cognate subjects read before the Institution of Civil Engineers, two +similar papers read before the Society of Arts, and in a variety of +reports upon public buildings, warehouses, &c. While regretting the +great loss that the public has sustained, in being deprived by Mr. +Braidwood's sudden death of a complete record of his long and varied +London experience, it has been considered advisable to republish the +above materials arranged in a systematic form, omitting only such +parts as the Author's more matured experience rendered desirable, but +confining the whole to his own words. + +LONDON, + + _June, 1866._ + + + + +AUTHOR'S PREFACE + +_To his work "On the Construction of Fire-Engines and Apparatus; the +Training of Firemen; and the Method of Proceeding in cases of Fire," +published in Edinburgh, in 1830._ + + +Not having been able to find any work on Fire-Engines in the English +language, I have been led to publish the following remarks, in the +hope of inducing others to give further information on the subject. + +For the style of the work I make no apology; and as I presume no one +will read it except for the purpose of gaining information, my aim +will be obtained if I shall have succeeded in imparting it, or in +directing the public attention to the advantage which may be derived +from the systematic training of Firemen. + + + + +MEMOIR + +OF + +JAMES BRAIDWOOD. + + +The history of mankind, from the earliest times, has been one of +alternate peace and war with fire. The immeasurable value of its +obedience, and the fearful consequences of its insubordination, have, +in all ages, made its due subjection one of the most important +conditions of even human existence itself. As camps and trading +stations grew into populous cities, the dangers of fire were both +multiplied and aggravated. Its ravages in the ancient capitals of the +world are matters of history; and it is established that something +like organization was extended to the means then employed for +suppressing conflagrations. Even the fire-engine itself, in a +practicable, although imperfect form, was described and illustrated by +a sectional working drawing, by Hero of Alexandria, in a book written +by him more than one hundred years before the Christian era. In its +many translations, from the original Greek into Latin and into modern +tongues, Hero's book, with its remarkable series of drawings, still +occupies a place in the mechanical literature of our own time. But, +although the construction of the fire-engine was thus known two +thousand years ago, we have no actual evidence of its use until within +the last two centuries; and within the whole compass of English +history, at least, we know that nothing like discipline and +organization, in the modern sense of the terms, were introduced into +the management of fire apparatus until a time quite within the +recollection of the middle-aged men of our own day. If there be +anything apparently improbable in this fact, we need only recollect +that many of the grandest triumphs of human genius, with which we are +already so familiar, are not yet forty years old. The modern system of +English fire brigades belongs wholly to the period of railways, steam +navigation, and electric telegraphs, and it owes nearly all to the +genius and disciplined heroism of a single individual, James +Braidwood, who, but little more than four years ago, fell--as nobly +for himself as sadly for others--at his chosen post of duty. What, +when he first gave his energies--indeed, his whole heart to it, was +but the rough and unskilful employment of the fireman, became under +Mr. Braidwood's command and his infusing spirit of order and +intelligence, as distinguished from reckless daring, a noble pursuit, +almost rising in dignity to a profession, and indeed acknowledged as +such by many, and significantly, although indirectly, by Royalty +itself. + +Until the year 1833, not only the parish engines of the metropolis, +numbering, as they did, about three hundred, but the engines also of +the Fire Insurance Companies, were comparatively inefficient and often +out of order, while they were also under the most diverse, if not +irresponsible management. There were no really trained firemen, and +those who controlled and worked the engines were oftener in antagonism +with each other than acting in concert. The parish engines were in the +care of the beadles, and in one case a beadle's widow, Mrs. Smith, for +some years commanded one of the city engines. The energies of each +band of firemen were commonly reserved for the protection of property +only in which their own insurance company or parish was immediately +interested. As a rule, whatever water was thrown upon a burning +building was dashed against the walls, windows, and roof from the +outside only, very little if any really reaching the actual seat of +the fire within. As a consequence, fires, which are now quickly "got +under," were then left to burn themselves out, the spreading of the +fire being prevented either by deluging the contiguous buildings with +water, or by pulling them down altogether. + +James Braidwood was born in Edinburgh in the year 1800. His father was +a well-known upholsterer and builder, who appears to have chosen for +his son the profession of a surveyor. To this end he was entered at +the High School, then under the rectorship of Mr. (afterwards +Professor) Pillans, and here, and subsequently under private masters, +the youth received a sound education in the branches most appropriate +to his intended pursuit in life. He was for some time engaged in his +father's business, and thereby gained an amount of practical +knowledge, which was of, perhaps, as much service to him in his +subsequent career as a fireman, as it would have been had he adopted +the profession originally chosen for him. Young Braidwood was an apt +student, a fact, perhaps, sufficiently attested afterwards by his +successful authorship, at the age of thirty, of the only English work +then extant upon the fire-engine and its proper management. He read +much, wrote well, was a good draughtsman, and had a sound knowledge of +mechanics. But whether his powers required wider scope than a +surveyor's practice could offer, or whether, more than forty years +ago, and in Edinburgh, the chances of professional success were very +much less than now, James Braidwood soon turned his mind to what +became the great work of his life. He was becoming known for activity +and a high order of personal courage, and there were those in place +and power who saw in him the other elements of character which go to +make a successful leader of men. He was soon, and when but +twenty-three years of age, made the superintendent of the Edinburgh +fire engines, and he almost as soon began to reform their inefficient +and vicious system of management. He had held his post but three +weeks, however, when the series of fires broke forth which still bear +the name of the Great Fire of Edinburgh. Many of the old and lofty +houses in the High Street were destroyed, between four and five +hundred families were made houseless, ten persons were either killed +outright or fatally injured, and for several days nearly the whole of +the High Street, if not the larger part of the old town, was +threatened with destruction. Never were the consequences of want of +organization more conspicuous. There was no real command, for there +were none to obey; and while those who might have stopped the flames +at the outset, wasted their own energies in random efforts, or, +perhaps, fell to quarrelling among themselves, the fearful devastation +rolled on. The occasion was sufficient to induce the authorities and +insurance companies to listen to and profit by Mr. Braidwood's +recommendations. They consented to bear in common the expenses +necessary to organize and maintain an efficient brigade. This was soon +formed of picked men, who, although daily engaged in their former +ordinary occupations, were regularly inspected, trained, and exercised +early in one morning of every week. Fires were becoming more and more +numerous year by year; but the influence of the improved system was +soon felt. The men were taught to improve to the utmost the first few +minutes after an alarm was given, and by constant emulation and +discipline, a spirit of wonderful readiness was cultivated in them. +They were trained to seek out and follow up the source of a fire +before it had had time to spread, and to throw the water from the +engines directly upon it, instead of wastefully, if not injuriously +about. The result was, that while out of forty-eight fires which +happened in the first year of the history of the brigade, eleven +proved total losses, and twelve "considerable" losses, the number of +total losses decreased rapidly, year by year, while the whole number +of "calls" was almost as rapidly increasing. Thus in the second year +of the brigade there were eighty "calls," of which seven were total, +and eighteen considerable losses. In the next three years, with from +ninety-four to one hundred and ninety-four "calls" yearly, there was +but one total loss in each year, and but from nine to eighteen +"considerable" losses. + +Mr. Braidwood was meanwhile improving the fire-escapes, and when new +engines were added to the force, he procured better workmanship. By +his personal influence, also, more than by the mere advantage of +official position, Mr. Braidwood secured the constant co-operation of +the police in giving the earliest alarms of fire, and in facilitating +the labours of the firemen when actually on duty. As has just been +shown, the results of method, applied skill, and of a personal +devotion cultivated under the high impulse of immediate public +observation and approval, were soon manifest. To this vast improvement +the _Edinburgh Mercury_, as representing the opinion of the citizens +of the Scottish capital, bore public testimony in its issue of August +14, 1828, when the Fire Brigade of that city had been tested by nearly +five years of constant trial, and with conspicuous success. Referring +to the excellent organization of the establishment, it was remarked +that there were then but few, if any, serious fires in Edinburgh, for +when a fire broke out--and the alarms were as frequent as ever--it was +speedily checked. Said the writer:-- + + "Not only is the apparatus constructed on the best possible + principles, but the whole system of operations has been + changed. The public, however, do not see the same bustle, or + hear the same noise as formerly; and hence they seem + erroneously to conclude that there is nothing done. The fact + is, the spectator sees the preparation for action made, but + he sees no more. Where the strength of the men and the + supply of water used to be wasted, by being thrown against + windows, walls, and roofs, the firemen now seek out the spot + where the danger lies, and creeping on hands and feet into a + chamber full of flame, or smoke, often at the hazard of + suffocation, discover the exact seat of danger; and, by + bringing the water in contact with it, obtain immediate + mastery over the powerful element with which they have to + contend. In this daring and dangerous work men have + occasionally fainted from heat, or dropped down from want of + respiration, in which cases the next person at hand is + always ready to assist his companion, and to release him + from his service of danger." + +In a fire which happened while Mr. Braidwood was at the head of the +Edinburgh Brigade, he won great admiration by bringing out from the +burning building a quantity of gunpowder which was known to be stored +there. He would not ask any of his men to undertake this dangerous +feat, but, amidst the breathless suspense of thousands of spectators, +he coolly searched for and safely carried out, first one, and then a +second, cask of this explosive material. Had the fire reached the +powder, it was known that the worst consequences of the conflagration +would have been immensely increased. + +The fame of the Edinburgh Brigade rapidly spread throughout the +kingdom, and it gradually became regarded as a model to which all +other organizations for the suppression of fires would ultimately be +made to conform. As a response to constant inquiries from a distance, +Mr. Braidwood, in 1829, forwarded to the Society of Arts, London, a +description of his chain-ladder fire-escape. For this invaluable +apparatus, which had already effected a considerable saving of life, +the Society's Silver Medal was awarded, and, accompanying the award, +the Council of the Society extended an invitation to the author to +"give a complete account of his mode of drilling firemen, and +combining the use of fire-escapes with the ordinary fire-engine +service." Responding to this invitation, Mr. Braidwood in the +following year published his work "On the Construction of Fire-Engines +and Apparatus, the Training of Firemen, and the Method of Proceeding +in Cases of Fire." From this work, which may still be regarded as an +authority, extensive extracts have been made in the subsequent +chapters of the present volume, and it need not, therefore, be further +referred to here than to say that it formed a thoroughly original +account of an original system, and that its illustrations, which were +especially clear, were drawn by the author's own hand. This work +attracted much attention from municipal bodies and insurance companies +throughout the kingdom, and more than one official deputation visited +Edinburgh to learn from Mr. Braidwood himself the details of a system +which was already working such important results. In London, +especially, three West India warehouses had been burnt in the year +1829, with a loss of 300,000_l._; and with the extending use of gas, +the increasing frequency of fires, and the conspicuous inefficiency of +the parish engines, and the want of unity of action among the +insurance companies, it was felt that what had answered so well in +Edinburgh would prove still more valuable in the metropolis. The +general estimation in which Mr. Braidwood's services were then held +may be considered as expressed in the following, among other +contemporary reviews of his book:-- + + "The Edinburgh Fire-engine Establishment is now all but + perfect. A unity of system has been accomplished, and a + corps of firemen mustered, who, in point of physical vigour + and moral intrepidity, are all entitled to be denominated + chosen men. At the head of this band stands Mr. Braidwood, + an individual who has on several occasions given abundant + evidence of promptitude in extremity, and a noble contempt + of personal danger, and whose enthusiasm, in what we may + call his profession, could not have been more strikingly + exemplified than by his illustrating it in the manner we now + see before us. It is the only book we are acquainted with + that treats of the systematic training of firemen; and from + the perspicuity of its details, it must necessarily become + the manual of all such institutions, and ought to find a + place in every insurance office in the United Kingdom." + +It had been from time to time attempted to bring the fire apparatus of +the London Insurance Companies under a single management; but it was +nearly ten years after the establishment of the Edinburgh Fire +Brigade, and only when Mr. Braidwood himself had been invited to come +to London, that this was at last effected. As for the parish engines, +they were wholly neglected under this arrangement, and, indeed, a +great number of them had been already allowed to fall into disuse, as +far as could be permitted without incurring the penalties of the +Statutes of 1774. On the 1st January, 1833, at the instance of Mr. +Ford, of the Sun Fire-office, eight of the insurance companies formed +an association of fire-engines and firemen, each company withholding +its own distinctive name and badges from the united force. This was +known as the London Fire-engine Establishment. It was supported by the +companies in common, each in proportion to the premiums received from +its business in London, a minimum rate being fixed. Each company +contributing to the support of the establishment nominated one member +of the committee of management. This association existed for +thirty-three years, when on the 1st of January, 1866, the Metropolitan +Board of Works took charge of the fire-engines and the general fire +establishment of the metropolis. Mr. Braidwood took the command of the +London Brigade thus formed at the onset. The Edinburgh Fire-engine +Committee, on accepting his resignation, presented him with a gold +watch, and a vote of thanks, "for the singularly indefatigable manner +in which he had discharged the duties of his important office, not +merely by his extraordinary exertions on occasions of emergency, but +for the care and attention he had bestowed on the training of the +firemen, whereby the establishment had been brought to its present +high state of efficiency." He had previously received from the men +under him a handsome silver cup, bearing the following +inscription:--"Presented to Mr. James Braidwood, by the City of +Edinburgh Firemen, as a token of their admiration of him as their +leader, and of deep respect for him as a gentleman." + +As in Edinburgh, the London Fire Brigade under Mr. Braidwood's +superintendence became a new force, and in every respect a remarkable +organization. Where the inefficiency of the old firemen could not at +once be made to yield to discipline, they were pensioned off; and +within a short time a select band of active, hardy, and thoroughly +trained men was formed. In 1834, the second year of Mr. Braidwood's +superintendence, the Houses of Parliament were burnt; and a most +destructive fire occurred also at Mile-end. The first-named fire +created general consternation, and there are many persons who can +still recollect that also at Mile-end. These great fires stimulated +Mr. Braidwood to increased exertions, and the result was soon visible +in the lessened proportion of totally destroyed premises to the whole +number of fires. The brigade had, of course, no power of prevention, +and alarms of fire were becoming more numerous than ever. The use of +friction matches and of gas was increasing enormously; manufactures, +and the steam-engines and machinery for conducting them, were being +rapidly multiplied; and with the vast progress making in the +production of cotton goods, the use of cotton curtains and +bed-furniture was becoming common in dwellings forming a large +proportion of the metropolis, but in which, not long before, such +articles were either regarded as luxuries or were altogether unknown. +The total number of fires attended by the brigade in the year 1833, +exclusive of chimneys on fire, was 458, while in 1851 the number had +risen to 928; and although London had been growing all this time, it +had not doubled in size to correspond with the increased number of +fires. But while the total yearly number of fires, since the formation +of the brigade, has shown a large and hardly interrupted increase, the +number of cases of total destruction has almost as steadily +diminished. Thus, "totally destroyed" was reported of 31 fires in the +year 1833, whereas in 1839 there were but 17 cases, and the average +for twenty-one years, from 1833 to 1853 inclusive, was but 25-1/2 +yearly, while at the present time, with all the vast growth of London, +the average, under the continuance of Mr. Braidwood's system, is +hardly if at all greater. + +Mr. Braidwood from the first exhibited excellent judgment in his +choice of men to serve under him. He chose sailors, as a rule, as +being accustomed to obedience, and to irregular and prolonged duty, +while also they were especially hardy and active; and where there was +especial danger which must be met, he was always ready to lead, and +his men had soon learned to confide in his quick and sound judgment in +emergency, knowing that he would never permit them to incur needless +risk. His own iron constitution, and his habits of constant vigilance, +served as a high standard and incentive to those about him; and thus +it was, by selection, discipline, and example, resting upon a +foundation of even paternal kindness, that the men of the London Fire +Brigade became conspicuous for their courage, energy, hardihood, and +unalterable devotion to duty. The brigade, too, was most popular with +the public, and could always count upon any necessary assistance in +their labours. The system of rewards given to whoever was the first to +bring a call of fire, the liberal gratuity to the policeman who first +reached the burning premises, there preventing undue confusion, and by +keeping the street-door closed, shutting off a strong draught of air +from the flames, and the handsome pay to the ready throng of +strong-armed men who worked the engines, secured every co-operation +from the public, beyond that naturally springing from a general +admiration of so brave and well-trained a body of men. + +Mr. Braidwood's residence was at the principal station of the +Fire-engine Establishment in Watling-street. To this station came all +alarms of fire. He attended in person all calls from leading +thoroughfares, public buildings, or localities where a serious +conflagration might be expected. In the night a call was announced to +him through a speaking-tube reaching to his bedside. The gas in his +room was always burning, and he would quickly decide, from the known +locality of the fire, and from the report given, whether he need go +himself. In any case, his men were awake and quickly away. Rapidity in +dressing, and in horseing and mounting the engines, was but a detail +of daily drill. The moment the scene of action was reached, nothing +was allowed to stand in the way of access to the actual seat of the +fire, and nothing either in securing a supply of water. The inmates of +the premises, if any, were quickly got out, and wherever an unhappy +creature was cut off by the flames, there were always one or more +firemen ready, if necessary, to brave an apparently certain death in a +heroic attempt at rescue--an attempt, indeed, which but seldom failed. +It is but just to say here that the firemen were always nobly +seconded, if not indeed anticipated, in these attempts by the officers +and men of the Royal Society for the Protection of Life from Fire--a +body which has long rendered priceless services to humanity under most +appalling circumstances. The men of the Fire Brigade were taught to +prevent, as much as possible, the access of air to the burning +materials. What the open door of the ash pit is to the furnace of a +steam-boiler the open street door is to the house on fire. In both +cases the door gives vital air to the flames. The men of the Brigade +were trained to pursue a fire, not yet under full headway, up-stairs +and down, in at windows and out through the roof, anywhere, so it +could be reached directly by the water from the engines. They were +made to regard it as worse than a waste to throw even a gallon of +water upon a dead wall or upon a surface of slate or plaster, so long +as by any means the branch pipe could be got to bear upon the seat of +the fire itself. The statistics of the operations of the London +Fire-engine Establishment from 1833 to the present time, show with +what success the system originated and so admirably carried out by Mr +Braidwood has been pursued. Of the whole number of fires not one in +fifty now proceeds to the extent of total destruction of the premises. + +Previous to the organization of the Fire-engine Establishment there +were no official annual reports of the fires in the metropolis. No one +person by himself was indeed in a position to know all of the fires +that happened, any more than, but for Lloyds', could we know of all +the wrecks which take place around and upon our coasts. It was +impossible, under such a state of things, that either the value of +insurance to the insured or its risk to the insurer could be rightly +known. The general public could only know that, like fevers and +certain other classes of disease, fires were always breaking out, but +no one could know, even approximately, how great or how little was the +real general risk. When, however, a fire establishment was formed, the +engines were called to all fires, whether of insured or uninsured +property. It was not now difficult to tabulate the number and +localities of fires; but Mr. Braidwood went further, and extended his +yearly tables to include the various causes of fires, and the +classification of the premises, whether residences, shops, warehouses, +manufactories, &c., where they occurred, the subdivision of these +classes being extended to every variety of occupation and business. +Even the hours at which the various fires broke out were carefully +tabulated, and thus the particulars of London fires soon became an +important branch of statistics, from which the operations of insurance +have derived increased certainty, with greater economy to the insured. + +Although regarding the training and discipline of firemen as of the +first importance in the organization of a fire brigade, Mr. Braidwood +gave a large share of attention to the improvement of fire-engines and +their kindred appliances. While in Edinburgh, where the steepness of +many of the streets, and the roughness of the pavements in the older +parts of the town prevented the rapid and easy movement of heavy +engines, he recommended and adopted a lighter description, but in +London he recognised the necessity for greater power. Mr. Tilley, then +a fire-engine maker in the Blackfriars'-road, ably seconded his +efforts, and at length the distinctive type known as the London Fire +Brigade Engine was produced, and which, weighing about eighteen cwt. +when ready for service, would throw eighty-eight gallons of water per +minute, and, in short trials, as much as 120 gallons in the same time. +This engine was mounted upon springs, and in strength and ease of +working presented a marked improvement upon those which had preceded +it. Its ordinary working complement of men was twenty-eight, and +larger engines, upon the same general design, have since been made, to +be worked by from forty-five to sixty men. The steam fire-engine has +already, to a certain extent, superseded the brigade engine, but the +latter is still likely, for some time at least, to be preferred for a +large class of fires, both in London and in the provinces. + +Mr. Braidwood at an early date adopted the ordinary military scaling +ladders to the purposes of his brigade, two being placed on each +engine, and at his recommendation ladders were also placed on a +two-wheeled carriage as a convenient fire-escape. He also induced the +Admiralty, in 1841, to adopt hose-reels in the various dockyards, +these implements having been previously in successful use in New York. +In 1848 he was induced, in consequence of the large number of small +fires to which his engines were called out, to adopt a small hand-pump +as an auxiliary to the fire-engine. This could be rapidly brought to +bear, and although worked by but one man, the value of a small +quantity of water thrown directly upon the seat of a small fire was +found to be greater than that of perhaps twenty times as much when +thrown about in the ordinary manner. It was of great importance also +in warehouses stored with valuable goods, to throw the least necessary +quantity of water upon a fire. These hand-pumps still form an +important part of the present apparatus of the brigade, and they have +been widely adopted elsewhere. + +London, unlike Edinburgh, has a vast water-side property, always +exposed to danger from fire. Almost immediately, therefore, after +having taken the command of the London Brigade, Mr. Braidwood directed +his attention to the construction of improved floating fire-engines, +to be moored in the river, where they would be always available for +the protection of wharf property. Two were constructed, one being a +machine of great power, with pumps made to be worked by 120 men. These +machines proved of great value. In 1852, shortly after the memorable +fire at Humphrey's warehouses, he persuaded the Fire-engine Committee +to allow one of these engines to be altered so as to work by steam, +and in 1855 a large self-propelling floating steam fire-engine was +made upon a novel construction, and which, having already rendered +great service at fires on the river side, still ranks as the most +powerful machine in the service of the brigade. With locomotive +boilers and large double steam engines, this float can steam nine +miles an hour, and when in place at a fire it can throw four streams +of water, each from a jet-pipe of 1-1/2 inch in diameter, to a great +distance. In the great fire of 1861, this floating engine was worked +with but little intermission for upwards of a fortnight. In 1860 Mr. +Braidwood obtained the sanction of the Fire-engine Committee for the +introduction of a land steam fire-engine, and although he did not live +to witness the present remarkable development of these machines, he +was enabled to employ the first one in the brigade with much +advantage. + +We may quote here from a brief but excellent memoir of Mr. Braidwood, +which appeared in the annual report of the Institution of Civil +Engineers for 1861: + + "As early as 1841, the Government began to profit by his + experience, the Lords of the Admiralty having in that year + consulted him on the subject of floating fire-engines for + the various dockyards. These were eventually constructed + from his designs and under his superintendence. In the + following year he inspected all the dockyards, and reported + fully on each, with regard to both floating and land + fire-engines, the supply of water, the alterations of + buildings to prevent spread of fire, and the proper care + required in dangerous trades. From this time, although not + holding any appointment, he acted as Government consulting + engineer on all questions relating to fire prevention and + extinction, and he advised from time to time the precautions + to be taken for the protection of the royal palaces and + various other public buildings. This position enabled him, + not without a great deal of opposition, to induce the + Government to adopt in all its departments a uniform size of + hose-coupling. This is the one which he introduced in + Edinburgh, and known as the London Fire Brigade coupling, is + now in almost universal use; its application has been found + comparatively of as much utility for fire-brigade purposes, + as the adoption of the Whitworth gauges of screw-bolts for + mechanical engineering. + + "Although so fully occupied, he never refused advice on + professional matters to all who sought it. The various dock + companies, public institutions, country fire brigades, + private firms, &c., benefited largely by his experience. The + numerous inquiries from foreign countries and the colonies + with regard to the best means of extinguishing fires, also + made great inroads on his time. In 1833 he became an + Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers, to which, + in 1844, he contributed a valuable paper 'On the means of + rendering large supplies of Water available in case of Fire, + &c.,' for which he was awarded a Telford Medal; and in 1849 + a second paper 'On Fire-Proof Buildings.' In 1856, a paper + on 'Fires: the best means of preventing and arresting them; + with a few words on Fire-Proof Structures,' was read by him + before the Society of Arts. + + "He took great interest in the passing of Acts of Parliament + for regulating buildings in the metropolis, was consulted by + the framers of these Acts, and used his utmost influence to + prevent the endangering a whole neighbourhood by the + erection of monster warehouses for private profit. He + strongly contended for the principle of dividing buildings + by party-walls carried through the roof, and restricting + these divisions to a moderate cubic content. Writing to Lord + Seymour, Commissioner of Woods and Forests, on the 28th + June, 1851, he said 'that no preparations for contending + with such fires will give anything like the security that + judicious arrangements in the size and construction of + buildings will do.' The wise provisions introduced through + his instrumentality into these Acts of Parliament were + continually being evaded, and clusters of warehouses quickly + rose which he saw would, if on fire, defy all his means of + extinction. In a letter to Sir W. Molesworth, First + Commissioner of Public Works, dated 10th February, 1854, on + the subject of a proposed warehouse in Tooley-street, he + wrote 'The whole building, if once fairly on fire in one + floor, will become such a mass of fire that there is now no + power in London capable of extinguishing it, or even of + restraining its ravages on every side, and on three sides it + will be surrounded by property of immense value.' How + literally this was realized, and at what cost, was shown by + the great warehouse fire in Tooley-street, on the 22nd June, + 1861, at which Mr. Braidwood lost his life." + +The great fire at Cotton's Wharf; Tooley-street, broke out on +Saturday, June 22nd, 1861, and continued to burn for more than a +fortnight, consuming Scovell's, and other large warehouses, and, in +all, upwards of two millions' worth of property. The fire is believed +to have originated in the spontaneous combustion of hemp, of which +upwards of 1000 tons were consumed, together with 3000 tons of sugar, +500 tons of saltpetre, nearly 5000 tons of rice, 18,000 bales of +cotton, 10,000 casks of tallow, 1100 tons of jute, and an immense +quantity of tea, spices, &c., besides many other descriptions of +goods. Although discovered in broad daylight, and before the flames +had made any considerable headway, the want of a ready supply of +water, and the fact that the iron doors in the division walls between +the several warehouses had been left open, taken in connexion with the +extremely combustible nature of the materials, soon rendered hopeless +all chance of saving the buildings and property. Mr. Braidwood was +upon the spot very soon after the alarm had been given, and nearly the +whole available force of the Fire-engine Establishment was summoned at +his command. He appears to have at once foreseen that the fire would +be one of no ordinary magnitude, and that the utmost that could be +done would be to prevent its extending widely over adjoining property. +The floating fire-engines had been got to bear upon the flames, and +the men in charge of the branch pipes were, after two hours' work, +already suffering greatly from the intense heat, when their chief went +to them to give them a word of encouragement. Several minor +explosions, as of casks of tallow or of oil, had been heard, but as it +was understood that the saltpetre stored at the wharf was in buildings +not yet alight, no alarm was then felt as to the walls falling in. At +the moment, however, while Mr. Braidwood was discharging this his last +act of kindness to his men, a loud report was heard, and the lofty +wall behind him toppled and fell, burying him in the ruins. Those of +his men who were near him had barely time to escape, and one person at +his side, not a fireman, was overwhelmed with him. From the moment +when the wall was seen to fall, it was known that whoever was beneath +it had been instantly crushed to death. It is needless, and it would, +indeed, be out of place, to describe here the further progress of the +fire, which had then but fairly begun, and which was still burning +more than a fortnight afterwards. + +Great as was the general consternation at so terrible a conflagration, +it is doubtful if the public were not still more impressed by the +dreadful death of Mr. Braidwood, and by a feeling that his loss was a +public misfortune. Her Majesty the Queen, with that ready sympathy +which she has ever shown for crushed or suffering heroism, commanded +the Earl of Stamford to inquire on the spot, on Monday, whether the +body had yet been recovered by the firemen, and Her Majesty's +sympathies were also conveyed to Mrs. Braidwood. It was not, however, +until the following morning, that after almost constant exertions, +under the greatest difficulties, the crushed remains were rescued. An +inquest was necessary, not merely to ascertain what was already well +known, that death had been instantly caused by accident, but to know +whether culpable carelessness of any kind had indirectly led to the +sorrowful event. None, however, appeared. The remains of the fallen +chief were afterwards borne to his late residence in Watling-street. +The members of the committee of the London Fire-engine Establishment, +formed of representatives from all of the twenty-five insurance +companies of London, had already met to express, by a formal +resolution, their sincere condolence with Mrs. Braidwood and her +family. It was known that the funeral would take place on Saturday, +June 29th, and it was widely felt that a general expression of sorrow +and respect should be made, in view of the common loss of so valued a +public servant, as well as for the noble qualities for which he had +been so long and so well known. On the occasion of the funeral this +was shown not more by the great length and marked character of the +_cortege_ itself than by the general suspension of business in the +leading thoroughfares of the city through which it passed, and by the +hushed demeanour of the countless multitude who pressed closely upon +the procession throughout its entire course. Among the thousands who +sadly led the way to the grave were the London Rifle Brigade, about +700 strong (and of which Mr. Braidwood's three sons were members), the +Seventh Tower-Hamlets, and other rifle corps, upwards of 1000 +constables of the metropolitan police force, besides nearly 400 +members of the city police, the superintendents and men of the various +water companies, the secretary and conductors and the band of the +Royal Society for the Protection of Life from Fire, a large number of +private and local fire-brigades, and the members of the London +Fire-engine Establishment. The pall-bearers were six of Mr. +Braidwood's engineers and foremen, some of whom were at his side when +he fell, and who had barely escaped with their own lives. Following +the chief mourners were the Duke of Sutherland, the Earl of Caithness, +the Rev. Dr. Cumming, and a large number of relatives and friends of +the deceased, and the committee of the London Fire-engine +establishment. The procession was nearly one mile and a-half in +length, and was about three hours in its progress from Watling-street +to Abney Park Cemetery, where the solemn service of the dead was +conducted by the Rev. Dr. Cumming, of whose congregation the deceased +had long been a member. With the exception of the great bell of St. +Paul's, which tolls only on the occasion of the death of a member of +the royal family or of a lord-mayor in office, the bells of all the +churches in the city were booming slowly through the day, and so +evident was the general sorrow that it could be truly said that the +heart of the nation mourned. + +On Thursday, July 4th, a public meeting was held at the Mansion House, +when resolutions were passed for the collection of subscriptions +towards a memorial to Mr. Braidwood's long and arduous public +services. This memorial, it was felt, should take the form of a +permanent provision for his family, for the post of Fire Brigade +Superintendent had never been a lucrative one. Before, however, the +collection of subscriptions had extended beyond a few hundred pounds, +it was made known that the insurance companies had promptly settled +upon Mrs. Braidwood the full "value"--speaking in an insurable +sense--of her husband's life. Mr. Braidwood had for many years +supported two maiden sisters, and the public subscription was applied, +therefore, to the purchase of small annuities for each of them. + +It will be remembered that the London Fire-engine Establishment was +from the first controlled only by the insurance companies, upon whom +of course, fell the whole cost of its maintenance. Their interest in +the suppression of fires, although direct and unmistakeable, was not +the same as that of the public. Thus, it would be to the public +advantage that no fires should happen, whereas such a result would be +fatal to the insurance companies, since no one in that case would +insure. Although the protection of the Establishment was in practice +extended alike to both insured and uninsured property, the real object +for which it was formed and maintained was undoubtedly that of +protecting insured property only. It was the interest of the companies +to incur as little expense as would, on the whole, fairly effect this +purpose, and it was not their interest to effectually protect the +whole of the metropolis from fire. Thus it was that, with all the +excellence of the organization and discipline of the Fire-engine +Establishment, it was greatly inferior in extent to what was requisite +for the proper security of the first city in the world. Mr. Braidwood +had long felt this truth, but, acting for a private association, he +could only go to the extent of the limited resources at his disposal. +It was, more than anything else, the great fire at Cotton's Wharf that +first directed public attention to the necessary insufficiency of any +private establishment for the general suppression of fires, and that +has led to the legislation under which the Fire-engine Establishment +was, on the 1st of January last, taken over and extended by the +Metropolitan Board of Works. London will now, it is hoped, be better +protected from fire, because of the increased extent of the means of +protection; but it can hardly be expected that the discipline of the +brigade will be improved. + +Apart from the public value of Mr. Braidwood's career in increasing +the common security against a common foe, there was much in his +personal, intellectual, and moral qualities worthy of admiration. He +was a man of strong and commanding frame, of inexhaustible energy, and +of enduring vitality. The constitutions of but few men could have +withstood such long continued wear and tear as fell to his. He braved +all weathers, all extremes of heat and cold, could sleep or wake at +will, and could work on long after others would have given way. He was +always at his post, and in no moment of difficulty or danger did his +cool judgment or his steady courage forsake him. It was this, together +with his considerate bearing, and on occasions of special trial his +almost womanly kindness to his men, that inspired them with unlimited +confidence in him and in his plans. Beyond this, he was a man of +superior mind, with strong comprehensive and generalising faculties. +His various published papers, and a correspondence of which but few +could know the extent and importance, as well as his ready, clear, and +exact manner in stating his views before committees and before those +in authority, who so often consulted him, all attest an order of mind +which, in a different sphere, would alone have won distinction for its +possessor. His profession was one in which it happens that almost +every person thinks himself competent to give advice; yet, without any +assumption of authority, Mr. Braidwood could make it felt wherever he +pleased that he was a master in the art of extinguishing fire. But he +was not on this account the less ready to listen to suggestions, and +there are numbers who can bear testimony to the patient, honest, and +appreciative manner in which he considered the many and diverse +propositions submitted to him as the head of the Fire Brigade of the +first city in the world. The soundness of his views and opinions is +sufficiently attested by the success of his practice--a success which, +but for the Government tax upon fire policies, would have long since +made fire insurance in London almost the cheapest of all the forms of +protection of property from danger. The London Brigade was +insignificant in numbers and tame in display when compared with the +eight hundred _sapeurs pompiers_ of Paris, with their parade and all +their accessories of effect--insignificant and tame, too, after the +glittering apparatus, imposing paraphernalia, and deafening clatter of +the "Fire Department" of New York; but Mr. Braidwood's chosen men knew +how to do their duty, and considering the differences in the mode of +building and of heating, and in the extent of lighting in the three +great metropoli just named, it is an easy matter, on reference to +statistics, to prove that none others have done better. + +Above all, Mr. Braidwood was a gentleman of deep Christian feeling; +and those who knew him best had never doubted that, had it been his +lot to linger long in pain, knowing the end that was to come, his calm +but unwavering faith in a better future would have sustained him +through all. Brought up from childhood in the faith of the Scotch +church, he was a regular attendant upon the ministrations of the Rev. +Dr. Cumming. In his own quiet way he did much good in the poorer +districts of London, and he took a special interest in the ragged +schools of the metropolis. What he was in his own home may be best +inferred from the crushing force with which his dreadful yet noble +fate fell upon those who were dearest to him. His family had already +too much reason to know the dangers which had always attended his +career. A step-son had fallen, five years before, in nearly the same +manner, and now lies buried in the same grave. Eleven members, in all, +of the brigade, had perished in the discharge of their duty during the +time Mr. Braidwood had commanded it: a fact which, taken with daily +experience, pointed to other victims to follow. Such consolation, +then, as a stricken widow and a mourning family could have, next to an +abiding faith in the goodness of God, was in the recollection of the +virtues and noble qualities of the husband and father, and in the +spontaneous sorrow with which a great people testified their sense of +his worth and of their common loss. + +To show the universal as well as national esteem in which Mr. +Braidwood was held, two extracts are here given from the numerous +letters of condolence addressed to his bereaved family, from all parts +of the world. Mr. G. H. Allen, Secretary to the Boston (America) Fire +Department, writes: "It gives me pleasure to unite with the Board in +testimony to the extreme kindness of Mr. Braidwood in the conduct of +our correspondence, whereby we have been greatly benefited and +received extensive information. Allow me also to extend our sympathy +to those who have lost one who will ever be remembered as standing at +the head of the most valued arm of the Government, and one that you +can hardly expect to be replaced, except by years of experience and +great natural ability." Mr. T. J. Bown, Superintendent of the Sydney +(Australia) Fire Brigade, in a letter dated 22nd August 1861, says, +"On receipt of the sad news, our large fire-bell was tolled, the +British ensign hoisted half-mast high, and crape attached to the +firemen's uniform, as a token of respect for one of the noblest and +most self-denying men that ever lived, who spent and lost his life in +the service of his fellow-creatures." + + + + +A TRUE HERO. + +JAMES BRAIDWOOD.--_Died, June 22nd, 1861._ + +By the Author of + +"JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN." + + + Not at the battle front,-- + Writ of in story; + Not on the blazing wreck, + Steering to glory; + + Not while in martyr pangs + Soul and flesh sever, + Died he--this Hero new-- + Hero for ever. + + No pomp poetic crown'd, + No forms enchained him, + No friends applauding watched, + No foes arraigned him: + + Death found him there, without + Grandeur or beauty, + Only an honest man + Doing his duty: + + Just a God-fearing man, + Simple and lowly, + Constant at kirk and hearth, + Kindly and holy: + + Death found--and touched him with + Finger in flying:-- + So he rose up complete-- + Hero undying. + + Now, all mourn for him, + Lovingly raise him + Up from his life obscure, + Chronicle, praise him; + + Tell his last act, done midst + Peril appalling, + And the last word of cheer + From his lips falling; + + Follow in multitudes + To his grave's portal; + Leave him there, buried + In honour immortal. + + So many a Hero walks + Daily beside us, + Till comes the supreme stroke + Sent to divide us. + + Then the Lord calls His own,-- + Like this man, even, + Carried, Elijah-like, + Fire-winged, to heaven. + + _Macmillan's Magazine_, Vol. IV., page 294. + + + + +FIRE PREVENTION + +INCLUDING + +FIRE-PROOF STRUCTURES. + + +To prevent fires it is necessary to consider what are the principal +causes of such calamities. These may be classed under several heads:-- + + 1. Inattention in the use of fires and lights. + + 2. Improper construction of buildings, &c. + + 3. Furnaces or close fires for heating buildings, or for + mechanical purposes. + + 4. Spontaneous ignition. + + 5. Incendiarism. + +As almost all fires arise from inattention in one shape or another, it +is of the utmost importance that every master of a house or other +establishment should persevere in rigidly enjoining and enforcing on +those under him, the necessity of observing the utmost possible care +in preventing such calamities, which, in nineteen cases out of twenty, +are the result of remissness or inattention. Indeed, if any one will +for a moment consider the fearful risk of life and property, which is +often incurred from a very slight inattention, the necessity of +vigilance and care will at once be apparent. Immense hazard is +frequently incurred for the most trifling indulgences, and much +property is annually destroyed, and valuable lives often lost, because +a few thoughtless individuals cannot deny themselves the gratification +of reading in bed with a candle beside them. + +Some years ago, upwards of 100,000_l._ were lost, through the partner +of a large establishment lighting gas with a piece of paper, which he +threw away, and thus set fire to the premises, although it was a +strict rule in the place that gas should only be lighted with tapers, +which were provided for that purpose. In one department of a great +public institution, it was, and is still, a rule that only covered +lights should be carried about, and for that purpose four lanterns +were provided; yet, on inquiry some time back, it was found that only +one was entire, the other three being broken--one having lost two +sides and the top; still they were all used as covered lights. + +The opportunities for inattention to fires and lights are so various, +that it is impossible to notice the whole. + +One of the prevailing causes of fire is to be traced to persons +locking their doors, and leaving their houses to the care of children. +I believe one-half of the children whose deaths are occasioned by +accident suffer from this cause alone: indeed, almost every week the +newspapers contain some melancholy confirmation of what I have here +stated. Intoxication is also a disgraceful and frequent cause of fire. +The number of persons burned to death in this way is really +incredible. It is true that it does not always happen that a fire +takes place in the house, in either of the above cases, although the +unfortunate beings whose clothes take fire, rarely escape with their +lives; but the danger to the neighbourhood is at all times +considerable, if persons in a state of inebriety are left in a house +alone. When there is reason to apprehend that any member of a family +will come home at night in that state, some one should always be +appointed to receive him, and on no account to leave him till he is +put to bed, and the light extinguished. + +I do not mean to say that people must be actually drunk before danger +is to be apprehended from them. Indeed, a very slight degree of +inebriety is dangerous, as it always tends to blunt the perception, +and to make a person careless and indifferent. I may also add, that no +inconsiderable number of fires are occasioned by the thoughtless +practice of throwing spirits into the fire. The dresses of females +taking fire adds very much to the list of lives lost by fire, if it +does not exceed all the other causes put together. + +Another very general cause of fire is that of approaching with lighted +candles too near bed or window curtains; these, being generally quite +dry, are, from the way in which they are hung, easily set on fire, +and, as the flames ascend rapidly, when once touched, they are in a +blaze in a moment. + +It is really astonishing to find that, with daily examples before +their eyes, people should persist (whether insured or not seems to +make little difference) in practices which, there is a hundred chances +to one, may involve both themselves and the neighbourhood in one +common ruin. Of this sort are the practices of looking under a bed +with a lighted candle, and placing a screen full of clothes too near +the fire. + +Houses not unfrequently take fire from cinders falling between the +joints of the outer and inner hearths. When smoke is observed to arise +from the floor, the cause should be immediately ascertained, and the +inmates ought on no account to retire to rest while there is the +slightest smell of fire, or any grounds to suspect danger from that +cause. + +Occasional fires are caused by a very absurd method of extinguishing +at night the fires kept in grates during the day. Instead of arranging +the embers in the grate in such a way as to prevent their falling off, +and thus allowing the fire to die out in its proper place, they are +frequently taken off and laid on the hearth, where, should there be +wood-work underneath, it becomes scorched, and the slightest spark +falling through a joint in the stones sets it on fire. + +A very frequent cause of fire in shops and warehouses arises from the +carelessness of the person intrusted to lock them up. It is no +uncommon practice with those to whom this duty is intrusted, to light +themselves out, or to search for any little article which may have +been mislaid, with a lighted paper, and then to throw it carelessly on +the floor, imagining they have taken every necessary precaution, +merely by setting their foot upon it, forgetting that the current of +air occasioned by shutting the door frequently rekindles it, and +produces the most serious consequences. + +In warehouses and manufactories, fires are not unfrequently caused by +the workmen being occasionally kept late at work. By the time their +task is finished, the men are so tired and sleepy, that the +extinguishing of fires and lights is done in a very careless manner. I +recollect an instance of this sort, in which the flames were issuing +from three upper windows, and observed by the neighbours, while the +workmen engaged at their employment in the lower floors knew nothing +of the destruction that was going on above. + +A very serious annual loss is also caused by want of due care in +handing up or removing the goods in linen-drapers' shop windows when +the gas is burning. Flues taking fire often result in mischief and it +is believed that many serious fires have arisen from this cause, which +can hardly be called accidental, as, if flues are properly +constructed, kept moderately clean, and fairly used, they cannot take +fire. + +From what has been said, it will be seen that care and attention may +do a very great deal towards the prevention of fire, and consequent +loss of life. It is very easy to make good rules, and keep them for a +time, after having been alarmed by some serious loss of property or +life, but the difficulty is to maintain constant attention to the +subject. The most evident plan for effecting this seems to be, for the +masters thoroughly to examine and consider the subject at certain +stated periods, not too far apart, and to constantly warn their +domestics, workmen, or others, of the danger of the improper use of +fires and lights. + +One of the greatest preventives of carelessness in the use of fires +and lights would be a legal inquiry in every case, as it would not +only show the faults that had been committed, and thus warn others, +but the idea of being exposed in the newspapers would be another +motive for increased care. This plan has been adopted in New York, and +the reports of the proceedings of Mr. Baker, the "Fire Marshal," show +that the inquiries there made have led to most useful results. Mr. +Payne, the coroner, held inquests on fires in the City of London some +years ago, but the authorities would not allow his expenses, and +therefore they were given up, although believed to be highly +advantageous in explaining accidental and others causes of fire. + +_The improper construction of buildings_ more generally assists the +spread than is the original cause of fires, although laying hearths on +timber, and placing timber too near flues, are constant causes of +fire, and it is believed that many melancholy occurrences have arisen +from these and similar sources. + +One cause of danger from chimneys arises from the communication which +they often have with each other in one gable. The divisions or +partitions, being very often found in an imperfect state, the fire +communicates to the adjoining chimney, and in this way sometimes wraps +a whole tenement in flames. I know a division of a principal street in +Edinburgh, in which there is scarcely a single chimney-head that is +not more or less in this condition; and I have no doubt that this is +not an uncommon case. There is also great danger from the ends of +joists, safe-lintels, or other pieces of timber, being allowed to +protrude into chimneys. In one instance which came under my notice, a +flue passing under the recess of a window had on the upper side no +other covering than the wood of the floor; of course, when the chimney +took fire the floor was immediately in a blaze: but there are many +instances of such carelessness. It is a common practice amongst +carpenters to drive small pieces of wood into walls for the purpose of +fixing their work, not paying the least attention as to whether the +points run into the flues or not. + +In the repairs and alterations of old buildings, house-carpenters are, +if possible, even more careless in this particular, than in the +construction of new. + +I know of two different buildings which underwent some alterations. In +both of these, safe-lintels had been run into flues, and both of them, +after the alterations, took fire; the one in consequence of a foul +chimney, which set fire to the lintel; and although the other did not +take fire from the same cause, the lintel was nevertheless very much +scorched, and obliged to be removed. + +Great carelessness is frequently exhibited by builders, when erecting +at one time two or three houses connected by mutual gables, by not +carrying up the gables, or party-walls, so as to divide the roofs. I +have seen more than one instance where the adjoining house would have +been quite safe, but for this culpable neglect. It is no uncommon +thing, too, to find houses divided only by lath and standard +partitions, without a single brick in them. When a fire occurs in +houses divided in this manner, the vacuities in the middle of the +partitions act like so many funnels to conduct the flame, thereby +greatly adding to the danger from the fire, and infinitely increasing +the difficulty of extinguishing it. + +In London the Building Act forbids all such proceedings, but the +District Surveyors do not seem to have sufficient power, or be able to +pay sufficient attention to such matters, as they are constantly met +with at fires. A very flagrant case of laying a hearth on timber was +lately exposed by a fire in the City. Due notice was given of the +circumstance, but no farther attention was paid to the matter than to +make the proprietor construct the floor properly, although the Act +gave power to fine for such neglect. The omission is to be regretted, +as there could not have been a better case for warning others; it +occurred in a very large establishment, and the work was done by one +of the first builders in the City. Had this fire taken place in the +night and gained some head, it would have been very difficult to have +ascertained the cause. As the premises were situated, a serious loss +of life might have occurred, the apartment in which the fire +originated being the only means of retreat which ten or twelve female +servants had from their bedrooms. + +The Metropolitan Building Acts, up to about the year 1825, by +insisting upon party-walls and other precautions, were invaluable for +the prevention of the spread of fires. By them no warehouse was +permitted to exceed a certain area. From the year 1842, the area has +been exchanged for a specified number of cubic feet. But since 1825, a +class of buildings has arisen of which there are now considerable +numbers in the City, called Manchester or piece goods warehouses, +which somehow have been exempted from the law restricting the extent +of warehouses, on the plea that they are _not_ warehouses, because +"bulk is broken" in them, although it is thoroughly understood that +the legislature intended by the Act to restrict the amassing such a +quantity of goods under one roof as would be dangerous to the +neighbourhood. + +Manchester and piece goods warehouses have for some time past been +built in London of unlimited size, sometimes equal to twenty average +houses. This is pretty nearly the same as if that number of houses +were built without party-walls, only that it is much worse, for the +whole mass generally communicates by well holes and open staircases, +and thus takes fire with great rapidity, and, from the quantity of +fresh air within the building, the fire makes much greater progress +before it is discovered. By this means the risk of fire in the City +has been greatly increased, not only to such warehouses themselves, +but to the surrounding neighbourhood, for it is impossible to say how +far fires of such magnitude may extend their ravages under untoward +circumstances, there being at present no preventive power in London +capable of controlling them. To provide such a power would be a very +costly business. + +Such buildings are also against the generally received rule, that a +man may burn himself and his own property, but he shall not unduly +risk the lives and property of his neighbours. + +The new Building Act is likely to repress, to a certain extent, this +great evil, unless its meaning be subverted by some such subterfuge as +destroyed the efficiency of the last one. But what is to be done with +those which are already built? It may seem tedious to dwell so much on +this subject, but it appears to be a risk which is not generally much +thought of, though it is of the most vital importance to the safety of +London. It is very desirable that the metropolis should take warning +by the experience of Liverpool, without going through the fiery ordeal +which the latter city did. + +From 1838 to 1843, 776,762_l._ were lost in Liverpool by fire, almost +entirely in the warehouse risks. The consequence was, that the +mercantile rates of insurance gradually rose from about 8_s._ per +cent. to 30_s._, 40_s._, and, it is said, in some cases, to 45_s._ per +cent. Such premiums could not be paid on wholesale transactions, +therefore the Liverpool people themselves obtained an Act of +Parliament, 6 and 7 Vic., cap. 109, by which the size and height of +warehouses were restricted, party walls were made imperative, and +warehouses were not allowed to be erected within thirty-six feet of +any other warehouse, unless the whole of the doors and window-shutters +were made of _wrought iron_, with many similar restrictions. This Act +applied to warehouses already built as well as to those to be built, +and any tenant was at liberty, after notice to his landlord, to alter +his warehouse according to the Act, and to stop his rent till the +expense was paid. Another Act, 6 and 7 Vic., cap. 75, was also +obtained, for bringing water into Liverpool for the purpose of +extinguishing fires and watering the streets _only_. It is supposed +that the works directed, or permitted, by these two Acts, cost the +people of Liverpool from 200,000_l._ to 300,000_l._ Shortly after +these alterations had been made, the mercantile premiums again fell to +about 8_s._ per cent. + +There is another very common cause of fire, which seems to come under +the head of construction--viz., covering up a fireplace when not in +use with wood or paper and canvas, &c. The soot falls into the +fireplace, either from the flue itself, or from an adjoining one which +communicates with it. A neighbouring chimney takes fire; a spark falls +down the blocked-up flue, sets fire to the soot in the fireplace, +which smoulders till the covering is burned through, and thus sets +fire to the premises. + +In theatres, that part of the house which includes the stage and +scenery should be carefully divided from that where the spectators +assemble by a solid wall carried up to, and through the roof. The +opening in this wall for the stage should be arched over, and the +other communications secured with iron doors, which would be kept shut +while the audience was in the house. By this plan, there would be +abundance of time for the spectators to retire, before fire could +reach that part of the theatre which they occupy. + +_The danger from furnaces_ or close fires, whether for heating, +cooking, or manufacturing purposes, is very great, and no flue should +be permitted to be so used, unless it is prepared for the purpose. The +reason is, that in a close fire the whole of the draught must pass +through the fire. It thus becomes so heated that, unless the flue is +properly built, it is dangerous throughout its whole course. In one +instance of a heating furnace, the heat in the flue was found to be +300 deg., at a distance of from forty to fifty feet from the fire. In open +fireplaces, the quantity of cold air carried up with the draught keeps +the flue at a moderate heat, from the fire upwards, and, unless the +flue is allowed to become foul, and take fire, this is the safest +possible mode of heating. + +Heating by hot air, steam, and hot water are objectionable. First, +because there must be a furnace and furnace flue, and the flue used is +generally that built for an open fire only; and second, the pipes are +carried in every direction, to be as much out of sight as possible. By +this means they are constantly liable to produce spontaneous ignition, +for there appears to be some chemical action between heated iron and +timber, by which fire is generated at a much lower temperature than is +necessary to ignite timber under ordinary circumstances. No +satisfactory explanation of this fact has yet been given, but there is +abundant proof that such is the case. In heating by hot-water pipes, +those hermetically sealed are by far the most dangerous, as the +strength of the pipes to resist the pressure is the only limit of the +heat to which the water, and of course the pipes, may be raised. In +some cases a plug of metal which fuses at 400 deg. is put into the pipes, +but the heat to which the plug is exposed will depend very much on +where it is placed, as, however great may be the heat of the exit +pipe, the return pipe is comparatively cool. But even where the pipes +are left open, the heat of the water at the furnace is not necessarily +212 deg.. It is almost needless to say that 212 deg. is the heat of boiling +water under the pressure of one atmosphere only; but if the pipes are +carried sixty or seventy feet high, the water in the furnace must be +under the pressure of nearer three atmospheres than one, and therefore +the heat will be proportionately increased. Fires from pipes for +heating by hot water have been known to take place within twenty-four +hours after first heating, and some after ten years of apparent +safety. + +The New Metropolitan Building Act prescribes rules for the placing +steam, hot-air, and hot-water pipes at a certain distance from timber; +but as it must be extremely difficult for the District Surveyors to +watch such minute proceedings, it becomes every one who is anxious for +safety to see that the District Surveyors have due notice of any +operation of this kind. + +Another cause of fire which may come under this head is the use of +pipes for conveying away the products of combustion. Every one is +acquainted with the danger of stove pipes, but all are not perhaps +aware that pipes for conveying away the heat and effluvia from +gas-burners are also very dangerous when placed near timber. It is not +an uncommon practice to convey such pipes between the ceiling and the +flooring of the floor above. This is highly dangerous. Gas-burners are +also dangerous when placed near a ceiling. A remarkable instance of +this took place lately, where a gas-burner set fire to a ceiling +28-1/2 inches from it. + +Another evil of furnaces is, that the original fireplace is sometimes +not large enough to contain the apparatus, and the party wall is cut +into. Perhaps it may be necessary to notice at this point the use of +gas, as it is becoming so very general. Gas, if carefully laid on, and +properly used, is safer than any other light, so far as actually +setting fire to anything goes, but the greater heat given out so dries +up any combustibles within its reach, that it prepares them for +burning, and when a fire does take place, the destruction is much more +rapid than in a building lighted by other means. Gas-stoves, also, +from the great heat given out, sometimes cause serious accidents; in +one instance, a gas-stove set fire to a beam through a two-and-half +inch York landing, well bedded in mortar, although the lights were +five or six inches above the stone. This is mentioned to show that +gas-stoves require quite as much care as common fires. + +_Spontaneous ignition_ is believed to be a very fruitful cause of +fires; but, unless the fire is discovered almost at the commencement, +it is difficult to ascertain positively that this has been the cause. +Spontaneous ignition is generally accelerated by natural or artificial +heat. For instance, where substances liable to spontaneous ignition +are exposed to the heat of the sun, to furnace flues, heated pipes, or +are placed over apartments lighted by gas, the process of ignition +proceeds much more rapidly than when in a cooler atmosphere. Sawdust +in contact with vegetable oil is very likely to take fire. Cotton, +cotton waste, hemp, and most other vegetable substances are alike +dangerous. In one case oil and sawdust took fire within sixteen hours; +in others, the same materials have lain for years, until some external +heat has been applied to them. The greater number of the serious fires +which have taken place in railroad stations in and near London have +commenced in the paint stores. In a very large fire in an oil +warehouse, a quantity of oil was spilt the day before and wiped up, +the wipings being thrown aside. This was believed to have been the +cause of the fire, but direct proof could not be obtained. Dust-bins +also very often cause serious accidents. In one instance, 30,000_l._ +to 40,000_l._ were lost, apparently from hot ashes being thrown into a +dust-bin. + +These accidents may in a great measure be avoided by constant care and +attention to cleanliness, and where paints and oils are necessary, by +keeping them in some place outside the principal buildings. Dust-bins +should, as much as possible, be placed in the open air, and where that +cannot be done, they should be emptied once a day. No collection of +rubbish or lumber of any sort should be allowed to be made in any +building of value. + +Mr. Wyatt Papworth, architect, has published some very interesting +notes on spontaneous ignition, giving several well-authenticated +instances. + +_Incendiarism_ may be divided into three sorts--malicious, fraudulent, +and monomaniac. Of the former there has been very little in London for +many years. The second, however, is rather prevalent. The insurance +offices, which are the victims, protect themselves as well as they +can, but an inquest on each fire is the true mode of lessening the +evil. This is much more the interest of the public than at first seems +to be the case. In several instances where the criminals were brought +to punishment by Mr. Payne's inquests, people were asleep in the upper +parts of the houses set fire to, and in one case there were as many as +twelve or fifteen persons. This, however, is seldom stated in the +indictment, as, if it is, the punishment is still death by the law, +and it is supposed that a conviction is more easily obtained, by the +capital charge being waived. Monomania is a rare cause of +incendiarism, but still several well-certified cases have occurred in +which no possible motive could be given. In one instance a youth of +fifteen set fire to his father's premises seven times within a few +hours. In another, a young female on a visit set fire to her friend's +furniture, &c., ten or eleven times in the course of one or two days. +In neither case could anything like disagreement or harshness be +elicited, but the reverse. In other instances, it has been strongly +suspected that this disease was the cause of repeated fires, but there +was no positive proof. In all these cases, known or suspected, the +parties were generally from fourteen to twenty years of age. + + +FIRE-PROOF STRUCTURES. + +What is "Fire-proof Construction?" is a question which has given rise +to a great deal of discussion, simply, as it appears to me, because +the size of the buildings, and the quantity and description of the +contents, have not always been taken into account. That which may be +perfectly fireproof in a dwelling house, may be the weakest in a large +warehouse. Suppose an average-sized dwelling-house 20 x 40 x 50 = +40,000 cubic feet, built with brick partitions, stone or slate stairs, +wrought-iron joists filled in with concrete, and the whole well +plastered. Such a house will be practically fire-proof, because there +is no probability that the furniture and flooring in any one room, +would make fire enough to communicate to another. But suppose a +warehouse equal to twenty such houses, with floors completely open, +supported by cast-iron pillars, and each floor communicating with the +others by open staircases and wells; suppose, further, that it is half +filled with combustible goods, and perhaps the walls and ceilings +lined with timber. Now, if a fire takes place below, the moment it +bursts through the upper windows or skylights, the whole place becomes +an immense blast furnace; the iron is melted, and in a comparatively +short time the building is in ruins, and, it may be, the half of the +neighbourhood destroyed. The real fire-proof construction for such +buildings is groined brick arches, supported on brick pillars only. +This mode of building, however, involves so much expense, and occupies +so much space, that it cannot be used with advantage. The next best +plan is to build the warehouses in compartments of moderate size, +divided by party-walls and double wrought-iron doors, so that if one +of these compartments takes fire, there may be a reasonable prospect +of confining the fire to that compartment only. Again, cast iron gives +way from so many different causes, that it is impossible to calculate +when it will give way. The castings may have flaws in them; or they +may be too weak for the weight they have to support, being sometimes +within 10 per cent., or less, of the breaking weight. The expansion of +the girders may thrust out the side walls. For instance, in a +warehouse 120 feet x 75 feet x 80 feet, there are three continuous +rows of girders on each floor, with butt joints; the expansion in this +case may be twelve inches. The tie rods to take the strain of the flat +arches must expand and become useless, and the whole of the lateral +strain be thrown on the girders and side walls, perhaps weak enough +already. Again, throwing cold water on the heated iron may cause an +immediate fracture. For these and similar reasons, the firemen are not +permitted to go into warehouses supported by iron, _when once fairly +on fire_. + +Cast and wrought-iron have been frequently fused at fires in large +buildings such as warehouses, sugar houses, &c., but according to Mr. +Fairbairn's experiments on cast iron in a heated state, it is not +necessary that the fusing point should be attained to cause it to give +way.[A] He also states, that the loss of strength in cold-blast cast +iron, in a variation of temperature from 26 deg. to 190 deg. = 164 deg. Fahr., is +10 per cent., and in hot-blast at a variation of from 21 deg. to 190 deg. = +169 deg. Fahr., is 15 per cent.; now if the loss of strength advances in +anything like this ratio, the iron will be totally useless as a +support, long before the fusing point is attained. + +Much confidence has been placed in wrought-iron tie or tension rods, +to take the lateral strain of the arches, and also in trusses to +support the beams; but it must be evident that the expansion of the +iron from the heat, would render them useless, and under a high +temperature, it would be so great as to unsettle the brickwork, and +accelerate its fall, on any part of the iron-work giving way: again, +the application of cold water to the heated iron, in an endeavour to +extinguish the fire, is almost certain to cause one or more fractures. +The brick-arching is also very liable to fall, especially if only four +and a half inches thick, independently of the weight which may be +placed upon it, for it is not uncommon after a fire in a large +building, to find the mortar almost completely pulverized to the depth +of three inches, or four inches, from the face of the wall. When a +fire occurred under one of the arches of the Blackwall Railway, on the +15th July, 1843, a portion of the lower ring fell down, and also a few +bricks from the next ring. + +Another very serious objection to buildings of this description, is +that, unless scientifically constructed, they are very unlikely to be +safe, even for the common purposes intended, independent of the risk +of fire. In the Report of Sir Henry De la Beche and Mr. Thomas Cubitt +on the fall of the mill at Oldham, in October, 1844,[B] it is stated +that the strength of the iron-beams was within ten per cent. of the +breaking weight. Now according to Mr. Fairbairn's experiments on +heated iron, already referred to, an increase of temperature of only +170 deg. would have destroyed the whole building. It is quite clear, +therefore, that so long as mill-owners and others continue to +construct such buildings without proper advice, they must be liable to +these accidents. In timber-floors there can be no such risk, as the +strains are all direct, and any journeyman carpenter, by following +good examples, can ascertain the size required; and even if he makes a +mistake, the evil is comparatively trivial, as the timber will give +notice before yielding, and may be propped up for the time, until it +can be properly secured. In the case of fire-proof buildings, an +ignorant person may make many mistakes without being aware that he has +done so, and the slightest failure is probably fatal to every one +within the walls. This also increases the difficulty and danger of +extinguishing fires in a large building, as the only method of doing +so is for the firemen to enter it with their branches, and in case of +the floors falling, there is no chance of escape. On the other hand, +timber-floors have repeatedly fallen while the firemen were inside the +building, and they have made their escape uninjured. + +In a pamphlet published by Mr. S. Holme, of Liverpool, in 1844,[C] and +which contains a report from Mr. Fairbairn on fire-proof buildings, it +is stated, that many people, especially in the manufacturing +districts, are their own architects; that the warehouses in Liverpool +may be loaded to one ton per yard of flooring; and that unless great +care and knowledge are used in the construction of fire-proof +buildings, they are of all others the most dangerous.[D] + +The following are the principles on which Mr. Fairbairn proposes to +build fire-proof warehouses:-- + + The whole of the building to be composed of non-combustible + materials, such as iron, stone, or bricks. + + In order to prevent fire, whether arising from accident or + spontaneous combustion, every opening, or crevice, + communicating with the external atmosphere to be closed. + + An isolated staircase, of stone, or iron, well protected on + every side by brick, or stone walls, to be attached to every + story, and be furnished with a line of water-pipes, + communicating with the mains in the street, and ascending to + the top of the building. + + In a range of stores, the different warehouses to be divided + by strong partition-walls, in no case less than eighteen + inches thick, and no more openings to be made than are + absolutely necessary for the admission of goods and light. + + That the iron columns, beams, and brick arches be of + strength sufficient, not only to support a continuous dead + pressure, but to resist the force of impact to which they + are subject by the falling of heavy goods upon the floors. + + That in order to prevent accident from the columns being + melted by intense heat in the event of fire in any of the + rooms, a current of cold air should be introduced into the + hollow of the columns, from an arched tunnel under the + floors. + +There is no doubt that if the second principle could be carried out, +namely, the total exclusion of air, the fire would go out of itself; +but it seems, to say the least of it, very doubtful indeed if this can +be accomplished, and if it could, the carelessness of a porter leaving +open one of the doors or windows, would make the whole useless. The +fifth principle shows that Mr. Fairbairn has omitted to allow for the +loss of strength the iron may sustain from the increase of +temperature. The last principle would not be likely to answer its +purpose, even if it was possible to keep these tunnels and hollow +columns clear for a number of years, which is scarcely to be expected. +A piece of cast-iron pipe, one-and-a-half inch in diameter, was heated +for four minutes in a common forge, both ends being carefully kept +open to the atmosphere, when, on one end being fixed in a vice, and +the other pulled aside by the hand, it gave way. + +One of the principal objections to the kind of fire-proof buildings +above described, is, that absolute perfection in their construction is +indispensable to their safety; whereas buildings of a more common +description are comparatively safe, although there may be some errors +or omissions in their construction. Indeed, Mr. Fairbairn states in +the same Report, that "it is true that negligence of construction on +the one hand, and want of care in management on the other, might +entail risk and loss to an enormous extent." + +The following is a very clear proof of the inability of cast iron to +resist the effects of fire:-- + +"A chapel in Liverpool-road, Islington, seventy feet in length and +fifty-two feet in breadth, took fire in the cellar, on the 2nd +October, 1848, and was completely burned down. After the fire, it was +ascertained that of thirteen cast-iron pillars used to support the +galleries, only two remained perfect; the greater part of the others +were broken into small pieces, the metal appearing to have lost all +power of cohesion, and some parts were melted. It should be observed, +that these pillars were of ample strength to support the galleries +when filled by the congregation, but when the fire reached them, they +crumbled under the weight of the timber only, lightened as it must +have been by the progress of the fire." + +In this case it mattered little whether the pillars stood or fell, but +it would be very different with some of the large wholesale warehouses +in the City, where numbers of young men sleep in the upper floors; in +several of those warehouses the cast-iron pillars are much less in +proportion to the weight to be carried than those referred to, and +would be completely in the draught of a fire. If a fire should +unfortunately take place under such circumstances, the loss of human +life might be very great, as the chance of fifty, eighty, or one +hundred people escaping in the confusion of a sudden night alarm, by +one or two ladders, to the roof, could scarcely be calculated on, and +the time such escape must necessarily occupy, independent of all +chance of accidents, would be considerable. + +For the reasons here stated, I submit that large buildings, containing +considerable quantities of combustible goods, with floors of +brick-arches, supported by cast-iron beams and columns, are not, +practically speaking, fire-proof; and that the only construction which +would render large buildings fire-proof; where considerable quantities +of combustible goods are deposited, would be groined brick-arches, +supported by pillars of the same material, laid in proper cement. I am +fully convinced, from a lengthened experience, that the intensity of a +fire,--the risk of its ravages extending to adjoining premises, and +also the difficulty of extinguishing it, depend, _caeteris paribus_, on +the cubic contents of the building which takes fire, and it appears to +me that the amount of loss would be very much reduced, if, instead of +building immense warehouses, which give the fire a fortified position, +warehouses were made of a moderate size, with access on two sides at +least, completely separated from each other by party-walls, and +protected by iron-doors and window-shutters. In the latter case, the +probability is, that not more than one warehouse would be lost at a +time, and perhaps that one would be only partially injured. + +It is sincerely to be hoped that the clause in the last Metropolitan +Building Act, restricting the size of warehouses, may be more +successful than its predecessor, for it is not only property that is +at stake, but human life. In many of these "Manchester warehouses," +there are fifty or one hundred and upwards of warehousemen and +servants sleeping in the upper floors, whose escape, in case of fire, +would be very doubtful, to say the least of it.[E] + +Covering timber with sheet-iron is very often resorted to as a +protection against fire. I have never found it succeed; but Dr. +Faraday, Professor Brande, Dr. D. B. Reid, and Mr. W. Tite, M.P., are +of opinion that it may be useful against a sudden burst of flame, but +that it is worse than useless against a continued heat. + +In wadding manufactories the drying-rooms were frequently lined with +iron-plates, and when a fire arose there, the part covered with iron +was generally found more damaged than the rest; the heat got through +the sheet-iron, and burnt the materials behind it, and there was no +means of touching them with water until the iron was torn down; sheet +iron should not, therefore, be used for protecting wood. + +Even cast iron, one inch thick, laid on tiles and cement three inches +thick, has allowed fire to pass through both, to the boarding and +joisting below, merely from the fire in an open fire-place being taken +off and laid on the hearth. This arises from iron being so good a +conductor that, when heat is applied to it, it becomes in a very short +time nearly as hot on the one side as the other. If the smoke escapes +up a chimney, or in any other way, there may be a serious amount of +fire before it is noticed. + +In a fire at the Bank of England, the hearth on which the stove was +placed was cast iron an inch thick, with two-and-a-half inches of +concrete underneath it; but the timber below that was fired. + +With regard to the subject of fire-proof dwelling-houses of average +size, I consider that such houses when built of brick or stone, with +party-walls carried through the roof; the partitions of brick, the +stairs of slate or stone, the joists of wrought iron filled in with +concrete, and the whole well plastered, are practically fire-proof +because, as stated at the opening of this chapter, there is no +probability that the furniture and flooring in any one room would make +fire enough to communicate to another. The safest manner of heating +such houses is with open fire-places, the hearths not being laid upon +timber. Stone staircases, when much heated, will fracture from cold +water coming suddenly in contact with them; but in a dwelling-house +built as described above, there is very little chance of such a +circumstance endangering human life, even with wooden steps carried +upon brick walls, and rendered incombustible by a ceiling of an inch +and a quarter of good hair mortar and well pugged, all the purposes of +safety to human life would be attained. + +There is a particular description of floor, which, although not +altogether fire-proof, is certainly (at least so far as I can judge), +almost practically so for dwelling-houses. It is composed simply of +plank two and a-half or three inches thick, so closely joined, and so +nicely fitted to the walls, as to be completely air-tight. Its +thickness and its property of being air-tight, will be easily observed +to be its only causes of safety. Although the apartment be on fire, +yet the time required to burn through the floor above or below, will +be so great, that the property may be removed from the other floors, +or, more probably, if the means of extinguishing fire be at hand, it +may be subdued before it can spread to any other apartment. The doors +must of course be made in proportion, and the partitions of brick or +stone. + +Before closing the subject of fire-proof structures, I will add a few +words upon fire-proof safes. These are all constructed with double +casings of wrought iron, the interstices being in some filled with +non-combustible substances, such as pumice stone and Stourbridge clay, +and in others with metal tubes, that melt at a low temperature, and +allow a liquid contained in them to escape, and form steam round the +box, with the intention of preventing the heat from injuring the +contents. Such safes I have never found destroyed; and in some cases, +after large fires, the whole of the contents have been found +uninjured, while the papers in common safes, merely made strong enough +to prevent their being broken into, were generally found consumed. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[Footnote A: _Vide_ Seventh Report of the British Association, 1837, +vol. vi. page 409.] + +[Footnote B: _Vide_ Report on the Fall of the Cotton Mill, at Oldham, +and part of the Prison at Northleach, page 4. Folio. London: Clowes +and Sons, 1845.] + +[Footnote C: _Vide_ Report of W. Fairbairn, Esq., on the Construction +of Fire-proof Buildings. With introductory Remarks by Samuel Holme, +page 11, _et seq._ Tract, 8vo. Liverpool: T. Baines, 1844.] + +[Footnote D: The Author has been informed by Mr. Farey, M. Inst. C.E., +that a fire took place, in 1827, in a mill belonging to Mr. Marshall, +of Leeds, the whole of which, with the exception of the roof, was +fire-proof. The upper floor was filled with flax, which took fire; the +roof fell in, and the heat so affected the iron beams of the floor, as +to cause them to give way.] + +[Footnote E: In the year 1858, when reporting to the Insurance Offices +upon the Warehouses in the Metropolitan Docks, Mr. Braidwood made the +following suggestions which are applicable to all large buildings. +That all the party-walls where the roofs do not rise above the wall, +should be 3 feet 6 inches above such roof. That all the party-walls in +the valleys of the roofs should be raised to the level of the highest +ridge on either side, all openings in such walls being closed by +wrought-iron doors on each side of the walls, at least a quarter of an +inch thick in the panels, and such openings not to exceed 42 +superficial feet in the clear. That all windows which look upon other +windows, or loop-hole doors in other warehouses or compartments, +within 100 feet, should be bricked up, or have wrought-iron shutters +at least 3/16th of an inch thick in the panels. + +That all loop-hole doors similarly situated should be made entirely of +wrought iron, frames included, or bricked up. That all shafts for +lifts or other purposes, should be of brick, with wrought-iron doors +where necessary to receive or deliver goods, and that all openings +whatever for machinery should be included in such shaft. That every +hatchway or opening in the floors for "shooting" goods from floor to +floor should have a strong flap _hinged on_ to the floor, to be closed +when not in use, especially at night. + +That there should be direct access to every room, of every +compartment, of every warehouse, from a fire-proof staircase, by iron +doors, and that all such staircases should enter from the open air, as +well as from under any warehouse on the quay; in the latter case the +doors must be of iron only. + +All the windows in the entresol and ground floors to be bricked up, or +have iron shutters, and the doors and frames to be of iron. + +Wherever the warehouses face each other within 100 feet, the front +parapet walls to be carried up to the level of the ridge of the roof. + +When it is stated in this report that the windows or loop-hole doors +should be bricked up, it is not meant to exclude the use of thick +glass, three or four pieces being built into each door or window +space, not exceeding 6 inches in diameter or square, in the clear, and +set in the mortar or cement at least 3/4 of an inch all round, the +glass to be not less than 1-1/2 inches thick, flat on both sides, and +so placed that no goods can be stored within 18 inches of the inner +surface. + +There should be a tank on the top of each staircase, with a tap from +it on each landing, with six fire buckets hung near it, and three +small hand pumps in every staircase; the officers and workpeople +seeing these every day would be certain to run to them in case of +fire, and by having a constant supply of water on every floor small +accidents might be extinguished at once, and the iron doors and roofs +kept cool in case of one room taking fire.] + + + + +FIRE EXTINCTION, INCLUDING FIRE BRIGADES, FIRE ENGINES, AND WATER +SUPPLY. + + +Before entering upon the subject of Public Fire Brigades, I will call +attention to the course to be pursued by inmates of the house on fire, +and their neighbours. + +When all available means of fire prevention have been adopted, the +next thing to be considered is a supply of water. In the country, or +where there are no water-pipes or engines, this ought to be +particularly attended to, and a hand-pump should be provided. Where no +water is kept solely for the purpose of extinguishing fire, such +vessels as can be spared should be regularly filled every night, and +placed in such situations as may be most convenient in case of danger; +and no master of a family ought to retire to rest, without being +satisfied that this has been attended to. If it had no other advantage +than merely that of directing the inmates of a house to the +possibility of such an occurrence as fire, it would be worth much more +than the trouble such an arrangement would cost; but, in addition to +that, a supply of water would be at hand, in most cases more than +sufficient to extinguish the fire immediately on its being discovered, +and before it had become either alarming or dangerous. But when no +such precaution has been adopted, when even the bare possibility of +fire has not been considered, when no attention has even been paid to +the subject, and no provision made for it; the inhabitants are +generally so alarmed and confused, that the danger is probably over, +by their property being burned to the ground, before they can +sufficiently recollect themselves to lend any effective assistance. + +In most cases of fire, the people in whose premises it occurs are +thrown into what may be called a state of temporary derangement, and +seem to be actuated only by a desire of muscular movement, no matter +to what purpose their exertions are directed. Persons may often be +seen toiling like galley-slaves, at operations which a moment's +reflection would show were utterly useless. I have seen tables, +chairs, and every article of furniture that would pass through a +window, three or four stories high, dashed into the street, even when +the fire had hardly touched the tenement. On one occasion I saw +crockery-ware thrown from a window on the third floor.[F] + +Most of these extravagances take place on the first alarm. When the +engines have got fairly into play, people begin to recollect +themselves, and it is at this time that most of those "who go to see a +fire" arrive. By the exertions of the police there is then generally a +considerable degree of order restored, and the most interesting part +of the scene is over. + +What remains, however, may, from its novelty or grandeur, if the fire +is extensive, be still worth looking at for a little, but much of the +excitement is banished with the confusion; and if the fire and firemen +seem to be well matched, the chief interest which is excited in the +spectators is to ascertain which of the parties is likely to be +victorious. Few people, comparatively, have thus an opportunity of +witnessing the terror and distraction occasioned by the first alarm of +fire, and this may probably account for the apathy and indifference +with which people who have not seen this regard it. + +When a fire actually takes place, every one should endeavour to be as +cool and collected as possible; screams, cries, and other exhibitions +of terror, while utterly useless in themselves, have generally the +effect of alarming those whose services might otherwise be of the +utmost advantage, and of rendering them unfit for useful exertion. It +is unhappily, too, at the commencement of fires, that this tendency to +confusion and terror is the strongest, when a bucket of water, +properly applied, is generally of more value than a hundred will be +half an hour afterwards. It is the feeling of total surprise, on the +breaking out of a fire, which thus unhinges the faculties of many +individuals. They have never made the case their own, nay, one would +almost imagine they had scarcely thought such an occurrence possible, +till, coming on them almost like a thunderbolt, they are lost in +perplexity and terror. The only preventive against this is to think +the matter over frequently and carefully before it occurs. + +The moment it is ascertained that fire has actually taken place, +notice should be sent to the nearest station where there is a +fire-engine. No matter whether the inmates are likely to be able to +extinguish the fire themselves--this should never be trusted to if +more efficient help can be had. + +It is much better that an engine should be turned out twenty times +when it is not wanted, than be once too late. This may cause a +trifling expense; but even that expense is not altogether lost, as it +teaches the firemen steadiness and coolness. + +The person in the house best qualified for such duty should endeavour +to ascertain, with as much precision as possible, the extent and +position of the fire, while the others collect as much water as they +can. If the fire be in an upper floor, the inmates should be got out +immediately, although the lower part of the house may generally be +entered with safety for some time. If in the lower part of the house, +after the inmates have been removed, great care should be observed in +going into any of the upper floors, as the flames very often reach the +stair before being observed by those above. The upper floors are, +besides, generally filled with smoke, and, in that case, there is +great danger of suffocation to those who may enter. + +This, indeed, is the principal danger attending fires, and should be +particularly guarded against, as a person, when being suffocated, is +unable to call for assistance. In a case of this kind the fire took +place in the third floor from the street, and all the inmates +immediately left the premises except one old woman. In about fifteen +minutes after the arrival of the engines, the firemen made their way +upstairs, and the poor woman was found dead beside a basket partly +filled with clothes, which it was supposed she had been packing up for +removal; had she made any noise, or even broke a pane of glass, she +would, in all probability, have been saved; as the fire never touched +the floor in which she was found, she must have died entirely from +suffocation, which a little fresh air would have prevented. Had the +slightest suspicion existed that any one was in the upper floors, they +would have been entered by the windows or the roof; but as the fire +took place in daylight, and none of the neighbours spoke of any one +being in the house, it was thought unnecessary to damage the property, +or risk the lives of the firemen, without some adequate cause. This, +however, shows how little dependence can be placed on information +received from the inmates of the premises on fire. Some of the people +who lived on the same floor with this poor woman, and who had seen her +immediately before they left the house, never mentioned her. I do not +suppose that this negligence arose from apathy, or any feeling of that +sort; but the people were in such a state of utter confusion, that +they were unable to think of anything. But to return. + +On the first discovery of a fire, it is of the utmost consequence to +shut, and keep shut, all doors, windows, or other openings. It may +often be observed, after a house has been on fire, that one floor is +comparatively untouched, while those above and below are nearly burned +out. This arises from the door on that particular floor having been +shut, and the draught directed elsewhere. If the person who has +examined the fire finds a risk of its gaining ground upon him, he +should, if within reach of fire-engines, keep everything close, and +await their arrival, instead of admitting air to the fire by +ineffectual efforts to oppose it with inadequate means. In the +meantime, however, he should examine where a supply of water is most +likely to be obtained, and communicate that, and any other local +information, to the firemen on their coming forward. If there be no +fire-engine within reach, the person who has examined the fire should +keep the place where it is situated as close as possible, till as many +buckets of water as can be easily collected are placed within his +reach. + +Taking care always that there is some one ready to assist him, he +should then open the door, and creep forward on his hands and knees +till he gets as near the fire as possible; holding his breath, and +standing up for a moment to give the water a proper direction, he +should throw it with force, using a hand pump if available, and +instantly get down to his former position, where he will be again able +to breathe. The people behind handing forward another bucket of water, +he repeats the operation till the fire is quenched, or until he feels +exhausted; in which case some one should take his place. If there be +enough of water, however, two, three, or any convenient number of +people may be employed in throwing it; on the contrary, if the supply +of water be insufficient to employ even one person, the door should be +kept shut while the water is being brought, and the air excluded as +much as possible, as the fire burns exactly in proportion to the +quantity of air which it receives. + +One great evil, and which ought to be strictly guarded against by +people not accustomed to fire, is, that on the first alarm they exert +themselves to the very utmost of their strength. This, of course, can +last but a short time; and when they feel tired, which in that case +soon happens, they very often give up altogether. Now this is the +reverse of what it ought to be. In extinguishing fires, like most +other things, a cool judgment and steady perseverance are far more +effective than any desultory exertions which can be made. + +The heat generally increases in a considerable degree when water is +first thrown upon a fire, from the conversion of a portion of it into +steam. This is sometimes very annoying; so much so, that the persons +engaged in throwing the water, frequently feel themselves obliged to +give back a little. They should on no account, however, abate or +discontinue their exertions in throwing the water with as much force +as possible in the direction of the fire; it will in a short time cool +the air and materials, and the steam will, in consequence, be +generated more slowly, while a steady perseverance on the part of +those employed can alone effect the object in view. + +When water is scarce, mud, cow or horse dung, damp earth, &c., may be +used as substitutes; but if there seems no chance of succeeding by any +of these, and the fire is likely to extend to other buildings, the +communication should be immediately cut off by pulling down the +building next to that on fire. Any operation of this sort, however, +should be begun at a sufficient distance from the fire to allow the +communication to be completely cut off, before it gains upon the +workmen. If this operation be attempted so near the fire as to be +interrupted by it, it must be begun again at a greater distance; and, +in that case, there is a greater destruction of property than might +have been necessary. + +If a fire occur in a stable or cow-house, surrounded with other +buildings of the same description, or with the produce of a farm, +there is much danger. The cattle and horses should be immediately +removed; and, in doing so, if any of them become restive, they should +be blindfolded, taking care that it is done thoroughly, as any attempt +to blindfold them partially, only increases the evil. They should be +handled as much as possible in the ordinary manner, and with great +coolness; the violent gestures and excited appearance of the persons +removing them tending greatly to startle the animals, and render them +unmanageable. + + +PUBLIC FIRE BRIGADES AND THE DUTIES OF FIREMEN. + +The best public means of arresting fires is a very wide question, as +the only limit to the means is the expense. Different nations have +different ways of doing the same thing. On the Continent generally, +the whole is managed by Government, and the firemen are placed under +martial law, the inhabitants being compelled to work the engines. In +London, the principal means of arresting fires is a voluntary +association of the insurance companies, without legal authority of any +sort, the legal protection by parish engines being, with a few +praiseworthy exceptions, a dead letter. + +In Liverpool, Manchester, and other towns, the extinction of fires by +the pressure of water only, without the use of fire-engines, is very +much practised. The advantages of this system are very great; but, to +enable us to follow this system in London, the whole water supply +would require to be remodelled. + +In America, the firemen are generally volunteers, enrolled by the +local Governments. They are exempt from other duties, or are entitled +to privileges, which appear to satisfy them, as the situation of +fireman is eagerly sought in most of the American cities. + +Which is the best of these different modes it is difficult to say; +perhaps each is best suited for the place where it exists. + +It is now generally admitted, that the whole force brought together to +extinguish a fire ought to be under the direction and control of one +individual. By this means, all quarrelling among the firemen about the +supply of water, the interest of particular insurance companies, and +other matters of detail, is avoided. By having the whole force under +the command of one person, he is enabled to form one general plan of +operations, to which the whole body is subservient; and although he +may not, in the hurry of the moment, at all times adopt what will +afterwards appear to be the best plan, yet it is better to have some +general arrangement, than to allow the firemen of each engine to work +according to their own fancy, and that, too, very often in utter +disregard as to whether their exertions may aid or retard those of +their neighbours. The individual appointed to such a situation ought +not to be interfered with, or have his attention distracted, except by +the chief authority on the spot, or the owner of the premises on fire. +Much valuable information is frequently obtained from the latter, as +to the division of the premises, the party-walls, and other matters +connected with its locality. But, generally speaking, the less +interference and advice the better, as it occupies time which may +generally be better employed. + +I need scarcely add, that on no account whatever should directions be +given to the firemen by any other individual while the superintendent +of brigade is present; and that there may be no quarrelling about +superiority, the men should be aware on whom the command is to devolve +in his absence. + +It has often been to me a matter of surprise, that so small a portion +of the public attention should be directed to the matter of +extinguishing fires. It is only when roused by some great calamity +that people bestir themselves; and then there is such a variety of +plans proposed to avert similar cases of distress, that to attempt to +concoct a rational plan out of such a crude, ill-digested, and +contradictory mass of opinion, requires more labour and attention than +most people are inclined to give it, unless a regular business was +made of it. In Paris the corps of military firemen are so well +trained, that although their apparatus is not so good as it should be, +the amount of the losses by fire is comparatively trifling. If the +head-quarters of such an establishment were to be in London, a store +of apparatus, constructed on one uniform plan, could be kept there, to +be forwarded to any other part of the kingdom where it might be +required. This uniformity of the structure and design of the apparatus +could extend to the most minute particulars; a screw or a nut of any +one engine would fit every other engine in the kingdom. A depot could +also be kept at head-quarters, where recruits would be regularly +drilled and instructed in the business, and a regular system of +communication kept up with all the provincial corps. Any particular +circumstances occurring at a fire would thus be immediately reported, +and the advantages of any knowledge or experience thus gained, would +be disseminated over the whole kingdom. As the matter at present +stands one town may have an excellent fire-engine establishment, and +another within a few miles a very indifferent one, and when the one is +called to assist the other, they can neither act in concert, nor can +the apparatus of the one in case of accident be of the smallest +service in replacing that of the other. The best might (if a proper +communication were kept up) be under frequent obligations to the +worst, and here, as in other matters, it is chiefly by communication +that knowledge is increased. If the whole experience of the country +were brought together, and maturely considered and digested by persons +competent to judge, I have no doubt that a system might be introduced +suitable to the nation and to the age in which we live. Instead of +hearing of the "_dreadful losses by fire_," and the "_great +exertions_" made to extinguish it, all the notice would be, such a +place took fire, the engines arrived, and it was extinguished. + +It would be useless for me to enter into the details of a plan which I +have little hope of ever seeing realized. I may state, however, that a +premium might be offered for the best engine of a size previously +agreed upon, which, when finished, should be kept as a model. + +Specifications could then be made out, and estimates advertised for, +for all the different parts, such as wheels, axles, levers, cisterns, +barrels, air-vessels, &c., separately. When any particular part of an +engine was damaged, it could be immediately replaced, and the engine +again rendered fit for service; and upon emergency any number of +engines could be set up, merely by putting the different parts +together. The work would also be better done; at least it would be +much more easy to detect faults in the materials or workmanship than +if the engines were bought ready for use. These remarks apply to all +the rest of the apparatus. + +It could be provided that firemen might be enlisted for a term of +years. When enlisted, they would be sent to the depot at +head-quarters, drilled to the use of the engines, and carefully +instructed in separating and cleaning the different parts. Here also +they could be practised in gymnastic exercises, and generally +instructed in everything tending to promote their usefulness as +firemen. They could then be sent off to some large towns, and, after +having seen a little active service, distributed over the country in +such parties as might be deemed necessary for the places they were +intended to protect. + +The practice of keeping fire-engines at noblemen's and gentlemen's +residences, and at large manufactories in the country, is by no means +uncommon, and I have no doubt that many more would supply themselves +in this way if they knew where to apply for information in such +matters; but the great fault lies in the want of persons of skill and +experience to work them when fire occurs. In the way I have mentioned, +proprietors and others could have one or more of their workmen +instructed in this necessary piece of duty; and I have no doubt that +many gentlemen would avail themselves of the means of instructing some +of their servants. + +It will be observed, I do not propose that the firemen who are +enlisted, drilled, and instructed in the business, should be sent to +the different stations in sufficient numbers to work the engines; this +part of the work can be performed by any man accustomed to hard +labour, as well as by the most expert fireman, and the local +authorities could easily provide men for this purpose. In small towns, +where fires are rare, the novelty would draw together plenty of hands; +and in large towns, where the inhabitants are not sufficiently +disinterested to work for nothing, there are always plenty who could +be bound to assist in cases of fire at a certain rate per hour, to be +paid upon a certificate from the fireman who has charge of the engine +at which they worked. The trained firemen would thus be required only +for the direction of the engine, attaching the hose, &c. + +I am quite aware that many people object to the training of firemen; +but it would be just as reasonable to give to a mob all the "materiel" +of war, and next day expect it to act like a regular army, as to +expect engines to be managed with any general prospect of success, +unless the men are properly trained and prepared for the duty which is +expected from them. Fire is both a powerful and an insidious enemy, +and those whose business it is to attack it will best succeed when +they have become skilful and experienced in the use of their arms. + +It is quite obvious that a fire brigade, however complete in its +apparatus and equipments, must depend for its efficiency on the state +of training and discipline of the firemen. Wherever there is +inexperience, want of co-operation, or confusion amongst them, the +utmost danger is to be apprehended in the event of fire. It is amidst +the raging of this destructive element, the terror and bustle of the +inhabitants, that organization and discipline triumph, and it is +there, too, that coolness and promptitude, steadiness and activity, +fearlessness and caution, are peculiarly required; but, unfortunately, +it is then also that they are most rarely exhibited. + +There should not be less than five or six men attached to each engine, +who should be properly instructed and drilled, to take charge of it, +and to guide the people who work at the levers. + +The person having the principal charge of the engines should +frequently turn over in his mind what might be the best plan, in such +and such circumstances, supposing a fire to take place. By frequently +ruminating on the subject, he will find himself, when suddenly turned +out of bed at night, much more fit for his task than if he had never +considered the matter at all. Indeed he will frequently be surprised, +when examining the premises afterwards (_which he ought always to do, +and mark any mistakes he may have committed_), that he should have +adopted the very best mode of extinguishing the fire, amid the noise, +confusion, and the innumerable advices showered down on him, by all +those who consider themselves qualified or entitled to give advice in +such matters; a number, by the way, which sometimes includes no +inconsiderable portion of the spectators. He should also make himself +well acquainted with the different parts of the town in which he may +be appointed to act, and notice the declivities of the different +streets, &c. He will find this knowledge of great advantage. + +Any buildings, supposed to be particularly dangerous, should be +carefully examined, and all the different places where supplies of +water can be obtained for them noticed. + +A knowledge of the locality thus obtained will be found of great +advantage in case of a fire breaking out. Indeed all firemen, +especially those having the charge of engines, should be instructed +carefully to examine and make themselves acquainted with the +localities of their neighbourhood or district. Such knowledge will +often prove valuable in emergencies; the proprietors or tenants of the +property on fire being sometimes in such a state of alarm, that no +distinct intelligence can be got from them. + +When an engine is brought to a fire, it ought to be placed as nearly +as possible in a straight line between the supply of water and the +premises on fire; taking care, however, to keep at such a distance +from the latter that the men who work the pumps may be in no danger +from being scorched by the heat, or of being annoyed by the falling of +water or burning materials. Running the engine close upon the fire +serves no good purpose, except to shorten the quantity of hose that +would otherwise be required. The addition of twenty or thirty feet of +hose makes very little difference in the working of the engine, and, +when compared with the disadvantage of the men becoming unsteady from +the idea of personal danger, is not even to be named. Indeed, if the +engine be brought too near the fire, there is danger of the men +quitting the levers altogether. I may also add that, both for the +safety of the hose and the convenience of the inhabitants, the engine +should be kept out of the way of people removing furniture. + +When the hose is attached and the engine filled with water, the man +who holds the branch-pipe, accompanied by another, should get so near +the fire, inside the house, _that the water from the branch may strike +the burning materials_. If he cannot accomplish this standing, he must +get down on his hands and knees and creep forward, those behind +handing up the hose. A stratum of fresh air is almost always to be +depended on from six to twelve inches from the floor, so that if the +air be not respirable to a person standing upright, he should +instantly get down. I have often observed this fact, which indeed is +well known; but I once saw an example of it which appeared to me to be +so striking, that I shall here relate it. A fire had broken out in the +third floor of a house, and when I reached the top of the stair, the +smoke was rolling in thick heavy masses, which prevented me from +seeing six inches before me. I immediately got down on the floor; +above which, for a space of about eight inches the air seemed to be +remarkably clear and bright. I could distinctly see the feet of the +tables and other furniture in the apartment; the flames in this space +burning as vivid and distinct as the flame of a candle, while all +above the smoke was so thick that the eye could not penetrate it. The +fire had already burst through three out of five windows in the +apartment, yet, when lying flat on the floor, no inconvenience was +felt except from the heat. + +When the fire has broken through a floor, the supply of air along that +floor is not to be depended on--the fire drawing the principal supply +of air from the apartments below. + +When the two first firemen have gained a favourable position, they +should keep it as long as they are able; and when they feel exhausted, +the men behind them should take their place. + +The great point to which everything ought to be made subservient is, +_that the water on its discharge from the branch-pipe should actually +strike the burning materials_. This cannot be too often or too +anxiously inculcated on every one connected with a fire-engine +establishment. Every other method not having this for its grand +object, will, in nine cases out of ten, utterly fail; and upon the +degree of attention paid to this point, depends almost entirely the +question as to the amount of damage the fire will occasion. + +When approaching a fire, it should always be done by the door, if +possible. When this is attended to, it is much easier to shift the +hose from one apartment to another; and the current of fresh air, +entering by the door and proceeding along the passages, makes +respiration easier and safer than elsewhere. + +When entrance by the door is impracticable, and access is to be gained +by a window, the flames frequently burst through in such a manner as +to render advance in the first instance impossible. In that case, the +branch should be pointed against the window, nearly in a perpendicular +direction; the water striking the lintel, and falling all round inside +the window, will soon extinguish the fire at that point sufficiently +to render an entrance practicable. + +The old plan of standing with the branch pipe in the street, and +throwing the water into the windows is a very random way of going to +work; and for my own part, although I have seen it repeatedly tried, I +never saw it attended with success. Indeed it is hardly to be expected +that water, thrown from the street into a room three or four storeys +high, can have any impression on closets, presses, or passages, +divided probably with brick partitions in the centre of the house. The +circumstance of having engines at work on both sides of the house does +not alter the case. The fire very often burns up through the centre, +and frequently, when the space between the windows is large, along the +front or back wall, till it arrives at the roof, which the water +cannot touch on account of the slates or tiles. On the other hand, +when the firemen enter the house, the fire is almost wholly under +their command. And when it happens that there is any corner which the +water cannot directly strike, the fire in it may often be extinguished +by throwing the water against an opposite wall or partition, and +trusting to the recoil to throw it to the point required. + +When the water is thrown from the street, it is impossible to say +whether it touches the parts on fire or not. No one can tell anything +about it, except when the flame appears at the windows. + +On going with the branch inside the house, besides the advantage of +the water rushing directly from the hose upon the fire, there is a +great saving in the article of water itself. The whole that is thrown +by the engine is applied to the right purpose. No part of it is lost; +that which does not strike the burning materials falls within the +house; and, by soaking those parts on which it falls, prevents their +burning so rapidly when the flames approach them. + +If, on entering an apartment, it be found that the flames cover a +considerable space, it is of advantage, in some instances, to place +the point of the thumb in contact with the water at the nozzle of the +branch. By this means the water may be spread to cover any space under +twenty or thirty feet, according to the pressure applied. + +While speaking of the mode of entering houses on fire, I may mention +that I have tried several inventions for the purpose of elevating the +branch pipe and hose to the level of a second or third story window. +But these, although exceedingly ingenious, appear to me to rest on a +principle entirely wrong; I mean that of throwing water on the fire +from the outside of the building. + +Independent altogether of a mistaken principle of usefulness, one +insuperable objection to all these machines, is the difficulty of +conveying them with the necessary celerity, and the impossibility of +packing them on the engine in such a manner that it may be worked +without their being taken off, as it seems to me _that every +description of apparatus which cannot be conveyed along with the +engine, is likely to be left behind when most wanted_. It is notorious +that parish fire-ladders are, for this reason, seldom or never made +use of. + +Many people object to going inside a building on fire on account of +the danger. It ought never to be forgotten, however, that the danger +increases with the delay; and that although at first there may be no +danger, if the opportunity is not promptly seized, it may become very +considerable. + +Several of the firemen have at different times fainted, or become +stupefied, from the want of fresh air; but as no one is ever allowed +to enter singly, they have been, in all cases, immediately observed by +their comrades, and relieved. + +Another objection has been raised in the alleged difficulty of +persuading men to risk their lives in this manner for the small +consideration which is allowed them. The truth is, that any +persuasions I have had occasion to use, have been generally on the +other side. + +To hold the branch is considered the post of honour; and when two +engines are working together, I have sometimes difficulty in +preventing the men from pressing forward farther than is absolutely +necessary. This forwardness is not the result of pecuniary reward for +the increase of risk, but a spirit of emulation is at work, and the +man entrusted with this duty, if found drawing back, would be +completely disgraced. + +A retreat should in all cases be kept open, to provide against any +accident that may occur; and as this may be done in almost all cases +by means so easy and simple, there can be no excuse for its omission. +At the same time no one but an expert fireman should be permitted to +enter where there is personal danger. + +The danger to which firemen are most exposed is catching cold, from +their being so frequently drenched with water, and from their exposure +to the sudden alternations of heat and cold. A man is turned out of +bed at midnight, and in a few minutes after quitting it he is exposed +to the sharp air, perhaps, of a frosty winter night; running to the +fire as fast as he can, he is, from the exercise, joined to the +oppressive heat inside the place on fire, in a few minutes in a state +of the most profuse perspiration; and, while in this state, he is +almost certain to be soaked with cold water. The smoke is sometimes so +thick, that he comes under the range of the branch of the engine +without being aware of it till the water strikes him. If he escape +this chance, the water rushing on some other object, recoils on him, +and produces the same effect; and if the fire be in the roof of the +apartment, he must lie down on his back on the floor, and in this +manner gets completely steeped. + +A bath of this sort is neither very safe nor pleasant; and the only +preventive of injury to the health is to keep the men in constant +motion. When they are allowed to stand still or sit down, the danger +is considerable. When the fire is extinguished, or in two or three +hours after its commencement, I make it a rule to give every man a +dram of spirits. If it be necessary to leave an engine on the spot, +those of the men who are to remain are sent home to change their +clothes. + + +THE LONDON FIRE BRIGADE. + +The London Fire Brigade now (January, 1861) consists of one +superintendent, four foremen, each being appointed to a district +consisting of a fourth part of London, which he never leaves except on +some very pressing emergency, and who, in the absence of the +superintendent, has the sole command of all engines, or firemen, +within, or who may come within, his district; twelve engineers, ten +sub-engineers, forty-seven senior firemen, and forty-three junior +firemen: in all, one hundred and seventeen individuals. In addition, +there are fifteen drivers and thirty-seven horses, all living at the +several stations, and ready when required. There is also a +supplementary force of four extra firemen, four drivers, and eight +horses living at the stations, pursuing their usual avocations, and +only paid by the Committee when required. The mechanical appliances +consist of twenty-seven large engines drawn by horses, eight small +engines drawn by hand, two floating-engines worked by steam, one of +forty-horse power, and the other of eighty-horse power, one land steam +fire-engine, and twenty-eight hand-pumps, one of the latter being +carried on each engine. When an engine is sent to a fire, only four +firemen and one driver accompany it. The levers are worked by the +by-standers, who are paid one shilling for the first hour, and +sixpence for each succeeding hour, besides refreshments. Upwards of +six hundred assistants have been thus employed at one time. The +principal protection of London against fire is entirely voluntary on +the part of the insurance companies, to whom the above establishment +belongs; there being no law in any shape whatever to control or +sustain the brigade; and with the exception of some fifteen or twenty, +the parish-engines are comparatively useless at a serious fire. It +must not be omitted, that the greatest possible assistance is given to +the firemen by the police, of whom there are about 7000, in keeping +back the crowd, &c. The fire-offices look upon the whole as a matter +of private business, so that the brigade is proportioned quite as must +to the amount which the offices think it prudent to spend as to the +size of the place. Paris, which is not half the size of London, and +the buildings of which are much more substantial, has upwards of 800 +firemen. It appears to me that any success which the brigade may have +attained depends, in a great measure, on the liberal pay given, by +which the best men for the purpose can be obtained, the favourable +view in which the brigade is regarded by the public, and the willing +and able assistance given by a numerous and perhaps the best police in +existence. + +The firemen in London being constantly employed on weekly wages, give +their whole time to their employers, and are much more under command +than where men are only occasionally employed. The wages and treatment +being liberal, although the discipline is severe, there are generally +a considerable number of candidates for each vacancy. Thus good men +are obtained, seamen being preferred, as they are taught to obey +orders, and the night and day watches and the uncertainty of the +occupation are more similar to their former habits, than to those of +other men of the same rank in life. The large number of fires is, +however, the principal cause of any advantage the London firemen may +possess over those of smaller places; and it is hardly fair to compare +firemen who have only an opportunity of attending one or two fires in +a week, to those who attend nearly three fires a day. + +The firemen are drilled first daily, and then two or three times a +week, for some months; and this, with an average of three calls a day, +soon makes them acquainted with the routine of their business; but it +takes years of constant work to make a thoroughly good fireman. + +The management of the London Fire Brigade is confided to a Committee, +consisting of one of the directors or secretaries from each of the +fire-offices in London. + +The superintendent has the command of the whole force. + +The town is divided into four districts, in each of which there are +stationed a sufficient number of engines, under the charge of a +foreman, with engines and firemen under him. + +The districts are as follows:-- + +NORTH SIDE OF RIVER. + + District A. From the eastward to Paul's Chain, St. Paul's + Churchyard, Aldersgate-street, and Goswell-street-road. + + B. From St. Paul's, &c., to Tottenham-court-road, + Crown-street, and St. Martin's-lane. + + C. From Tottenham-court-road, &c., westward. + + D. South side of River. + +The men are clothed uniformly; are distinguished by numbers +corresponding with their names in the books; and regularly exercised +in the use of their engines, and in such other duties as the Committee +or Superintendent may direct. + +The following general regulations do not contain rules of conduct +applicable to every variety of circumstance that may occur to +individuals in the performance of their duty, as something must always +be left for the exercise of intelligence and discretion; and, +according to the degree in which these qualities in members of the +Establishment are combined with zeal and activity, they become +entitled to future promotion and reward. + +It is strongly impressed upon the minds of all persons serving in the +Establishment, that one of the greatest advantages which the present +system possesses above that which it superseded, is derived from the +embodying the whole force under one responsible officer. It is, +therefore, incumbent upon the men to render prompt and cheerful +obedience to the commands of their superiors; to execute their duties +as steadily and quietly as possible; to be careful not to annoy the +inhabitants of houses they may be called upon to enter, and to treat +all persons with civility; to take care to preserve presence of mind +and good temper, and not to allow themselves to be distracted from +their duty by the advice or directions of any persons but their own +officers, and to observe the strictest sobriety and general regularity +of behaviour. + +As every man wears the uniform of the Establishment, which is marked +with a number corresponding with his name in the books, he must +constantly bear in mind that misconduct will not only reflect +discredit upon the Establishment, but be easily brought home to +himself and subject him to proportional punishment. + +The men are particularly cautioned not to take spirituous liquors from +any individual without special permission of the superintendent, or, +in his absence, of the foreman of the district; and as intoxication +upon the alarming occasion of fires is not only disreputable to the +Establishment, but in the highest degree dangerous, by rendering the +men unfit for duty, every appearance of it is most rigidly marked, and +the foremen, engineers, and sub-engineers report immediately, for the +purpose of being laid before the Committee, every instance of +insubordination or intoxication, and the men are accordingly apprised +that the regulations regarding the above-mentioned faults will be most +strictly enforced. + +All the men in the Establishment are liable to be punished by fine, +suspension, reduction, or dismissal, for disobeying or neglecting any +of these regulations, or for any other misconduct; and the disposal of +the fines so collected is at the discretion of the Committee. + +The following are the conditions upon which each man is admitted into +the Establishment:-- + + He devotes his whole time to the service. + + He serves and resides wherever he is appointed. + + He must promptly obey all orders which he may receive from + those placed in authority over him. + + The age of admission does not exceed twenty-five, nor is + under eighteen. + + He conforms himself to all regulations which may be made + from time to time. + + He does not upon any occasion, or under any pretence + whatever, take money from any person, without the express + permission of the Committee. + + He appears at all times in the dress of the Establishment. + + If lodgings be found for him, a deduction of one shilling + per week is made from his pay, if unmarried; if married, and + if lodgings be found for him, an agreement in each + particular case will be made. + + He receives his pay weekly on such day as shall be + appointed. + + The pay of a Junior Fireman is 3_s._ per day, or 21_s._ a + week. + + The pay of a Senior Fireman, 3_s._ 6_d._ a day, or 24_s._ + 6_d._ a week. + + The pay of a Sub-Engineer is 26_s._ a week. + + The pay of an Engineer, 4_s._ a day, or 28_s._ a week. + + The Foremen are paid by annual salaries. + + Each man contributes towards a Superannuation Fund, + according to a scale determined by the Committee. + + Each man receives annually-- + + One short frock coat, marked with a number answering to his name + in the books. + + A black neckcloth. + + Two pairs of cloth trousers. + + One cloth cap. + + Four pairs of boots in three years, and + + Once in three years he receives-- + + One great coat. + + He does not quit the service without giving fourteen days' + previous notice; if he quits without such notice, or is + dismissed, the whole of his pay then due is forfeited. + + Every man who is dismissed from the Establishment, or who + resigns his situation, delivers up, before he quits the + service, every article of dress and appointment which may + have been supplied to him; if any of such articles have + been, in the opinion of the superintendent, improperly used + or damaged, the man makes good the damage or supplies a new + article. + + Every man in the service is liable to immediate dismissal + for unfitness, negligence, or misconduct. The Committee, if + they see fit, may dismiss a man without assigning any + reason. + + No fireman must allow to be used by any other person, nor + use himself, except while he belongs to the Establishment, + the button and badge given with his clothes. + + In the event of sickness rendering any man incapable of + performing his duties, the Committee reserves to itself the + power of making a deduction from his weekly pay. + + Each man, on his admission, gives to the Committee, if + required, a letter of guarantee from some respectable + person, to an amount not exceeding 50_l._, as security. + + +OUTLINE OF GENERAL DUTY. + +One-third of the men are constantly on duty at the different +engine-houses, night and day; and the whole are liable to be called up +for attendance at fires, or for any other duty. In general, it is +arranged as follows, viz.:-- + +If a fire happen in District A, the whole of the men and engines of +that district immediately repair to the spot; two-thirds of the men, +and one of the engines, from each of the districts B and D, also go to +the fire; and one-third of the men from the district C. + +If the fire happen in B, the whole of the men and engines in that +district immediately repair to the fire; one engine from A, another +from C, two-thirds of the men from A and C, and one-third of the men +from D. + +If the fire happen in C, the whole of the men and engines in that +district, one engine and two-thirds of the men from the district B, +and one-third of the men from A and D, go to the fire. + +If the fire happen in D, the whole of the men and engines in that +district, with one engine and two-thirds of the men from the district +A, and one-third of the men from B and C, shall go to the fire. + +If a fire happen on the boundary of a district, and it is doubtful in +which district it has occurred, the whole of the engines and men of +the two adjoining districts instantly proceed to the spot, and +one-third of the men of the two remaining districts. + +In case of emergency, the superintendent calls in such additional +force as he may require. + +The engines are not taken to alarms of chimneys on fire, unless the +circumstances of the case should, in the opinion of the +superintendent, foreman, or engineer, require a deviation from this +regulation. + +When any of the men from another district come to assist at a fire, if +the engine to which they are attached is not in attendance, they +instantly go to the foreman's engine of the district to which they +come. + +The engines are conveyed to fires at not less than seven miles per +hour, and the men who do not accompany the engines go at not less than +four miles per hour. + +Any engineer or fireman who, when at a fire, is absent from an engine +or a branch pipe, without orders from the superintendent or foreman, +is liable to a fine. + +If any of the men are sick, or absent from any other cause, their +duties are performed by other men attached to their engine-station. + +With a view to the men being always at hand, they are lodged as near +as possible to their respective engine-houses. + +The roll is called at each station every morning and evening. + +No man leaves his own residence or the engine-station to which he +belongs from 10 P.M. to 6 A.M. except to go to a fire, or by an order +from a superior, or with written leave from the superintendent, and +the senior man on duty is answerable if he does not report any +departure from this rule. + +Men on duty not at the engine-stations are allowed one hour for +breakfast and one for dinner, as follows:--One-half of the men on duty +go to breakfast from 8 to 9, and the other half from 9 to 10; also +one-half go to dinner from 1 to 2, and the other half from 2 to 3. The +second half in no case leave until the whole of the first half have +returned, neither do the men on duty leave morning or evening until +the relief has arrived. The engineer or senior man on duty is +answerable for this regulation being carried into effect. And any man +being absent from the premises he is watching or working in, except at +the regular hours, is punished. + +The men for duty individually assemble at the principal engine-house +in the district before, or precisely at, the hour fixed for that +purpose. Their names are called, and an inspection made by the foreman +of the district, to ascertain that they are sober and correctly +dressed and appointed. The foreman then reads and explains the orders +of the day. At the hour for relieving the men, no one leaves his +engine-house until the relief has actually arrived there; when the men +are relieved, their names are called over, and they are inspected by +the engineer, that he may ascertain whether they are sober, and as +correctly dressed and appointed as when they went on duty. The +engineer enters these inspections in a book. + +The engineers deliver a written report, according to a printed form, +twice each day, to the foreman of the district, who in his turn +reports twice a day to the superintendent. + +The whole of the men are, at all times, ready to appear at any place +required, for exercise or any other purpose, and are ready (whether on +duty or not) to execute whatever orders they may receive, in relation +to the Establishment, from the engineers, foremen, or superintendent. + + +DUTIES OF SUPERINTENDENT. + +The Superintendent resides at the principal engine-station in +Watling-street. + +The moment an alarm of fire is given, wherever it may be, he repairs +to the spot with all possible expedition, and takes the command of the +whole force. + +He endeavours to ascertain the cause of the fire, and reports the same +to the committee. + +He is responsible for the general conduct of the foremen, engineers, +and firemen under his charge. + +He makes himself well acquainted with the character and conduct of +every man under his orders. + +He must be firm and just, and, at the same time, kind and conciliating +in his behaviour on all occasions. + +He takes care that the printed regulations and all others given out +from time to time, are promptly and strictly obeyed; and he gives +clear and precise instructions to the men under him, and reports every +instance of neglect of a serious nature to the Committee. + +He must feel the importance of visiting some of the engine-houses, at +uncertain hours, every day and night. + +He suspends and reports to the Committee persons who are guilty of +serious misconduct; and at once punishes by fines, according to a +scale sanctioned by the Committee, irregularities of a lighter +character, reporting such fines to them. + +He must be at all times prepared to furnish the Committee with +particulars respecting the state of the Establishment. + +When a fire is extinguished, the superintendent retains only such a +number of men and engines as he may think necessary for watching the +premises. + +He communicates with the surveyors of stock of the offices interested +in a fire, and arranges with them, in the event of its being +necessary, to work out salvage from the ruins. + +When a fire happens, he causes a report to be made immediately, if in +office hours (or, if after office hours, before ten o'clock next +morning), to those offices interested in the fire, and also to their +surveyors of buildings and stock, as soon as possible after the fire +is extinguished, and causes a daily report to be transmitted to each +office of all fires which have happened, according to a printed form +given to him for that purpose, as follows:-- + + Date and hour. + + Situation of premises. + + Name and occupation of tenant. + + Name and residence of landlord. + + Supposed cause of fire. + + In what offices insured. + + No. of Policy. + + If there is gas on the premises. + + By whom called. + + By whom extinguished. + + Supply of water, with name of company. + + No. of engines attending and of what district, and the order + in which they arrive. + + No. of men ditto ditto. + + Engines not of the Establishment, and the order in which + they arrive. + + Description of damage. + + +DUTIES OF FOREMAN. + +The Foreman resides at the place appointed for him. + +He receives his orders and instructions from, and makes his reports +to, the superintendent. + +He must set an example to the men of alacrity and skill in the +discharge of his duty, and of regularity in his general behaviour. + +In the absence of the superintendent, the foreman of the district will +take the command of the whole force, both those of his own district +and of all other engines and men which may come to his assistance in +cases of fire. + +He does not attend fires that happen out of his own district unless he +receives orders from the superintendent to that effect. + +He endeavours to ascertain the cause of the fire, and reports the same +to the superintendent. + +On the alarm of fire being given in his own district, he instantly +repairs to the spot, and uses his utmost endeavours to get the engines +into play and supply them with water. The first engine and firemen +which arrive at a fire are not interfered with, nor their supplies of +water diverted from them, by those coming afterwards, unless by a +distinct order from the superintendent, or, in his absence, from the +foreman of the district. The same rule applies to each succeeding +engine which takes up a position. + +He is careful to place the engines in such a manner that the men who +work at the levers may be in no danger from the falling of the +premises on fire; and also that the engines may not be in the way of +people carrying out furniture, &c.; but, above all things, he +endeavours to place the engineers with their branch pipes in such +positions _that the water from the branches may directly strike the +burning materials_. This he cannot too often inculcate on the men +placed under him, as upon this point, on being properly attended to, +depends entirely the effect of the engines. To attain this most +desirable end, it is frequently necessary to enter the premises on +fire, and the foreman takes care so to place his men that they can +easily escape. If he has reason to suspect that the building is not +sufficiently secure, he stations one or two competent men to observe +the state of the building, and to give the alarm when they see any +danger. + +He never allows any man unaccompanied by another to enter a building +on fire. + +He does not throw more water on the premises than is absolutely +necessary to extinguish the fire, as all the water thrown after the +fire is extinguished, only tends to increase the damage. + +When the inmates of the premises on fire are removed, the foreman +endeavours to exclude air from the parts on fire, by shutting all +doors and windows as far as may be practicable. + +He is responsible for the conduct of the men placed under him, and for +the state of the engines, which must at all times be kept in +first-rate order; he also makes himself well acquainted with the +talent and general character of each individual under him. + +He visits every engine-house in his district at least once in the +twenty-four hours; he sees that the men are on duty, the engines ready +for service, and everything in proper order, and enters his visit in a +book kept for that purpose, with the date and hour of his visit. If he +finds anything wrong, he enters it in the book, and immediately sends +off a report to the superintendent by one of the men not on duty. + +He sends a written report twice in every twenty-four hours to the +superintendent, which contains a particular statement of all fires and +everything else connected with the Establishment which has occurred in +his district within the preceding twelve hours. + +He returns in his report of a fire the names of such men, if any, as +were not ready to start with the engine to which they are attached. + +It is expected that he is able and ready to give instructions to the +engineers and men on all points relating to their duty. + +He receives and enters, in a book kept for that purpose, all +complaints which may be made against any person under his command, +causing the complaining party to sign the same and insert his address, +and he reports the whole matter without delay to the superintendent. + +He is responsible for the engines in his district being each provided +with the articles contained in the following list:-- + + 2 lengths of scaling ladder. + + 1 canvas sheet, with 10 or 12 handles of rope round the edge + of it, used as a portable fire-escape. + + 2 pieces of 2-1/2-inch rope, one 10 fathoms and one 14 + fathoms long. + + 7 lengths of hose, each 40 feet long. + + 2 branch pipes, one 4 and the other 1 foot long. + + 3 nozzles, or jet pipes. + + 4 lengths of suction-pipe, each about 6 feet long. + + 1 flat rose. + + 1 standcock. + + 1 goose-neck. + + 2 balls of strips of sheep-skin. + + 2 balls of small cord. + + 4 hose wrenches. + + 1 fire hook. + + 1 mattock. + + 1 shovel. + + 1 saw. + + 1 screw-wrench. + + 1 portable cistern. + + 1 hatchet or pole-axe. + + 1 iron crow-bar. + + +DUTIES OF THE ENGINEER. + +He resides in the engine-house to which he is appointed. + +He obeys all orders given to him by the superintendent or the foreman +of the district. + +He must set an example to the men of alacrity and skill in the +discharge of his duty, and of regularity in his general behaviour. + +He is held responsible for the conduct of the men under him, and for +the state of his engine, and takes care that it is provided with the +articles contained in the foregoing list. + +He reports to his foreman, every morning and evening, in writing, +whether any of his men have been absent with or without leave. + +He enters in his book the time when the men go to the foreman's +station before taking duty, and also when they return. + +On receiving notice of a fire happening within the prescribed limits, +he instantly takes his engine and men to the spot, and places himself +and them at the disposal of the superintendent, foreman, or senior +engineer of the district in which the fire happens. + +He must make himself acquainted with the character and abilities of +each man under him. + +He is subject to fines at the discretion of the Committee, for neglect +of duty or misbehaviour. + + +DUTIES OF SUB-ENGINEERS. + +The sub-engineers being attached to foremen's and double stations +only, in the absence of the foremen or engineer, or when in charge of +an engine, the duties of the sub-engineer are the same as those +described for an engineer; when the foreman or engineer is absent, the +sub-engineer must set an example to the firemen at the station of +constant attention, implicit obedience and activity, and in so far as +he exhibits these and similar qualifications he expects to rise in the +service. + + +DUTIES OF THE FIREMAN. + +Every fireman in the establishment may expect to rise to the superior +stations, by activity, intelligence, sobriety, and general good +conduct. + +He must make it his study to recommend himself to notice by a diligent +discharge of his duties, and strict obedience to the commands of his +superiors, recollecting that he who has been accustomed to obey will +be considered best qualified to command. + +He resides near the engine-house to which he is attached, in a +situation to be approved of, and devotes the whole of his time and +abilities to the service. + +On the alarm of fire, he proceeds with all possible speed to the +engine-house to which he is attached. + +He must at all times appear neat in his person, and correctly dressed +in the establishment uniform, and be respectful in his demeanour +towards his superiors. + +He must readily and punctually obey the orders of the engineers, +foremen, and superintendent. + +He must not quit his engine-house while on duty, except to go to a +fire, unless by special order from a superior. + +He is subject to fines for neglect of duty or misbehaviour, according +to the regulations. + + +BOOKS KEPT AT THE STATIONS. + +There is a book kept in each engine-house, in which are entered all +fires or alarms of fires; the time the men come on duty; the visits +made by the foremen, superintendent, or any of the Committee, and all +complaints against the men. + +This book is in charge of the superior on duty at the time; and the +foreman and engineers are answerable for its being correctly kept. + +Every entry made in this book is signed by the person making it. + +The superintendent enters, in a book kept for that purpose, the +particulars of every fire, the attendance of engines, supply of water, +&c., and lays it before the Committee weekly, or oftener, if required. + +Any false entry, for the purpose of concealing absence, is +punished--for the first offence, by the reduction of one step, and for +the second by dismissal. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[Footnote F: At a fire which took place in one of the best streets in +Edinburgh, and which began in the roof, the persons who rushed into +the house on the first alarm being given, threw the greater part of +the contents of the drawing-room and library, with several basketsful +of china and glass, out of the windows; the fire injured nothing below +the uppermost story.] + + + + +THE EDINBURGH FIRE BRIGADE. + + +In forming the brigade in Edinburgh, where the firemen are only +occasionally employed, the description of men, from which I made a +selection, were slaters, house-carpenters, masons, plumbers, and +smiths. + +Slaters make good firemen, not so much from their superiority in +climbing, going along roofs, &c., although these are great advantages, +but from their being in general possessed of a handiness and readiness +which I have not been able to discover in the same degree amongst +other classes of workmen. It is, perhaps, not necessary that I should +account for this, but it appears to me to arise from their being more +dependent on their wits, and more frequently put to their shifts in +the execution of their ordinary avocations. House-carpenters and +masons being well acquainted with the construction of buildings, and +understanding readily from whence danger is to be apprehended, can +judge with tolerable accuracy, from the appearance of a house, where +the stair is situated, and how the house is divided inside. Plumbers +are also well accustomed to climbing and going along the roofs of +houses; they are useful in working fire-cocks, covering the gratings +of drains with lead, and generally in the management of water. Smiths +and plumbers can also better endure heat and smoke than most other +workmen. + +Men selected from these five trades are also more robust in body, and +better able to endure the extremes of heat, cold, wet, and fatigue, to +which firemen are so frequently exposed, than men engaged in more +sedentary employments. + +I have generally made it a point to select for firemen, young men from +seventeen or eighteen to twenty-five years of age. At that age they +enter more readily into the spirit of the business, and are much more +easily trained, than when farther advanced in life. Men are frequently +found who, although they excel in the mechanical parts of their own +professions, are yet so devoid of judgment and resources, that when +anything occurs which they have not been taught, or have not been able +to foresee, they are completely at a loss. Now it happens not +unfrequently that the man who arrives first at a fire, notwithstanding +any training or instructions he may have received, is still, from the +circumstances of the case, left almost entirely to the direction of +his own judgment. It is, therefore, of immense importance to procure +men on whose coolness and judgment you can depend. If they are expert +tradesmen, so much the better, as there is generally a degree of +respect shown to first-rate tradesmen by their fellows, which inferior +hands can seldom obtain; and this respect tends greatly to keep up the +character of the corps to which they belong, which ought never to be +lost sight of. + +Amidst the noise and confusion which more or less attend all fires, I +have found considerable difficulty in being able to convey the +necessary orders to the firemen in such a manner as not to be liable +to misapprehension. I tried a speaking-trumpet; but, finding it of no +advantage, it was speedily abandoned. It appeared to me indeed, that +while it increased the sound of the voice, by the deep tone which it +gave, it brought it into greater accordance with the surrounding +noise. I tried a boatswain's call, which I have found to answer much +better. Its shrill piercing note is so unlike any other sound usually +heard at a fire, that it immediately attracts the attention of the +firemen. By varying the calls, I have now established a mode of +communication not easily misunderstood, and sufficiently precise for +the circumstances to which it is adapted, and which I now find to be a +very great convenience. + +The calls are as follows:-- + + 1 for red, 2 for blue, 3 for yellow, 4 for grey.[G] + + 5 to work the engine. + + 6 to stop working. + + 7 to attach one length of hose more than the engine has at + the time the call is given. + + 8 to coil up the hose attached to the engine. + + 9 to coil up the hose attached to the fire-cock. + + 10 to turn to the left. + + 11 to turn to the right. + + 12 the call to work the engine answers also to move forward + when the engine is prepared for travelling. + + 13 the call to stop working answers to stop the engine when + moving forward. + +In all there are thirty-six calls when compounded with the first four. + +In speaking of the drilling of firemen, I shall give a short account +of the plan followed here, which has been tolerably successful. + +The present number of firemen in Edinburgh is fifty, divided into four +companies; three of which consist of twelve and one of fourteen men. +The bounds of the city are divided into four districts; in each of +which there is an engine-house, containing one or more engines, one of +the companies being attached to each engine-house. In each company +there is one captain, one sergeant, four pioneers, and six or eight +firemen. + +The whole are dressed in blue jackets, canvas trousers, and hardened +leather helmets, having hollow leather crests over the crown to ward +off falling materials. The form of this helmet was taken from the +war-helmet of the New Zealanders, with the addition of the hind flap +of leather to prevent burning matter, melted lead, water, or rubbish +getting into the neck of the wearer. The captains' helmets have three +small ornaments, those of the sergeants one--those of the pioneers and +firemen being plain. + +The jackets of the captains have two small cloth wings on the +shoulder, similar to those worn by light infantry. Those of the +sergeants have three stripes on the left arm, and, on the left arms of +the pioneers and firemen, are their respective numbers in the company. +Each company has a particular colour--red, blue, yellow, and grey. +Each engine is painted of one or other of these colours, and the +accoutrements of the men belonging to it correspond. There is thus no +difficulty in distinguishing the engines or men from each other by +their colours and numbers. Each man also wears a broad leather +waist-belt, with a brass buckle in front. To the waist-belts of the +captains, sergeants, and pioneers is attached eighty feet of cord; the +captains having also a small mason's hammer, with a crow-head at the +end of the handle: the sergeants have a clawed hammer, such as is used +by house-carpenters, with an iron handle, and two openings at the end +for unscrewing nuts from bolts; the pioneers a small hatchet, with a +crow-head at the end of the handle; and the firemen each carry a +canvas water-bucket folded up. + +The captains assemble every Tuesday night, to give in a report of such +fires as may have occurred in their respective districts, with a list +of the men who have turned out, and a corresponding list from the +sergeant of police of the respective districts. They then receive any +orders which may be necessary; and any vacancies which have occurred +in the establishment are filled up at these meetings. + +For some months after this fire establishment was organized, the men +were regularly drilled once a week, at four o'clock in the morning; +but now only once a month at the same hour. + +Among many other good reasons for preferring this early hour, I may +mention, that it does not interfere with the daily occupation of the +firemen. The chance of collecting a crowd is also avoided, as there +are then comparatively few people on the streets; this is a matter of +some importance, as a crowd of people not only impedes the movements +of the firemen, but, from small quantities of water spilt on the +by-standers, quarrels are generated, and a prejudice excited against +the corps, to avoid which every exertion should be used to keep the +firemen on good terms with the populace. + +The mornings, too, at this early hour, are dark for more than half the +year, and the firemen are thus accustomed to work by torch-light, and +sometimes without any light whatever, except the few public lamps +which are then burning. And, as most fires happen in the night, the +advantage of drilling in the dark must be sufficiently obvious. + +The inhabitants have sometimes complained of being disturbed with the +noise of the engines at so early an hour; but when the object has been +explained, they have generally submitted, with a good grace, to this +slight evil. A different part of the city being always chosen for each +successive drill, the annoyance occasioned to any one district is very +trifling, and of very unfrequent occurrence. + +On the Tuesday evening preceding the drill, the captains are informed +when and where the men are to assemble. These orders they communicate +to the individual firemen. A point of rendezvous being thus given to +the whole body, every man, who is not on the spot at the hour +appointed, fully equipped, with his clothes and accoutrements in good +order, is subjected to a fine. Arrived on the ground, the men are +divided into two parties, each party consisting of two companies, that +being the number required to work each large engine without any +assistance from the populace. The whole are then examined as to the +condition of their clothing and equipments. + +The captains, sergeants, and pioneers of each company alternately take +the duty of directing the engine, attaching the hose, &c., while the +whole of each party not engaged in these duties take the levers as +firemen. The call is then given to move forward, the men setting off +at a quick walking pace, and, on the same call being repeated, they +get into a smart trot. When the call to stop is given, with orders to +attach one or more lengths of hose to the engine and fire-cock, it is +done in the following manner:--No. 1 takes out the branch pipe, and +runs out as far as he thinks the hose ordered to be attached will +reach, and there remains; No. 2 takes a length of hose out of the +engine, and uncoils it towards No. 1; and No. 3 attaches the hose to +the engine. If more than one length is required, No. 4 takes out +another, couples it to the former length, and then uncoils it. If a +third length is wanted, No. 3 comes up with it, after having attached +the first length to the engine. If more lengths are still wanted, No: +2 goes back to the engine for another; Nos. 3 and 4 follow, and so on +till the requisite length is obtained; No. 1 then screws on the +branch-pipe at the farther extremity of the last length.[H] While Nos. +1, 2, 3, and 4 are attaching the hose to the engine, No. 5 opens the +fire-cock door, screws on the distributor, and attaches the length of +hose, which No. 6 uncoils; Nos. 7 and 8 assist, if more than one +length of hose be required. Immediately on the call being given to +attach the hose, the sergeant locks the fore-carriage of the engine, +and unlocks the levers. The fire-cock being opened by No. 5 (who +remains by it as long as it is being used), the sergeant holds the end +of the hose which supplies the engine, and at the same time +superintends the men who work the levers. The call being given to work +the engine, the whole of the men, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, the captain +and sergeant excepted, work at the levers along with the men of the +other company. + +Although these operations may appear complicated, they are all +completed, and the engine in full play, with three lengths, or 120 +feet of hose, in one minute and ten seconds, including the time +required for the water to fill the engine so far as to allow it to +work. + +In order to excite a spirit of emulation, as well as to teach the men +dexterity in working the engines, I frequently cause a competition +amongst them. They are ordered to attach one or more lengths of hose +to each of two engines, and to work them as quickly as possible, the +first engine which throws water being considered the winner. They are +sometimes also placed at an equal distance from each of two separate +fire-cocks; on the call being given to move forward, each party starts +for the fire-cock to which it is ordered, and the first which gets +into play is of course held to have beat the other. The call to stop +is then given, and both parties return to their former station, with +their hose coiled up, and everything in proper travelling order; the +first which arrives being understood to have the advantage. + +The men are also carefully and regularly practised in taking their +hose up common-stairs, drawing them up by ropes on the outside, and +generally in accustoming themselves to, and providing against, every +circumstance which may be anticipated in the case of fire. + +When a fire occurs in a common-stair, the advantages arising from this +branch of training are incalculable. The occupants, in some cases +amounting to twenty or thirty families, hurrying out with their +children and furniture, regardless of everything except the +preservation of their lives and property, and the rush of the crowd to +the scene of alarm, form altogether, notwithstanding the exertions of +an excellent police, such a scene of confusion as those only who have +witnessed it can imagine; and here it is that discipline and unity of +purpose are indispensable; for, unless each man has already been +taught and accustomed to the particular duty expected from him, he +only partakes of the general alarm, and adds to the confusion. But +even when a hose has been carried up the interior of a common-stair, +the risk of damage from the people carrying out their furniture is so +great, that the hose is not unfrequently burst, almost as soon as the +engine has begun to play. If the hose be carried up to the floor on +fire by the outside, the risk of damage is comparatively small, the +hose in that case being only exposed for a short distance in crossing +the stair. + +During a period of four years the only two firemen who lost their +lives were run down by their own engines; and, in order to avoid +danger from this cause, they are frequently accustomed suddenly to +stop the engines when running down the steep streets with which this +city abounds. It is a highly necessary exercise, and is done by +wheeling the engine smartly round to the right or left, which has the +effect of immediately stopping its course. + +There is a branch of training which I introduced amongst the Edinburgh +firemen some time ago, which has been attended with more important +advantages than was at first anticipated. I mean the gymnastic +exercises. The men are practised in these exercises (in a small +gymnasium fitted up for them in the head engine-house) regularly once +a-week, and in winter sometimes twice: attendance on their part is +entirely voluntary; the best gymnasts (if otherwise equally qualified) +are always promoted in cases of vacancy. + +So sensible were the Insurance Companies doing business here, of the +advantages likely to arise from the practice of these exercises, that +on one occasion they subscribed upwards of 10_l._, which was +distributed in medals and money among the most expert and attentive +gymnasts of the corps, at a competition in presence of the +magistrates, commissioners of police, and managers of insurance +companies. + +Amongst the many advantages arising from these exercises I shall +notice only one or two. The firemen, when at their ordinary +employments, as masons, house-carpenters, &c., being accustomed to a +particular exercise of certain muscles only, there is very often a +degree of stiffness in their general movements, which prevents them +from performing their duty as firemen with that ease and celerity +which are so necessary and desirable; but the gymnastic exercises, by +bringing all the muscles of the body into action, and by aiding the +more general development of the frame, tend greatly to remove or +overcome this awkwardness. But its greatest advantage is the +confidence it gives to the men when placed in certain situations of +danger. A man, for example, in the third or fourth floor of a house on +fire, who is uncertain as to his means of escape, in the event of his +return by the stair being cut off, will not render any very efficient +service in extinguishing the fire; his own safety will be the +principal object of his attention, and till that is to a certain +extent secured, his exertions are not much to be relied upon. An +experienced gymnast, on the other hand, placed in these circumstances, +finds himself in comparative security. With a hatchet and eighty feet +of cord at his command, and a window near him, he knows there is not +much difficulty in getting to the street; and this confidence not only +enables him to go on with his duty with more spirit, but his attention +not being abstracted by thoughts of personal danger, he is able to +direct it wholly to the circumstances of the fire. He can raise +himself on a window sill, or the top of a wall, if he can only reach +it with his hands; and by his hands alone he may sustain himself in +situations where other means of support are unattainable, till the +arrival of assistance. These are great advantages; but, as I said +before, the greatest of all is that feeling of safety with which it +enables a fireman to proceed with his operations, uncertainty or +distraction being the greatest of possible evils. The cord carried at +the waist-belt of the captains, sergeants, and pioneers, being fully +sufficient to sustain a man's weight, and with the assistance of their +small hatchets easily made fast, and the pioneers always being two +together, there is thus no difficulty in descending even from a height +of eighty feet: the cords should be doubled by way of security. + + +I.--GENERAL REGULATIONS OF THE EDINBURGH FIRE BRIGADE. + +A list of the engine-houses, and the residences of the superintendent +and head enginemen in each district shall be publicly advertised, that +no one may be ignorant where to apply in cases of fire; and, in the +event of fire breaking out in any house, the possessor shall be bound +to give instant notice of it at the nearest station; and shall take +particular care to keep all doors and windows shut in the premises +where the fire happens to be. + +"Fire-engine house" shall be painted in large characters on one or +more prominent places of each engine-house; and the residences of the +master of engines, head enginemen, inspectors of gas companies, and +water-officers of the district, shall likewise be marked there. + +The head enginemen and firemen shall reside as near the engine-house +as possible. + +As, in the case of a fire breaking out, it may be necessary to break +open the doors of houses and shops in the neighbourhood, in order to +prevent the fire from spreading, it is ordered, that no possessors of +houses or shops in the neighbourhood shall go away, after the fire has +broken out, without leaving the key of their house or shop, as +otherwise the door will be broken open, if necessary; and it is +recommended that all possessors of shops shall have the place of their +residence painted upon their shop-doors, that notice may be sent them +when necessary. + + +II.--POLICE. + +Upon any watchman discovering fire, he shall call the neighbouring +watchmen to his assistance--shall take the best means in his power to +put all concerned upon their guard--and shall immediately send off +notice to the nearest office and engine-house. The watchman, who is +despatched to give these intimations, shall run as far as he can, and +shall then send forward any other watchman whom he may meet, he +himself following at a walk to communicate his information, in case of +any mistake on the part of the second messenger. + +Upon intimation of a fire being received at the main office, or a +district office, the head officer on duty shall instantly give notice +thereof to the head engineman of the district, to the master of +engines, to the water-officers of the district, and to the inspectors +of the different gas-light companies, and shall have power, if his +force at the office at the time be deficient, to employ the nearest +watchmen for these purposes; and, on intimation being first received +at a district-office, the officer on duty in the office shall +immediately send notice to the main office. + +Upon intimation being received at the main office, the officer on duty +shall also instantly send notice to the superintendent of police, and +the lieutenants not at the office at the time--to the master of +engines; to the head enginemen of the various districts; to the +superintendent of the water company; to the lord provost or chief +magistrate for the time; to the sheriff of the county; to the bailie +residing nearest the place; to the dean of guild; to the members of +fire-engine committee of commissioners of police; to the moderator of +the high constables; and also to the managers of the different +gaslight companies. + +The officer on duty at the main office shall, with the least possible +delay, send off to the fire a party of his men, under the command of a +lieutenant or other officer. + +This party, on arriving at the spot, shall clear off the crowd, and +keep open space and passages for the firemen and others employed. + +The officer commanding this party of the police shall attend to no +instructions except such as he shall receive from the acting chief +magistrate attending; or, in absence of a magistrate, from any member +of the committee on fire-engines; and the men shall attend to the +instructions of their own officer alone. + +Three or more policemen shall be in attendance upon the acting chief +magistrate and fire-engine committee; two policemen shall constantly +attend the master of the engines, to be at his disposal entirely; and +one policeman shall attend with the water-officer at each fire-cock +that may be opened. + +The superintendent of police shall always have a list of extra +policemen hung up in the police-office, who, upon occasions of fire, +may be called out, if necessary, and twenty of these extra men shall +always be called out upon notice of fire being received at the main +office, for the purpose of attending at the police-office, and +rendering assistance where it may be required. The superintendent +shall likewise have a supply of fire-buckets, flambeaux, and lanterns, +at the office, to be ready when wanted. + +There shall be no ringing of alarm-bells, beating of drums, or +springing of rattles, except by written order from the chief +magistrate for the time; but the alarm may be given by despatching +messengers, with proper badges, through different parts of the town, +when considered necessary. + + +III. SUPERINTENDENT OF FIRE BRIGADE. + +On receiving notice of a fire, the superintendent shall instantly +equip himself in his uniform, and repair to the spot where the fire +is. + +The necessary operations to be adopted shall be under his absolute +control, and he will issue his instructions to the head enginemen and +firemen. + +The superintendent shall report from time to time to the chief +magistrate in attendance (through such medium as may be at his +command, but without his leaving the spot), the state of the fire, and +whether a greater number of policemen, or a party of the military, be +required, and anything else which may occur to him; and the master +shall observe the directions of the chief magistrate attending, and +those of no other person whatever. + +The superintendent shall frequently inspect the engines, and all the +apparatus connected therewith; he shall be responsible for the whole +being at all times in good order and condition; and he shall have a +general muster and inspection at least once every three months, when +the engines and all the apparatus shall be tried. He shall also +instruct the enginemen, firemen, and the watchmen, to unlock the +plates, and screw on the distributors of the fire-cocks, or open the +fire-plugs. + +Whenever any repairs or new apparatus shall appear to be necessary, +the superintendent shall give notice to the clerk of the police, whose +duty it shall be instantly to convene the committee on fire-engines. + +Upon a fire breaking out, the superintendent shall lose as little time +as possible in stationing chimney-sweepers on the roofs of the +adjoining houses, to keep them clear of flying embers; and also +persons in each flat of the adjoining houses, to observe their state, +and report if any appearances of danger should arise; such persons +taking as much care as possible _to keep all doors and windows of said +flats shut_, and the doors and windows of the premises where the fire +happens to be shall, so far as practicable, be carefully kept shut. + +The superintendent shall forthwith prepare regulations for the +firemen, &c., under his charge, and report the same to the committee +on fire-engines for their approval. Every fireman shall be furnished +with a copy of such regulations, and shall be bound to make himself +master of its contents; and it shall be the duty of the superintendent +to see that the instructions are duly attended to in training and +exercising the men. + + +IV.--HEAD ENGINEMEN. + +Each head engineman shall attend to the engines placed in his +district, and all the apparatus connected therewith, and report to the +superintendent when any repairs or new apparatus seem requisite, and +shall be responsible for the engines being in proper working condition +at all times. + +Upon receiving notice of a fire, the head enginemen shall call out the +firemen in their respective districts; and they shall all repair, +perfectly equipped, with the utmost expedition, to the spot where the +fire happens to be, carrying along with them the engines and +apparatus. + +The head enginemen shall have the carts and barrels attached to their +several districts always in readiness, in good order, and the barrels +filled with water, which shall accompany the engines to the fire. + +On arriving at the spot, the head enginemen shall take their +instructions from the superintendent, or, in his absence, from the +chief magistrate in attendance on the spot; or, in their absence, from +a member of the fire-engine committee, and from no other person +whatever. + + +V.--FIREMEN. + +The firemen shall attend at all times when required by the head +enginemen or superintendent, as well as upon the days of general +inspection. They shall keep their engines in good order and condition, +and shall be equipped in their uniform at all times when called out. + +They shall observe the instructions of no person whatever, except +those of the superintendent or head enginemen. + + +VI.--HIGH CONSTABLES AND COMMISSIONERS OF POLICE. + +Upon occasions of fire, the moderator of the high constables shall +call out the high constables, and, if necessary, he shall also call +out the extra constables, and give notice to call out the constables +of their districts; and it shall be the duty of the constables to +preserve order and to protect property, to keep the crowd away from +the engines, and those employed about them; and, when authorized by +the chief magistrate, superintendent of engines, or, in the absence of +a magistrate, by a member of the committee on fire-engines, to provide +men for working the engines. + +Neither the constables nor the commissioners of police shall assume +any management, or give any directions whatsoever, except in absence +of a magistrate and the superintendent of engines, in which case any +member of the committee on fire-engines may give orders to the head +enginemen. + +In cases of protracted fire, when extra men may be required to relieve +the regular establishment, it shall be the duty of the high constables +to collect those wanted, from amongst the persons on the street who +may be willing to lend their assistance, mustering them in such +parties as may be required, taking a note of their names, and +furnishing each individual with a certificate or ticket, with which +the moderator of the high constables, or chief constable at the time, +will be supplied; and no person shall receive any remuneration for +alleged assistance given at a fire who may not produce such +certificate or ticket. + +The party or parties so mustered shall be placed and continue under +the care of two high constables, until required for service, when they +shall be moved forward to the engine. + +The men relieved by the party so moved forward, shall be taken charge +of by two high constables, who shall see them properly refreshed and +brought back within a reasonable time, so that the men employed may +thus occasionally relieve each other without confusion, and without +being too much exhausted. + + +VII.--MAGISTRATES, &c. + +Upon occasion of fires, the magistrates, sheriff, moderator of the +high constables, the superintendent of the water company, the managers +of the different gas-light companies, and the fire-engine committee, +will give their attendance. They will assemble in such house nearest +to the place of the fire as can be procured, of which notice shall be +immediately given to the officer commanding the police on the spot. + +The orders of the chief magistrate in attendance shall be immediately +obeyed; and no order, except those issued by such magistrate, and the +particular directions given as to the fire and engine department by +the master of engines, or, in their absence, by a member of the +fire-engine committee on the spot, shall be at all attended to. + +The magistrates and sheriff further declare, that all porters holding +badges shall be bound to give their attendance at fires when called +upon for that purpose. + + +VIII.--GAS-LIGHT COMPANIES. + +The managers of the different gas-light companies, on receiving notice +of a fire, shall instantly take measures for turning off the gas from +all shops and houses in the immediate neighbourhood of the fire. + + +IX.--SPECIAL REGULATIONS FOR THE FIREMEN. + +_Captains._--On the alarm of fire being given, an engine must be +immediately despatched from the main office to whatever district the +fire may be in; and the captain in whose district the fire happens +shall bring his engine to the spot as quickly as possible, taking care +that none of the apparatus is awanting. On arriving at the spot, he +must take every means in his power to supply his engine with water, +but especially by a service-pipe from a fire-cock, if that be found +practicable. Great care must be taken to place the engine so that it +may be in the direction of the water, with sufficient room on all +sides to work it, but as little in the way of persons employed in +carrying out furniture, &c., as possible. He must also examine the +fire while the men are fixing the hose, &c., that the water may be +directed with the best effect. + +The captains shall be responsible for any misconduct of their men, +when they fail to report such misconduct to the superintendent. + +The engines must be at all times in good working order, and the +captain shall report to the superintendent when any part of the +apparatus is in need of repair. + +When the fire is in another district, the captain of each engine shall +get his men and engine ready to proceed at a moment's notice, but must +not move from his engine-house till a special order arrives from a +lieutenant of police or the superintendent of brigade. + +_Sergeants._--The sergeant of each engine will take the command in +absence of the captain. When the captain is present, the sergeant will +give him all possible assistance in conducting the engine to the fire; +and it will there be more particularly the sergeant's duty to see that +the engine is supplied with water, and that every man is at his proper +station, and to remain with his engine while on duty, whether it is +working or not, unless he receives special orders to the contrary. + +_Pioneers._--Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4 of each engine will be considered +pioneers. Nos. 1 and 2 will proceed to the fire immediately, without +going to their engine-house, in order to prepare for the arrival of +the first engine, by ascertaining and clearing a proper station for +it, and by making ready the most available supplies of water, as also +to examine the state of the premises on fire and the neighbouring +ones, so as to be able to give such information to the captain on his +arrival as may enable him to apply his force with the greatest effect. +_The pioneers will attend particularly to the excluding of air from +the parts on fire by every means in their power, and they will +ascertain whether there are any communications with the adjoining +house by the roof, gable, or otherwise._ When the several engines +arrive, the pioneers will fall in with their own company, and take +their farther orders from the captain or sergeant. + +_Firemen._--On the alarm of fire being given, the whole company +belonging to each engine (Nos. 1 and 2 excepted) shall assemble as +speedily as possible at their engine-house, and act with spirit under +the orders of their officers in getting everything ready for service. +Each man will get a ticket with his own number and the colour of his +engine marked upon it; and on all occasions when he comes on duty he +will give this ticket into the hands of a policeman, who will be +appointed by the officer of police on duty to collect them at each +engine-house, and who will accompany the engine if it is ordered to +the fire. + +If the ticket be not given in, as before provided, within half an hour +after the alarm is given at their engine-house, or at all events, +within half an hour after the arrival of the engine at the fire, the +defaulter will forfeit the allowance for turning out, and also the +first hour's pay. + +If not given in within the first hour, he will forfeit all claim to +pay. + +The superintendent, however, may do away the forfeiture in any of +these cases, on cause being shown to his satisfaction. + +On quarter-days and days of exercise, every man must be ready equipped +at the appointed hour, otherwise he will forfeit that day's pay, or +such part of it as the superintendent may determine. + +Any man destroying his equipments, or wearing them when off duty, will +be punished by fine or dismissal from the service, as the +superintendent may determine. + +Careless conduct, irregular attendance at exercise, or disobedience of +superior officers, to be punished as above-mentioned. + +The man who arrives first at the engine-house to which he belongs, +_properly equipped_, will receive three shillings over and above the +pay for turning out. + +The first of the Nos. 1 and 2 who arrives at the fire, _properly +equipped_, in whatever district it may be, will receive three +shillings over and above the pay for turning out. + +No pay will be allowed for a false alarm, unless the same is given by +a policeman. + +As nothing is so hurtful to the efficiency of an establishment for +extinguishing fires as unnecessary noise, irregularity, or +insubordination, it is enjoined on all to observe quietness and +regularity, to execute readily whatever orders they may receive from +their officers, and to do nothing without orders. + +The first engine and company which arrive at the fire are not to be +interfered with, nor their supplies of water diverted from them by +those coming afterwards, unless by a distinct order from the +superintendent, or, in his absence, from the chief magistrate on the +spot. The same rule will apply to each succeeding engine which takes +up a station. + +The men must be careful not to allow their attention to be distracted +from their duty by listening to directions from any persons _except +their own officers_; and they will refer every one who applies to them +for aid to the superintendent, or to the chief magistrate present at +the time. + +All the firemen must be particularly careful to let the policemen on +their respective stations know where they live, and take notice when +the policeman is changed, that they may give the new one the requisite +information. + +The men are particularly cautioned not to take spirituous liquors from +any individual without the special permission of the captain of their +engine, who will see that every proper and necessary refreshment be +afforded to them; and as intoxication upon such alarming occasions is +not merely disreputable to the corps, but in the highest degree +dangerous, by rendering the men unfit for their duty, every appearance +of it will be most rigidly marked; and any man who may be discovered +in that state shall not only forfeit his whole allowances for the +turn-out and duty performed, but will be forthwith dismissed from the +corps. + +All concerned are strictly enjoined to preserve their presence of +mind, not to lose temper, and upon no occasion whatsoever to give +offence to the inhabitants by making use of uncivil language or +behaving rudely. + +*** Every one belonging to the establishment will be furnished with a +printed copy of these Regulations, which they are enjoined carefully +to preserve and _read over at least once every week_. + + +MEANS OF ESCAPE FROM FIRE. + +[The following was written in the year 1830, and does not refer to +Public Fire-Escapes other than those that can be carried with a +Fire-Engine.--EDITOR.] + +When the lower floors of a house are on fire, and the stairs or other +ordinary means of retreat destroyed, the simplest and easiest mode of +removing the inhabitants from the upper floors, is by a ladder placed +against the wall. In order to be able at all times to carry this plan +into effect, the person having charge of the engines should (as far as +possible) inform himself where long ladders are to be had, and how +they can most easily be removed. + +But if a ladder of sufficient length is not to be procured, or is at +too great a distance to render it safe to wait for it, recourse must +immediately be had to other means. + +If it happens that the windows above are all inaccessible, on account +of the flames bursting through those below, the firemen should +immediately get on the roof (by means of the adjoining houses,) and +descend by the hatch. The hatch, however, being sometimes directly +above the stair, is in that case very soon affected by the fire and +smoke. If, on approaching, it is found to be so much so as to render +an entrance in that way impracticable, the firemen should instantly +break through the roof, and, descending into the upper floors, +extricate those within. If it should happen, however, that the persons +in danger are not in the upper floor, and cannot reach it in +consequence of the stair being on fire, the firemen should continue +breaking through floor after floor till they reach them. In so +desperate a case as this the shorter process may probably be to break +through the party-wall between the house on fire and that adjoining, +when there is one; and when there is no house immediately contiguous, +through the gable, taking care in either case to break through at the +back of a closet, press, chimney, or other recess, where the wall is +thinnest. If an opening has been made from the adjoining house, it +should immediately (after having served the purpose for which it was +made) be built up with brick or stone, to prevent the fire spreading. +All these operations should be performed by slaters, masons, or +house-carpenters, who, being better acquainted with such work, are +likely to execute it in a shorter time than others--time, in such a +case, being everything, as a few minutes lost may cost the lives of +the whole party. It is not impossible, however, that circumstances may +occur to render all or either of these plans impracticable; in that +case, one or two of the lower windows must be darkened, and by this +means access gained to the upper ones. The plan recommended by the +Parisian firemen is, for a man to wrap himself up in a wet blanket, +and thus pass swiftly through the flames. But this effort is only to +be attempted when the flames from a single door are to be passed; in +any other case the stair will most likely be in flames, and +impassable. + +A simple means of escape from fire is to have an iron ring fastened to +the window sill, and inside of the room a cradle, with a coil of rope +attached to it. The rope is put through the ring, and the person +wishing to escape gets into the cradle, and lowers himself down by +passing the rope through his hands. The great objection to this plan, +which is certainly very simple, is the difficulty, or rather +impossibility, of persuading people to provide themselves with the +necessary materials. Many men, too, are incapable of the exertion upon +which the whole plan depends; and if men in a state of terror are +unfit for such a task, what is to become of women and children? + +Any fire-escape, to be generally useful, must, in the first place, be +capable of being carried about without encumbering the fire-engine; +and, in the next place, must be of instant and simple application. The +means which appear to me to possess these qualifications in the +highest degree, is a combination of the cradle plan, with Captain +Manby's admirable invention for saving shipwrecked seamen. + +The apparatus necessary for this fire-escape is a chain-ladder eighty +feet long, a single chain or rope of the same length as the ladder, a +canvas bag, a strong steel cross-bow, and a fine cord of the very best +workmanship and materials, 130 feet long, with a lead bullet of +three-ounce weight attached to one end, and carefully wound upon a +wooden cone seven inches high and seven inches broad at the base, +turned with a spiral groove, to prevent the cord slipping when wound +upon it, also a small pulley with a claw attached to it, and a cord +reeved through it of sufficient strength to bear the weight of the +ladder. + +In order to prevent the sides of the ladder from collapsing, the steps +are made of copper or iron tube, fastened by a piece of cord passed +through the tube and into the links of the chain, till the tube is +filled. The steps thus fastened are tied to the chain with +copper-wire, so that, in the event of the cord being destroyed, the +steps will be retained in their places by the wire. The ladder is +provided with two large hooks at one end, for the purpose of fixing it +to a roof, window-sill, &c. The bag is of canvas, three feet wide and +four feet deep, with cords sewed round the bottom, and meeting at the +top, where they are turned over an iron thimble at each side of the +mouth of the bag. The steel cross-bow is of the ordinary description, +of sufficient strength to throw the lead bullet with the cord +attached, 120 feet high. + +When the house from which the persons in danger are to be extricated +is so situated that the firemen can get to the roof by passing along +the tops of the adjoining houses, they will carry up the chain-ladder +with them, and drop it over the window where the inmates show +themselves, fastening the hooks at the same time securely in the roof. +The firemen will descend by the ladder into the window, and putting +the persons to be removed into the bag, lower them down into the +street by the single chain. If the flames are issuing from the windows +below, the bag, when filled, is easily drawn aside into the window of +the adjoining house, by means of a guy or guide-rope. + +If the house on fire stands by itself, or if access cannot be had to +the roof by means of the adjoining houses, the lead bullet, with the +cord attached, is thrown over the house by means of the cross-bow; to +this cord a stronger one is attached, and drawn over the house by +means of the former; a single chain is then attached, and drawn over +in like manner; and to this last is attached the chain-ladder, which, +on being raised to the roof, the firemen ascend, and proceed as before +directed. + +If the house be so high that the cord cannot be thrown over far enough +to be taken hold of by those on the opposite side, then the persons to +be extricated must take hold of the cord, as it hangs past the window +at which they may have placed themselves. By means of it they draw up +the small pulley, and hook it on the window-sill. The chain-ladder is +then made fast to the end of the cord, and drawn up by those below. +When the end of the chain-ladder comes in front of the window, the +persons inside fasten the hooks of the ladder on its sill, or to the +post of a bed, the bars of a grate, or anything likely to afford a +sufficient hold. After having ascertained that the ladder is properly +fixed, the firemen will ascend and proceed as in the former cases. + +I must here remark, that before this plan can be properly put in +execution, the firemen must be regularly trained to the exercise. When +the firemen here are practised with the fire-escape, the man ascending +or descending has a strong belt round his middle, to which another +chain is fastened, and held by a man stationed at the window for that +purpose; if any accident, therefore, were to occur with the +chain-ladder, the man cannot fall to the ground, but would be swung by +the chain attached to the belt round his body. The men are also +frequently practised in ascending and descending by single chains. The +firemen here are very fond of the above exercise; the bagging each +other seems to amuse them exceedingly.[I] + +The last resort, in desperate cases, is to leap from the window. When +this is to be attempted, mattresses, beds, straw, or other soft +substances, should be collected under the window; a piece of carpet or +other strong cloth should be held up by ten or twelve stout men. The +person in the window may then leap, as nearly as possible, into the +centre of the cloth, and if he has sufficient resolution to take a +fair leap, he may escape with comparatively little injury.[J] + + +FIRE-ENGINES. + +In the application of manual power to the working of fire-engines, the +principal object is, to apply the greatest aggregate power to the +lightest and smallest machine; that is, suppose two engines of the +same size and weight, the one with space for 20 men to work throws 60 +gallons per minute; and the other, with space for 30 men, throws 80 +gallons in the same time; the latter will be the most useful engine, +although each man is not able to do so much work as at the former. + +The reciprocating motion is generally preferred to the rotary for +fire-engines. Independent of its being the most advantageous movement, +a greater number of men can be employed at an engine of the same size +and weight; there is less liability to accident with people +unacquainted with the work, and such as are quite ignorant of either +mode of working, work more freely at the reciprocating than the rotary +motion. To these reasons may be added, the greater simplicity of the +machinery. + +Various sizes of engines, of different degrees of strength and weight, +have been tried, and it is found that a fire-engine with two cylinders +of 7 inches diameter, and a stroke of 8 inches, can be made +sufficiently strong at 17-1/2 cwt. If 4 cwt. be added for the hose and +tools, it will be found quite as heavy as two fast horses can manage, +for a distance under six miles, with five firemen and a driver. + +[Illustration: FIG. 1. Fire-Engine used by the London Fire Brigade. +Longitudinal section,--with the Levers turned up for travelling.] + +This size of engine has been adopted by the Board of Admiralty and the +Board of Ordnance, and its use is becoming very general. + +When engines are made larger, it is seldom that the proper proportions +are preserved, and they are generally worked with difficulty, and soon +fatigue the men at the levers. + +[Illustration: FIG. 2. Transverse section.] + +When an engine is large, it not only requires a considerable number of +men to work it, but it is not easily supplied with water; and, above +all, _it cannot be moved about with that celerity on which, in a +fire-engine establishment, everything depends_. When the engine is +brought into actual operation, the effect to be produced depends less +on the quantity of water thrown than upon its being made actually to +strike the burning materials, the force with which it does so, and the +steadiness with which the engine is worked. If the water be steadily +directed upon the burning materials, the effect even of a small +quantity is astonishing. + +When a large engine is required in London, two with 7-inches cylinders +are worked together by means of a connecting screw, thus making a jet +very nearly equal (as 98 to 100) to that of an engine with cylinders +10 inches diameter. + +It is also an advantage not unworthy of consideration, that two 7-inch +engines may be had nearly for the price of one 10-inch one; so that if +one happens to be rendered unserviceable the other may still be +available. + +The usual rate of working an engine of the size described is 40 +strokes of each cylinder per minute; this gives 88 gallons. The number +of men required to keep steadily at work for three or four hours is +26; upwards of 30 men are sometimes put on when a great length of hose +is necessary. The lever is in the proportion of 4-1/4 to 1. With 40 +feet of leather hose and a 7/8 inch jet, the pressure is 30 lb. on the +square inch; this gives 10.4 lbs. to each man to move a distance of +226 feet in one minute. The friction increases the labour 2-1/2 per +cent. for every additional 40 feet of hose, which shows the necessity +of having the engine, and of course the supply of water, as close to +the fire as is consistent with the safety of the men at the levers. + +In order that the reader may have a distinct idea of such a +fire-engine, I shall here endeavour to give a description, chiefly +taken from those made by W. J. Tilley,[K] fire-engine maker, London. + +The engravings (figs. 1 and 2) represent a fire-engine of 7-inch +barrels and 8-inch stroke.[L] The cistern marked A is made of mahogany +or oak. The upper work, B, and side-boxes or pockets, C, are of Baltic +fir. The sole, D, upon which the barrels stand, and which also +contains the valves, is of cast-iron, with covers of the same +material, which are screwed down, and the joints made good with +leather or india-rubber. The pieces E, at each end of the cast-iron +sole D, are of cast brass, and screwed to the cast-iron sole D, with a +joint the same as above. In one of these pieces is the screwed +suction-cap F, and to the other is attached the air-vessel G, made of +sheet-copper, and attached to the piece E by a screw. The exit-pipe H +is attached to the under side of the casting E by a swivel. The valves +at I are of brass, ground so as to be completely water-tight. The +barrels K are of cast brass. The engine is set on four grasshopper +springs M. The shafts or handles O, of the levers P, are of lancewood. +The box S, under the driving seat, is used for keeping wrenches, cord, +&c.; in the fore part of the cistern A, and the box B above the +cistern, the hose is kept; the branch and suction-pipes are carried in +the side-boxes or pockets C; the rest of the tools and materials are +kept along with the above-mentioned articles, in such situations as +not to interfere with the working of the engine. + +The cistern is made of oak or mahogany, for strength and durability; +but, for the sake of lightness, the upper work and side-boxes are made +of Baltic fir, strength in them being of less importance. + +As the valve cannot be made without a rise for the lid to strike +against, there is a small step at each of the valves, and the sole is +carried through as high as this step, to admit of the water running +off when the engine is done working. If constructed in a different +manner, the water will lodge in the bottom, and produce much +inconvenience in situations where the engine is exposed to frost. + +The valve-covers are of cast-iron, fastened down with copper screws, a +piece of leather or india-rubber being placed between them and the +upper edges of the sole. + +The pieces at each end of the sole are of cast-brass, instead of +sheet-copper, with soft-solder joints, which are very apt to give way. + +The screwed suction cap with iron handle admits the water in two +different directions, according as it is open or closed: the one to +supply the engine when water is drawn from the cistern, the other for +drawing water through the suction-pipe. + +The valves are brass plates, truly ground to fit the circular brass +orifice on which they fall. The brass being well ground, no leather is +used for the purpose of making them tight. The longer they are used +the better they fit, and by having no leather about them they are less +liable to the adhesion of small stones or gravel. The whole valve is +put together and then keyed into a groove in the sides and bottom of +the sole, left for that purpose. + +The barrels are of cast-brass, with a piston made of two circular +pieces of the same metal, each put into a strong leather cup, and +bolted to the other. The bottoms of the cups being together, when the +piston becomes loose in the barrels, and there is not sufficient time +to replace the cups by new ones, they are easily tightened by putting +a layer of hemp round the piston between the leather and the brass. +This operation, however, requires to be carefully performed; for if +more hemp is put into one part than another it is apt to injure the +barrels. The barrels are fixed to the cast-iron sole by copper screws, +a little red lead being placed between the bottom flange of the barrel +and the sole. + +When the engine is likely to be dragged over rough roads or causeways, +it is of importance to have it set on springs, to prevent the jolting +from affecting the working part of the engine, everything depending on +that being right. + +The engines used in Paris are mounted on two wheels, the carriage and +the engine being separate, the latter being dismounted from the former +before it can be used. In Paris, where the engines are managed by a +corps of regularly-trained firemen, this may answer well enough; but +if hastily or carelessly dismounted by unskilful persons, the engine +may be seriously damaged. It is also worthy of remark, that the proper +quantity of hose, tools, &c., can be more easily attached to and +carried on a four-wheeled engine. + +In order that the men may work more easily at the handles, and suffer +less fatigue, the engine is not higher than to enable them to have the +levers easily under their command. The shafts of the levers are of +lancewood, being best calculated to bear the strain to which they are +exposed when the engine is at work, and they are made to fold up at +each end for convenience in travelling. + +The air-vessel should be placed clear of any other part of the engine, +excepting only the point where it is attached. + +The fore-carriage of the engine is fitted with a pole, and is made to +suit the harness of coach-horses, these being, in large towns, more +easily procured than other draught cattle; this can be altered, +however, to suit such harness as can most readily be obtained. Where +horses are seldom used to move the engines, a drag-handle is attached, +by which one or two men are able easily to direct the progress of the +engine. + +Two drag-ropes, each twenty-five feet long, of three-inch rope, with +ten loops to each, are attached, one to each end of the splinter-bar, +by means of which the engines are dragged; and to prevent the loops +collapsing on the hand, they are partly lined with sheet-copper. + +The whole of the brass work of an engine should be of the best +gun-metal, composed of copper and tin only. Yellow brass should never +be used; even at first it is far inferior to gun-metal, and after +being used for some time it gets brittle. The whole of the materials +used in the construction of a fire-engine should be of the best +description. + +In London for some years past a hand-pump has been carried with each +engine. They have been found of the greatest service in keeping doors, +windows, &c., cool. They throw from six to eight gallons per minute, +to a height of from thirty to forty feet, and can be used in any +position. The idea of the hand-pumps I took from the old-fashioned +squirt, or "hand-engine." + +When fire-engines are unserviceable it arises more frequently from +want of care in keeping in order than from any damage they may have +received in actual service or by the wearing out of the materials; so +it is quite plain that this important part of the duty has not +generally had that degree of attention paid to it which it deserves. + +Although an engine were to be absolutely perfect in its construction, +if carelessly thrown aside after being brought home from a fire, and +allowed to remain in that state till the next occasion, it would be in +vain (especially in small towns, where alarms are rare) to expect to +find it in a serviceable condition; some of the parts must have grown +stiff, and if brought into action in this state something is likely to +give way. + +When an engine is brought back from a fire, it ought to be immediately +washed, the cistern cleaned out, the barrels and journals cleaned and +fresh oil put on them, the wheels greased, and every part of the +engine carefully cleaned and examined, and if any repairs are needed +they should be executed immediately. When all this has been attended +to clean hose should be put in, and the engine is again fit for +immediate service. Besides this cleaning and examination after use, +the engine ought to be examined and the brass part cleaned once a +week, and worked with water once a month whether it has been used or +not. + +In addition to the keeping of the engine always in an effective state, +this attention has the advantage of reminding the men of their duty, +and making them familiar with every part of the mechanism of the +engine; thus teaching them effectually how the engines ought to be +protected when at work, by enabling them to discover those parts most +liable to be damaged, and to which part damage is the most dangerous. +It is more troublesome generally to get the engines well kept when +there are no fires, than when there are many. But the only effectual +method of inducing the men to keep them in good order, in addition to +the moral stimulants of censure and applause, is to fine those who +have the charge of them for the slightest neglect. + +When the engine has been properly placed, before beginning to work the +fore-carriage should be locked. This is done by putting an iron pin +through a piece of wood attached to the cistern, into the +fore-carriage. This prevents the wheels from turning round, and coming +under the shafts, by which the latter might be damaged, and the hands +of the men at work injured. + +Small stones, gravel, and other obstructions, sometimes find their way +into the nozzle of the branch-pipe, from having dropped into the hose +before being attached, or having been drawn through the suction-pipe +or from the cistern. Whenever the engine is found to work stiffly, it +should be stopped and examined, otherwise the pressure may burst the +hose, or damage some part of the engine. If anything impedes the +action of the valves the pistons must be drawn, and if a person's hand +be then introduced they may easily be cleared--constant care and +attention to all the minutiae of the engine and apparatus being +absolutely indispensable, if effective service be expected from them. + +Considerable attention ought to be paid to the selecting a proper +situation for an engine-house. Generally speaking, it ought to be +central, and on the highest ground of the district it is meant to +protect, and care should be taken to observe when any of the streets +leading from it are impassable. + +If, in addition to these advantages, the engine-house can be had +adjoining to a police watch-house, it may be considered nearly +perfect, in so far as regards situation. These advantages being all +attained, the engine can be conveyed to any particular spot by a +comparatively small number of men, while the vicinity of a police +watch-house affords a facility of communicating the alarm of fire to +the firemen not to be obtained otherwise. When the engine-house is +placed in a low situation the men who first arrive must wait till the +others come forward to assist them to drag the engine up the ascent, +and many minutes must thus be lost at a time when moments are +important. + +After choosing a proper situation for the engine-house, the next care +should be directed towards having it properly ventilated, as nothing +contributes more to the proper keeping of the engines and hose than +fresh and dry air. For this purpose a stove should be fitted up, by +which the temperature may be kept equal. When engines are exposed to +violent alternations of heat and cold, they will be found to operate +very considerably on the account for repairs, besides occasioning the +danger of the engine being frozen and unserviceable when wanted. + +There ought to be at least half a dozen keys for each engine-house, +which should be kept by the firemen, watchmen, and those connected +with the establishment, that the necessity of breaking open the door +may not occur. + + +DESCRIPTION OF TOOLS WITH WHICH EACH ENGINE IS PROVIDED. + +Having considered the sort of fire-engine which is best adapted for +general purposes, I shall now notice the different articles which, in +London, are always attached to, and accompany, each engine of this +kind:-- + + 7 coils of hose, 40 feet each. + 4 bundles of sheepskin and lay-cord. + 4 lengths of suction-pipe, each between 6 and 7 feet long. + 2 branch pipes. + 3 jet pipes or nozzles and an elbow for jet. + 3 wrenches for coupling-joints. + 2 lamps. + 2 lengths of scaling ladder. + 1 fire-hook. + 60 feet of patent line, and 20 feet of trace line. + 1 mattock. + 1 shovel. + 1 hatchet or pole-axe. + 1 saw. + 1 iron crow-bar. + 1 portable cistern. + 1 flat suction strainer. + 1 standcock, and hook for street plugs. + 1 screw wrench. + 1 canvas sheet with 10 or 12 rope handles round its edges. + 9 canvas buckets. + 1 hand-pump with 10 feet of hose and jet pipe. + +Of these articles I shall endeavour to give a description as they +stand in the above list. + +The article of hose being first in order, as well as importance, +merits particular attention. + +The sort used is leather, made with copper rivets, and is by far the +most serviceable and durable hose that I have yet seen. + +Manufacturers of this article, however, for a very obvious reason, are +not always careful to select that part of the hide which, being +firmest, is best adapted for the purpose. Indeed, I have known several +instances wherein nearly the whole hide has been cut up and made into +hose, without any selection whatever. The effect of this is very +prejudicial. The loose parts of the hide soon stretch and weaken, and +while, by stretching, the diameter of the pipe is increased, the +pressure of the water, in consequence, becomes greater on that than on +any other part of the hose, which is thereby rendered more liable to +give way at such places. + +Hose are frequently made narrow in the middle, and, in order to fit +the coupling-joints, wide at the extremities--a practice which lessens +their capability of conveying a given quantity of water, in proportion +to the difference of the area of the section of the diameters at the +extremity and the middle part. + +In order to make them fit the coupling-joints, when carelessly widened +too much, I have frequently seen them stuffed up with brown paper, and +in that case they almost invariably give way, the folds of the paper +destroying the hold which the leather would otherwise have of the +ridges made on the ends of the coupling-joints. + +In order to avoid all these faults and defects, the riveted hose used +are made in the following manner:-- + +The leather is nine and five-eighths inches broad (that being the +breadth required for coupling-joints of two and a half inches diameter +of clear water-way), and levelled to the proper uniform thickness. The +leather used is taken from hides of the very best description, +perfectly free from flesh-cuts, warble-holes, or any other blemish, +and stuffed as high as possible.[M] Not more than four breadths are +taken from each hide, and none of the soft parts about the neck, +shoulders, or belly are used. No piece of leather is less than four +feet long. + +The leather is gauged to the exact breadth, and holes punched in it +for the rivets. In the operation of punching, great care must be taken +to make the holes on each side of the leather exactly opposite to each +other. If this precaution be not attended to, the seam when riveted +takes a spiral direction on the hose, which the heads of the rivets +are very apt to cut at the folds. Care must also be taken that the +leather is equally stretched on both sides, otherwise the number of +holes on the opposite sides may be unequal. The ends are then cut at +an angle of thirty-seven degrees; if cut at a greater angle, the +cross-joint will be too short, and if at a smaller, the leather will +be wasted. This must, however, be regulated in some degree by the +number of holes in the cross-joint, as the angle must be altered a +little if the holes at that part do not fit exactly with the holes +along the side. + +The different pieces of leather necessary to form one length, or forty +feet of hose, are riveted together by the ends. + +Straps of leather, three inches broad, are then riveted across the +pipe, ten feet apart, to form loops for the purpose of handing or +making fast the hose when full of water. The leather is then laid +along a bench, and a bar of iron, from eight to ten feet long, three +inches broad, and one inch thick, with the corners rounded off, is +laid above it. The rivets are next put into the holes on one side of +the leather, along the whole length of the iron bar. The holes on the +other side are then brought over them, and the washers put on the +points of the rivets, and struck down with a hollow punch. The points +of the rivets are then riveted down over the washers, and finished +with a setting punch. The bar of iron is drawn along, and the same +operation repeated till the length of the hose be finished. + +The rivets and washers should be made of the best wrought copper, and +must be well tinned before being used. + +Some objections have been made to riveted hose on account of the +alleged difficulty of repairing them; but this is not so serious a +matter as may at first view appear. Indeed, they very seldom require +any repairs, and when they do, the process is not difficult. If any of +the rivets be damaged, as many must be taken out as will make room for +the free admission of the hand. A small flat mandrel being introduced +into the hose, the new rivets are put into the leather, and riveted up +the same as new pipe; the mandrel is then shaken out at the end. + +If the leather be damaged, it may be repaired either by cutting out +the piece, and making a new joint, or by riveting a piece of leather +upon the hole. + +The manner of attaching the hose to the coupling-joint is also a +matter of very considerable importance. If a joint come off when the +engine is in operation, a whole length of hose is rendered useless for +the time, and a considerable delay incurred in getting it detached, +and another substituted. + +To prevent this, the hose ought to fit as tightly as possible to the +coupling-joint, without any packing. In riveted hose, a piece of +leather, thinned down to the proper size, should be put on to make up +the void which the thick edge of the leather next the rivet +necessarily leaves; the hose should then be tied to the coupling-joint +as firmly as possible with the best annealed copper wire, No. 16 +gauge. + +When the hose are completely finished in this manner they are proved +by a proving-pump, and if they stand a pressure of two hundred feet of +water they are considered fit for service. I may also add, that when +any piece of hose has been under repair it is proved in the same +manner before it is deemed trustworthy. + +The proving of the hose is of very considerable importance, and the +method of doing so which I have mentioned is greatly superior to the +old plan of proving them on an engine or fire-cock. By the latter +method, no certain measure can be obtained by which the pressure can +be calculated. In the first place it must depend on the relative +height of the reservoir from whence the water is obtained and that of +the fire-cock where the experiment is made; and as the supply of water +drawn from the pipes by the inhabitants may be different on different +days of the week and even in different hours of the day, it is quite +evident that by this method no certain rule can be formed for the +purpose required, the pressure being affected by the quantity of water +drawn at the time. + +The method of proving by an engine is considerably better than this; +but when a proving-pump can be obtained it is infinitely better than +either. One disadvantage of an engine is, that it requires a +considerable number of men; but even the proof, that of throwing the +water to a given height on the gable of a house or other height, is +not always a test of the sufficiency of the hose. As the temperature +is low or high, the wind fresh or light, the degree of pressure on the +hose in throwing the water to the required height will be greater or +less. Indeed, in high winds it is a matter of extreme difficulty to +throw the water to any considerable height. + +With an engine of 7-inch barrels and 7-inch stroke, fitted with eighty +feet of 2-3/8-inch hose, I have found from several experiments that +when the water is thrown seventy-five feet high, the pressure on the +hose is equal to one hundred feet. The same engine, with 160 feet of +hose, and the branch-pipe raised fifty feet above the level of the +engine, when the water was thrown fifty-six feet from the branch, +occasioned a pressure equal to 130 feet on the hose. From these +experiments, I am convinced that the pressure will not be equal to 200 +feet, except in very extreme cases, or when some obstacle gets into +the jet pipe. + +I tried the extreme strength of a piece of riveted hose 4 feet long +and 2-3/8 inches diameter, and found that it did not burst till the +pressure increased to 500 feet; and when it gave way the leather was +fairly torn along the rivet-holes. + +Every possible care should be taken to keep the hose soft and pliable, +and to prevent its being affected by mildew. After being used, in +order to dry them equally they should be hung up by the centre, with +the two ends hanging down, until half dry. They should then be taken +down and rubbed over with a composition of bees'-wax, tallow, and +neats-foot oil,[N] and again hung up to allow the grease to sink into +the leather. When the hose appear to be dry they should be a second +time rubbed with the composition, and then coiled up for use. In order +that the hose undergoing the operation of greasing may not be +disturbed or used till in a fit state, it is better to have a double +set, and in this way, while one set is in grease the other is in the +engine ready and fit for service. More time can also be taken for any +repairs which may be necessary, and they will in consequence be more +carefully done, and at fires where a great length of hose is required +the spare set will always be available. When the weather is damp, and +the hose cannot be dried so as to be fit for greasing in two or three +days, a stove should be put into the room in order to facilitate the +process. The greatest care, however, must be taken in the use of +artificial heat. The whole apartment should be kept of one equal +temperature, which ought never to be higher than is requisite to dry +the hose for greasing in about forty hours. + +_Coupling-joints._[O]--So much of the efficiency and duration of the +hose depend on the proper form given to the brass coupling-joints, +that I deem it useful to give a detailed description, both of those +generally made use of and of those adopted by the Edinburgh +fire-establishment, and also to point out their various defects and +advantages. + +[Illustration: FIG. 3. Old Coupling] + +Fig. 3 is the construction commonly made by engine-makers. Its defects +are as follows:--From the form of the furrows and ridges where the +leather is tied it does not hold on well against a force tending to +pull the hose off end-ways; screw-nails are therefore often employed, +as at A, to secure the hose on the brass. The points of these nails +always protrude more or less into the inside of the joint, and +materially impede the current of water. The mouths of the joints are +also turned outwards, and form a shoulder, as at B. The intention of +this is probably to assist in securing the leather in its place, and +to prevent the lapping from slipping. The effects of it are as +follows:--First, from the leather being strained over this projection, +it becomes liable to be cut by every accidental injury, and very soon +cracks and gives way, when a portion must be cut off and a fresh +fixing made; second, the leather being stretched over the projection, +does not fit the other part of the joint, and must be loose or filled +up with pieces of leather, or, as is sometimes done, with brown paper; +third, the irregularity of the calibre of the conduit which this +shoulder occasions diminishes the performance of the engine. + +[Illustration: FIG. 4. New Coupling] + +Fig. 4 is the coupling-joint adopted in Edinburgh. The furrows at the +tying place are shallow, but their edges present a powerful obstacle +to the slipping of the leather. No screw-nails are employed, nor is +there any shoulder, as at B; there is therefore no impediment to or +variation in the velocity of the current, as the calibres of the +coupling joints and of the hose are so nearly uniform. It will be seen +also that as the lapping projects above the leather this latter can +never be injured by falls or rubbing on the ground. + +Another great advantage attending the joints used here is the manner +in which their screws are finished. On examining the figure minutely, +it will be observed that the male-screw ends in a cylinder of the +diameter of the _bottom_ of its thread, consequently of the diameter +of the top of the thread of the female-screw. The effect of this is, +that, when the screws are brought together, the cylindric portion +serves as a guide to the threads, and the most inexperienced person +cannot fail to make them catch fair at the first trial. The advantage +of this in the circumstances attending fires is obvious. + +These joints, although requiring three or four turns to close them up, +yet as it is only the ring D which requires to be turned, it can +easily be done with the hand alone without the use of wrenches. +Although, when the whole length of hose has been jointed, it may be as +well to send a man with a pair of wrenches to set the joints firm; +this, however, is by no means absolutely necessary; if the joints are +kept in proper order a man can secure them sufficiently with the hand. + +There is also a facility in taking turns out of the hose, which no +other but a swivel joint affords. By slackening a single turn any +twist may be taken out, without undoing the joint or stopping the +engine, while, from the number of turns required to close the joints, +there is no chance of the screw being by any accident undone. In order +to prevent the threads from being easily damaged, they should be of a +pretty large size, not more than five or six to the inch. For the same +reason also the thread should be a little rounded. + +As it sometimes happens that the screws are damaged by falling on the +street, or by heavy bodies striking them, whenever the hose have been +used the joints should be tried by a steel gauge-screw, to be kept for +that purpose. This ought to be particularly attended to, as, on +arriving at a fire, it is rather an awkward time to discover that a +joint has been damaged, while the delay thus occasioned may be +attended with very serious consequences. + +_Four Bundles of Sheepskin and Lay-cord._--These are simply four or +five stripes of sheepskin, each about three or four inches broad. When +a leak occurs in a length of hose which cannot be easily replaced at +the time, one or more pieces of sheepskin are wrapt tightly over the +leak and tied firmly with a piece of cord. This is but an indifferent +method of mending, but I do not know of any other which can be so +readily applied with the same effect. If another length of hose can be +substituted for the leaky one it is better to do so; but that is not +always at hand, nor does it always happen that time can be spared for +the purpose. + +_Four Lengths of Suction-pipe._--These are generally made of leather, +riveted tightly over a spiral worm of hoop-iron, about three-quarters +of an inch broad, a piece of tarred canvas being placed between the +worm and the leather. They are usually made from six to eight feet +long, with a copper strainer screwed on the farther end, to prevent as +much as possible any mud or dirt from getting into the engine with the +water. It is of advantage to carry four lengths of suction-pipe, as +they can be joined to reach the water; if one is damaged the others +will still be serviceable. + +The suction-pipes are more troublesome to rivet than the common hose, +and are done in the following manner:--After the joints are fixed on +the spiral worm, and it is covered with the tarred canvas, an iron +mandrel longer than the worm is put through it, the edge being rounded +to the circle of the inside of the worm. The projecting ends of the +mandrel are supported to allow the worm to lie quite clear. One end of +the mandrel has a check, that the brass joint may not prevent the worm +from lying flat on the mandrel. The leather is then put over the worm, +and the rivets being put into one side, a small thin mandrel is laid +over the canvas and the rivets struck down upon it. If the small +mandrel be not used the heads of the rivets are apt to lie unequally +on the worm. + +_Three Wrenches for Coupling-joints._--These are for tightening the +coupling-joints, when that cannot be sufficiently done by hand. When +the hose are all put together a man is sent along the whole line with +a pair of wrenches to tighten such of the coupling-joints as require +it. The wrenches are generally made with a hole to fit the knob on the +coupling-joint, and, when used, are placed, one on the nob of the male +and another on the nob of the female-screw, so as to pull them in +opposite directions. + +_Two Branch Pipes._--These are taper copper tubes, having a +female-screw at one end to fit the coupling-joints of the hose, and a +male-screw at the other to receive the jet pipes, one is 4 feet long +to use from the outside of a house on fire, the other 12 inches for +inside work. + +_Three Jet-pipes_ or nozzles of various sizes made to screw on the end +of the branch pipe. + +A great many different shapes of jet have been tried, and that shown +in Fig. 5, I found to answer best when tried with other forms. The old +jet was a continuation in a straight line of the taper of the branch, +from the size of the hose-screw, to the end of the jet-pipe; this had +many inconveniences; the size of the jet could not be increased +without making the jet-pipe nearly parallel. As the branches were +sometimes 7 feet or 8 feet long, in some instances the orifice at the +end of the jet-pipe was larger than that at the end of the branch. The +present form of the jet completely obviates this difficulty, as the +end of the branch is always 1-1/2 inches diameter. + +[Illustration: FIG. 5.] + +The curve of the nozzle of the present jet is determined by its own +size; five times one-half of the difference between the jet to be made +and the end of the branch, is set up on each side of the diameter of +the upper end of the branch, a straight line is then drawn across, and +an arc of a circle described on this line, from the extremity of each +end of the diameter of the jet, until it meets the top of the branch; +the jet is then continued parallel, the length of its own diameter; +the metal is continued one-eighth of an inch above this, to allow of a +hollow being turned out to protect the edge: The rule for determining +the size of the jet for inside work is, to "make the diameter of the +jet one-eighth of an inch for every inch in the diameter of the +cylinder, for each 8 inches of stroke." The branch used in this case +is the same size as shown in Fig. 5. When it is necessary to throw the +water to a greater height, or distance, a jet one-seventh less in area +is used, with a branch from 4 feet to 5 feet long. + +_Two Lengths of Scaling Ladders._--These are 6-1/2 feet long, and are +fitted with sockets so that any number up to 7 or 8 may be joined +together to form one ladder varying in length according to +circumstances from 6-1/2 to upwards of 40 feet. + +_One Fire-hook._--This is similar to a common boat-hook, of such +length as may be most convenient to strap on the handles of the +engine. It is used for pulling down ceilings, and taking out +deafening-boards when the fire happens to be between the ceiling and +the floor above. It is also used when a strong door is to be broken +open. It is placed with the point upon the door, one or two men +bearing upon it, while another striking the door, the whole force of +the blows is made to fall upon the lock or other fastening, which +generally yields without much difficulty. + +_Sixty Feet of Patent Line and Twenty Feet of Trace Line._--These are +generally used for hoisting the hose into the windows of the house, in +which there is a fire, the stairs being sometimes so crowded with +people and furniture, that it is difficult to force a passage, and +when the pipe is laid in the stair, it is liable to be damaged by +people treading on it. + +_One Mattock and Shovel._--These are useful in damming any running +water or gutter, uncovering drains, &c., from which the engine may be +supplied with water. The mattock should be short and strong, and the +shovel of the sort called diamond-pointed. + +_One Hatchet._--The most serviceable hatchet for a fire-engine, is +similar to that used as a felling axe by wood-cutters. The back part +is made large that it may be conveniently used as a hammer. + +_One Saw._--This should be a stout cross-cut saw, very widely set. It +is useful in cutting off the communication between one house and +another, which, when water is scarce, is sometimes necessary. + +_One Iron Crow-bar._--This should be about two feet long. It is used +in opening doors, breaking through walls, &c. + +_One Portable Cistern._[P]--This is made of canvas on a folding iron +frame, and is used in London placed over the street-fire plugs, a hole +is left in the bottom through which the water enters and fills the +cistern, the escape between the canvas and the plug box being +trifling. Two and sometimes three engines are worked by suction-pipe +from one plug in this manner. The portable cistern is also used when +the engine is supplied by suction, from water conveyed in carts or +buckets, and is greatly preferable to any plan of emptying the water +directly into the engine. By this latter method there is always a +considerable waste of water, arising both from the height of the +engine, and the working of the handles; and, in addition to these +objections only one person can pour in water at a time. When the water +is poured into the engine from carts, it must stop working till the +cart is emptied. All these objections, are in a great measure removed +by placing the portable cistern clear of the engine; when used in this +manner there must of course be no hole in the bottom. + +_One Flat Suction Strainer_, made to screw on to the suction pipe, to +prevent anything being drawn in that would not pass through the +jet-pipe, and made flat, with no holes in the upper surface, for use +in the portable cistern. + +_One Standcock_, with stem to insert direct in the fire-plug, and used +principally with hose to throw a jet for cooling ruins. + +_One Canvas Sheet._--This, when stretched out and held securely by +several men, may be jumped into from the window of a house on fire +with comparative safety. + +_One Hand-pump_, as described at page 130, and used with the canvas +buckets. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[Footnote G: The engines and their crews are distinguished by these +colours.] + +[Footnote H: The hose are made up in flat coils, with the male +coupling-screw in the centre, and the female on the outside. When a +length is to be laid out in any direction, it is set on its edge, and +then run out in the required direction,--in this way no turns or +twists can ever occur. When the hose is to be taken up, it is +uncoupled, and then wound up, beginning at the end farthest from the +engine or from the fire-cock (as the case may be): by this method all +the water is pressed out.] + +[Footnote I: In practising this exercise the men are in the habit of +descending by the chains from the parapet of the North Bridge, +Edinburgh, to the ground below: a height of 75 feet.] + +[Footnote J: Mr. Braidwood used canvas jumping sheets on this +principle with hand holes for a dozen men, in the ordinary service of +the London Fire Brigade.] + +[Footnote K: Now Shand, Mason, and Co.] + +[Footnote L: This description applies to the most recently constructed +fire-engines belonging to the Metropolitan Fire Brigade.] + +[Footnote M: "Stuffing," a technical term need by leather-dressers or +curriers.] + +[Footnote N: The proportions are, 1 gallon neats-foot oil, 2 lbs. +tallow, 1/4 lb. bees-wax, melted together, and laid while warm on the +leather.] + +[Footnote O: This description of the Edinburgh coupling-joints was +written in 1830, and is inserted here to show how the present form of +the well-known London Brigade hose-coupling was arrived at. The +internal diameter was originally 2-3/8 inches, but Mr. Braidwood, when +in London, found that he could increase it to 2-1/2 inches.] + +[Footnote P: See engraving of portable cistern, page 156.] + + + + +FIRE ANNIHILATOR + + +With regard to the Fire Annihilator, I have seen several experiments +with this machine, and heard of more which were not successful; and if +an invention fails when experiments are tried, it is open to the +impression that it might fail when brought into active operation. +There have also been many cases where these machines have met with +accidents, one at Drury Lane Theatre amongst the number. + +Water, properly applied, will do whatever the Annihilator can +accomplish, and also many things which the latter cannot do. As it is, +there are some forty or fifty different articles to carry with each +fire-engine, and to add to them such unwieldy things as Fire +Annihilators, would be to encumber the men more than they are at +present, with a very doubtful prospect of advantage. + + +WATER SUPPLY. + +The supply of water is the most vital part of any exertions towards +extinguishing fire. Where the pressure is sufficient, and the mains +large enough, by far the most efficient and economical mode of using +the water is to attach the hose directly to the mains. + +In London, however, this can rarely be done, for several reasons. The +greatest number of plugs are on the service pipes, that is, the pipes +for supplying water for domestic and other purposes, which are only +open a short time every day. If the cisterns are nearly empty, the +pressure cannot be obtained till they are filled. Then, again, the +plugs being some distance apart, it is difficult to obtain a +sufficient number of jets. But when the plugs are full open 1-3/4 +diameter, a sufficient quantity of water is obtained from each to +supply three engines, each of which will give a jet equal to the plug +if confined to one jet. The pressure also in the mains in London +seldom exceeds 120 feet at the utmost. For these reasons the pressure +from the mains is seldom used till the fire is checked, when the ruins +are cooled by the "dummies," as the jets from the mains are named by +the firemen. + +If water can be obtained at an elevation, pipes with plugs or +firecocks on them, are preferable to any other mode at present in use +for the supply of fire-engines. The size of the pipes will depend on +the distance and elevation of the head, and also on the size of the +buildings to be protected. It may be assumed as a general rule, that +the intensity of a fire depends, in a great measure, on the cubic +content of the building; distinction being made as to the nature and +contents of such building. If no natural elevation of water can be +made available, and the premises are of much value, it may be found +advisable to erect elevated tanks; where this is done, the quantity of +water to be kept ready, and the rate at which it is delivered, must +depend on the means possessed of making use of the water. + +The average size of fire-engines may be taken at two cylinders of 7 +inches diameter, with a length of stroke of 8 inches, making forty +strokes each per minute. This sized engine will throw 141 tons of +water in six hours, and allowing one-fourth for waste, 176 tons would +be a fair provision in the tanks for six hours' work; this quantity +multiplied by the number of engines within reach, will give an idea of +what is likely to be required at a large fire. If, however, there are +steam-engines to keep up the supply through the mains, the quantity of +water kept in readiness may be reduced to two hours' consumption, as +it is likely that the steam-engines would be at work before that +quantity was exhausted. This is what may be supposed to be required, +in cases of serious fires in dockyards, in large stacks of warehouses, +or in large manufactories. + +[Illustration: FIG 6. Opening for Suction-pipe.] + +Where water can be had at nearly the level of the premises, such as +from rivers, canals, &c., if it is not thought prudent to erect +elevated tanks, the water may be conducted under the surface by large +cast-iron pipes, with openings at such distances as may seem advisable +for introducing the suction-pipes (Fig. 6). This plan should not be +adopted where the level of the water is more than 12 feet below the +surface of the ground, as although a fire-engine will, if perfectly +tight, draw from a much greater depth than 14 feet (2 feet being +allowed for the height of the engine), still a very trifling leakage +will render it useless for the time, at such a depth. + +The worst mode of supplying engines with water is by covered sunk +tanks; they are generally too small, and unless very numerous, confine +the engines to one or two particular spots, obliging the firemen to +increase the length of the hose which materially diminishes the effect +of the fire-engine. If the tank is supplied by mains from a reservoir, +it would be much better to save the expense of the tank, and to place +plugs or firecocks on the water-pipe. Another evil in sunk tanks is, +that the firemen can seldom guess what quantity of water they may +depend upon, and they may thus be induced to attempt to stop a fire, +at a point they would not have thought of if they had known correctly +the quantity of water in store. + +Where sunk tanks are already constructed, they may be rendered more +available by a partial use of the method shown in Fig. 6. + +_Memoranda of Experiments tried on the mains and service pipes of the +Southwark Water Company, between 4 and 9_ A.M. _of the 31st January, +1844. The wind blowing fresh from N.N.W._ + +The pressure at the water-works at Battersea was kept at 120 feet +during the experiments, and every service pipe or other outlet was +kept shut. + +_1st Experiment._--Six standcocks, with one length of 2-1/2 inches +riveted leather hose 40 feet long, and one copper branch 4 feet to 5 +feet long, with a jet 7/8 inch in diameter on each, were placed in six +plugs on a main 7 inches diameter, in Union-street, between +High-Street, Borough, and Gravel-lane, Southwark, at distances of +about 120 yards apart. The water was brought from the head at +Battersea, by 4250 yards of iron pipes 20 inches diameter, 550 yards +of 15 inches diameter, and 500 yards of 9 inches diameter. + +1st. One standcock was opened, which gave a jet of 50 feet in height, +and delivered 100 gallons per minute. + +With four lengths of hose the jet was 40 feet high, and the delivery +92 gallons per minute. When the branch and jet were taken off with one +length of hose the delivery was 260 gallons per minute. + +2nd. The second standcock was then opened, and the jet from the first +was 45 feet high. + +3rd. The third standcock was opened, and the jet from the first 40 +feet high. + +4th. The fourth standcock being opened, the first gave a jet of 35 +feet high. + +5th. The fifth being opened, the first gave a jet of 30 feet high. + +6th. All the six being opened, the first gave a jet of 27 feet in +height. + +_2nd Experiment._--Six standcocks were then put into plugs, on a main +9 inches diameter in Tooley-Street, the extreme distance being 450 +yards, with hose and jets as in the first experiment. The water was +brought from the head at Battersea by 4250 yards of iron pipes of 20 +inches diameter, 1000 yards of 15 inches diameter, 1400 yards of 9 +inches diameter. The weather was nearly the same, but the place of +experiment was more protected from the wind than in Union-street. + +1st. With one standcock open, a jet 60 feet in height was produced, +and 107 gallons per minute were delivered. + +2nd. The second standcock was then opened, and the difference in the +first jet was barely perceptible. + +3rd. Other two standcocks being opened, the first jet was reduced to +45 feet in height, and the delivery to 92 gallons per minute. + +4th. All the six standcocks being opened, the first jet was further +reduced to 40 feet high, and the delivery to 76 gallons per minute. + +_3rd Experiment._--Two standcocks, with hose, &c., as in the first +experiment, were then put into a service-pipe, 4 inches diameter and +200 yards long, in Tooley-street, the service-pipe was connected with +200 yards of main 5 inches diameter, branching from the main of 9 +inches diameter. The weather was still the same as at first, but the +wind did not appear to affect the jets, owing to the buildings all +round being so much higher than the jet. + +1st. The standcock nearest the larger main was opened, and a jet of 40 +feet high was produced, delivering 82 gallons per minute. + +2nd. Both standcocks being opened, the first gave a jet of 31 feet, +and delivered 68 gallons per minute. + +3rd. The standcock farthest from the large main only being opened, +gave a jet of 34 feet, and delivered 74 gallons per minute. + +4th. Both standcocks being opened, the farthest one gave a jet of 23 +feet, and delivered 58 gallons per minute. + +When both these plugs were allowed to flow freely without hose, the +water from that nearest the large main, rose about 18 inches, and the +farther one about 1 inch above the plug-box. + +[Illustration: FIG. 7. Common Fire-plug.] + +These and other experiments prove the necessity of placing the plugs +on the mains, and not on the service pipes, where there are mains in +the street. + +The different modes of obtaining water from the mains or pipes are +shown in the accompanying drawings. + +(Fig. 7) is a section of a common plug when not in use. + +[Illustration: FIG. 8. Fire-plug with canvas cistern.] + +(Fig. 8) is a section of the common plug, with a canvas dam or cistern +over it, as used in London. The cistern is made of No. 1 canvas, 15 +inches deep, extended at top and bottom by 5/8-inch round iron frames, +a double stay is hinged on the top frame at each end. When the cistern +is used the top frame is lifted up, and the stays put into the +notches, in two pieces of hoop iron, fixed to the bottom frame. There +is a circular opening 9 inches diameter in the canvas bottom, two +circular rings of wash-leather, about 2 inches broad, are attached to +the edges of the opening in the canvas, so as to contract it to 4 +inches or 5 inches diameter; the plug being opened, the cistern is +placed over it; the wash-leather is pressed down to the surface of the +road by the water, and a tolerably water-tight cistern, with about 12 +inches or 14 inches of water in it, is immediately obtained. + +[Illustration: FIG. 9. Plug, with Standcock.] + +(Fig. 9) is a plug with a standcock in it, to which hose may be +attached. + +(Fig. 10) is a common single firecock with a round water-way 2-1/2 +inches diameter. + +[Illustration: FIG. 10. Single Firecock.] + +(Fig. 11) is a double firecock, as laid down in Her Majesty's +Dockyards. + +[Illustration: FIG. 11. Double Firecock, used at the Royal Dockyards.] + +It will be observed, that the short piece of pipe between the main and +this firecock is not curved to the current of the water, but merely +opened a little; this is done with a view of increasing the supply by +steam power, and as the steam engines are, in most cases, situated in +a different direction from the tanks or reservoirs, therefore the +curve that would have assisted the current in one direction would have +retarded it in the other. It has been objected to these firecocks, +that the opening does not run through the centre of the key, therefore +only one side of the key covers the opening in the barrel, while in +the common firecock both sides are covered. + +[Illustration: FIG. 12. Double Firecock, used at the British Museum.] + +(Fig. 12) is a double firecock, as laid down at the British Museum. + +This has a very good delivery, and is certain to be always tight, if +well made, as the pressure of the water forces the key into the +barrel; this also renders the cock somewhat difficult to be opened and +shut, if the pressure be great; but as a lever of any length may be +used, and the key, from its perpendicular position, may be loosened by +a blow, this objection is in a great measure obviated. + +In Figs. 10 and 11 the openings in the street are large enough to +admit of the levers for opening the cock to be fixed, that no mistake +may occur from the lever being mislaid; but with those at the British +Museum, it was not thought necessary to have fixed levers, as a +crow-bar, or anything that could be introduced into the eye of the +spanner, would open them. + +The plug and firecock have both certain advantages and disadvantages, +which are now described. + +The plug, with a canvas cistern, is the easiest mode of obtaining +water; the plug-box being only the size of a paving-stone, is no +annoyance in the street, and the water has only one angle to turn +before it is delivered. + +On the other hand, where the supply of water is limited, the plugs +give but little command of it; there is, however, comparatively very +small loss at a large fire in London from this cause, as it is very +seldom that all the fire-engines can be supplied direct from the +plugs, and those that arrive late must pick up the waste water as they +best can, by using another description of canvas dam, or opening the +street; but in enclosed premises, especially where the water is kept +for the purpose of extinguishing fires, firecocks are much to be +preferred. It is very difficult to insert the standcock into a plug if +there is a considerable force of water, and if the paving has moved, +it cannot be done without raising the plug-box; but this is, however, +the easiest mode of using firecocks, and where there is a considerable +pressure of water, if the watchmen or the police are supplied with a +hose-reel and branch-pipe, they can, in enclosed premises, direct a +jet on the fire while the engines are being prepared, and if they +cannot reach the fire, they will have water ready for the engine when +it arrives. + +Inclosed premises are particularly mentioned, because the principal +duty of the watchmen, in these cases, is to guard against fire, and +their other duties being comparatively few, the men are not often +changed, and they can be instructed thoroughly in the matter. With the +general police of the metropolis it is quite different, their duties +are so numerous and varied, that to add that of firemen to them would +only be to confuse them. + +Firecocks, if kept at 9 inches to 12 inches below the surface, are +easily protected from frost, by stuffing the opening with straw. + +The advantage which the double firecocks have over the single ones, is +merely the increased water-way, as a firecock 3-1/2 inches diameter +could not be so easily opened or shut, as two cocks of 2-1/2 inches +diameter. + +One of the greatest objections to firecocks, is the very large +openings required in the streets, the first cost and the repair of +which are both considerable, besides their liability to accident. To +take them to the footpath, increases the expenses and diminishes the +supply of water, as it is generally done with a small pipe, and the +number of angles is increased. In some instances, where firecocks have +been put down on one side of the street, no less than four right +angles have been made in the course of the water; and if the fire +happens to be on the opposite side of the street from the firecock, +the thoroughfare must be stopped. The expense also is no slight +consideration, for if laid along with the water-pipes, each firecock, +if properly laid, and the pit built round with cement, will cost eight +or ten times as much as a plug. + +London is, upon the whole (except in the warehouse districts), fairly +supplied with water for the average description of fires, that is, +where not more than five or six engines are required. When, however, +it is necessary to work ten or twelve engines, there is very often a +deficiency. In many of the warehouse districts the supply is very +limited indeed, although it is there that the largest fires take +place. + +The water companies are generally willing to give any quantity of +water, but they object to lay down large mains without any prospect of +remuneration. The warehouse keepers decline to be at the expense of +laying the pipes, and there the matter seems to rest. In most other +places of importance, the water is under the management of the civic +authorities, and they, of course, endeavour to obtain a good supply of +water at fires in warehouse as well as in other districts. + +In supplying fire-engines with water from firecocks, one or more +lengths of hose are screwed on the firecock; the extreme end being put +into the engine, the firecock is then opened and the water rushes in. +When the water-pipes are large and the pressure considerable, two or +even three engines may be supplied from the same firecock. + +If the firecocks are all at too great a distance from the place on +fire, to be reached by the supply of hose brought with the engine, the +next resource is, to open the nearest firecock above the level of the +place where the water is required. By covering the eyes of drains, and +stopping up any cross-water channels, the water may in this manner be +conveyed along the street, from a very considerable distance. From the +nature of the ground it does not always happen that the water will run +directly from the nearest firecock, to the spot where it is required; +acclivities, buildings, and many other causes, may prevent this; but +in some of these cases a few lengths of the hose, attached to the +firecock, may convey the water to a channel which will conduct it to +the required point. Upon the arrival of the water, it ought to be +dammed up, and the engine will lift it by suction out of the pool so +formed. + +If, however, from the nature of the ground, from the want of hose, or +from other causes, it is found impracticable to convey the water by +either of the above methods, the next best is, to conduct the water in +hose as far as can be accomplished, and carry it the remainder of the +distance in carts, buckets, or whatever else may be most convenient. + +When carried in buckets it is of advantage to form a line of men from +the water to the engine, each man covering five or six feet of ground. +The buckets are then handed from one man to another, till they reach +the two or three men who are stationed round the suction-tub or +fire-engine to receive them. The buckets when emptied are returned by +a different line of men (women or boys) stationed in the same manner +as the former. If a sufficient number of hands cannot be had to return +the buckets in this manner, any convenient number may be employed to +carry them to the firecock, that they may be again filled. When a fire +occurs where the water-pipes are unprovided with firecocks or plugs, +the ground should be immediately opened, and the water-pipe cut. If it +be of cast-iron, a large hammer may effect the purpose: on the +water-pipe being broken, the suction-pipe of the engine is placed in +the opening so made. If the pipe be of lead, the opening in the street +should be made of sufficient length to admit of one end of it, when +cut, being turned into the engine. If the supply of water by this +means be so great as to occasion waste, it may be regulated by the +nearest stopcock on the water-pipe, by driving a wooden plug into the +end of a cast-iron pipe, or compressing the end of a leaden one. + +The next plan I shall notice of supplying fire-engines is from drains, +gutters, &c. In particular situations and wet weather considerable +supplies of water from these and similar sources may be obtained. In +the gutters all that is required is to dam them up; and, if there be +no materials at hand for this purpose, the causeway must be dug up, +till there is a sufficient depth of water for the suction-pipe of the +engine. + +When the water is to be drawn from drains or common sewers, great care +should be taken not to damage them farther than is absolutely +necessary. + +If enough of cover be taken off to allow one man to enter easily, it +will be quite sufficient for all necessary purposes. When the man +inside the drain or common sewer has collected a proper supply of +water by damming up the channel, the suction-pipe should be handed +down to him, and the engine set to work. + +Although it be true that foul water quenches fire, I will here +observe, that the water from a common sewer should never be used, +except when it is impossible to procure it from a purer source. For +the purpose of procuring water to extinguish a fire, I had at one time +occasion to open a common sewer, in which, with the usual impurities, +the waste from a gas manufactory was intermixed, and the stench in the +premises where the fire had been extinguished by this water, was for +some time after very disagreeable. + +If the water be obtained from a pond or river at a little distance, +one engine may be stationed close to it, and that engine made to pump +the water into another at work. If the water be conveyed in carts, an +engine may be kept at the pond or river for the purpose of filling +them. Of course this can only be done where there is a proper supply +of engines. + +In working from an open water, such as a gutter, drain, river, or +pond, it is proper, in order to prevent sand or gravel being drawn +into the engine, to sink an iron or wooden bucket, into which the +suction-pipe of the engine should be placed. If nothing better can be +had, a good wicker basket will be found useful. + +It is of great advantage to have a number of carts, with butts upon +them full of water, as it ensures a small supply to the engines the +moment they arrive at the fire. This plan, however, entails a very +considerable expense, as carters must be paid for taking them out on +every alarm, besides giving prizes to the owners of the first and +second horses, to ensure their coming in time. + + + + +APPENDIX. + + +The following, on Steam Fire-engines and the Metropolitan Fire +Brigade, is added as a supplement to Mr. Braidwood's account of the +London Fire Brigade, and brings the information upon these subjects up +to the present date (May, 1866):-- + +The steam fire-engine was first constructed in London, in 1830, before +the formation of the London Fire Brigade, by Braithwaite, who made +several engines, and exhibited them at various public trials, also at +several fires, but without being able to bring them into general use. + +The matter remained in abeyance till 1852, when the London Fire +Brigade caused their large hand-worked floating fire-engine to be +altered so as to be worked by steam. This engine having been +originally made by Tilley, of London, the alterations were entrusted +to Shand and Mason, his successors. In the same year the first +American steam fire-engine was constructed in New York. + +In 1855 the London Fire Brigade, stimulated by their first experiment, +caused an entirely new self-propelling, floating steam fire-engine to +be constructed. The experience gained by their first attempt at steam +fire-engine making, enabled Shand and Mason to compete successfully in +this matter, as their design was adopted after receiving the approval +of the late Mr. Walker, Engineer, of Great George Street, London. + +The re-introduction of land steam fire-engines into London was +accomplished by Shand and Mason, who, in 1858, constructed their +first; this engine, after several public trials, was in the same year +sent to St. Petersburgh. + +In 1859 the same firm constructed two land steam fire-engines, which +they offered to the London Fire Brigade for hire or purchase, and in +the following year (1860) the Fire Brigade took one on hire for one +year. This experiment proved so successful, that in 1861 the committee +purchased, from Shand and Mason, the fourth steam engine of their +construction. This, with one of the two made in 1859, were the only +land steam engines that were at work at the Great Tooley Street Fire +of 1861. + +In the beginning of 1862, Mr. Lee, of the firm of Lee and Larned, of +New York, brought over a land steam fire-engine to be placed in the +International Exhibition. This was worked in public at Hodges' +Distillery on the 24th of March previous to the opening of the +Exhibition. + +Shand and Mason supplied the London Fire Brigade in April, 1862, with +the eighth land steam fire-engine of their construction. Messrs. +Merryweather and Sons, of London, placed their first land steam +fire-engine in the International Exhibition of 1862, but this, like +the ninth by Shand and Mason, was not in time for the opening, and +consequently could not compete for a prize medal, which was awarded to +Lee and Larned, of New York. + +A public trial, however, took place before the jury of the Exhibition, +of which the following is an account extracted verbatim from the +jurors' published reports:-- + + +INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION, 1862. + +SPECIAL JURY FOR FIRE-ENGINES. + + +J. F. BATEMAN, F.R.S., _London_; Civil Engineer. + +CAPT. BENT, _London_; Superintendent of Fire Arrangements in the +Exhibition. + +W. M. BROWN, _London_; Superintendent of Westminster Fire Brigade. + +EARL OF CAITHNESS, _London_. + +J. HAWKSHAW, _London_; Civil Engineer. + +C. JENNY, _Austria_; Councillor of Mines in the Imperial Royal Academy +of Mines at Schemnitz. + +P. LUUYT, _France_; Engineer to the Imperial Commissioners of Mines. + +J. E. McCONNELL, _Wolverton_; late Locomotive Superintendent of the +London and North Western Railway. + +O. PIHL, _Norway_; Civil Engineer. + +W. M. RANKINE, _Glasgow_; Professor of Mechanics in the University of +Glasgow. + +CAPT. SHAW, _London_; Superintendent of the London Fire Brigade. + +DUKE OF SUTHERLAND, _London_. + +F. B. TAYLOR, _United States_; Mechanical Engineer. + +H. THOMAS, _Zollverein_; Manufacturer. + +H. TRESCA, _France_; Professor of Mechanics, President of the French +Institute of Civil Engineers. + + +REPORT OF THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF CLASS VIII. ON FIRE-ENGINES. + +_After detailing the Trials of Hand-worked Fire-Engines, the Report +states that_,-- + +The Committee next proceeded to take the necessary steps for trying +the steam fire-engines on the 1st of July, and, as before, invited the +engine builders to a preliminary meeting, that they might receive full +information as to the rules and regulations to be observed. + +In compliance with this invitation, the following engine-makers +attended a meeting on the 28th of June, viz:-- + + Mr. Lee, of the firm of Lee and Larned, Novelty Iron-works, + New York. + + Messrs. Merryweather and Son. + + Messrs. Shand and Mason. + +Mr. Lee declined to produce his steam fire-engine for trial, alleging +various reasons for so doing, and though strongly urged, persisted in +his resolution, and declined the contest. + +Messrs. Merryweather and Son expressed themselves ready to produce +their steam fire-engine on the appointed day. + +Messrs. Shand and Mason informed the Committee that the engine which +they had intended to work would not be ready owing to an accident, but +requested permission to produce for trial two steam-engines made by +them for the London Fire-Engine Establishment, although they were not +in the Exhibition. All the arrangements having been made for trying +several engines together, the Committee granted this request, as +otherwise only one engine would have been present, and a complete +table of results could therefore not have been obtained. + +The Committee assembled in the appointed place at eight o'clock on the +morning of the 1st of July, and found three engines present, viz., one +of Messrs. Merryweather and Son and two of Messrs. Shand and Mason. + +After the Committee had examined the boilers and machinery generally, +the engine-makers filled their respective boilers with cold water from +the river, and fires having been laid, the three were lighted at the +same moment, and the makers were ordered to commence working into a +tank at sixty feet distance as soon as they had attained a steam +pressure of 100 lbs. to the square inch. + +Messrs. Merryweather's engine attained the pressure named in 12 +minutes 10 seconds, Messrs. Shand and Mason's large engine in 18 +minutes 30 seconds, the small engine in about 30 minutes, some +mismanagement having occurred which compelled them to draw the fire in +the latter and light it a second time. Messrs. Merryweather's engine +commenced working as arranged when the steam-gauge indicated a +pressure of 100 lbs., and was 2 minutes and 50 seconds at work before +water passed through the nose-pipe. Notwithstanding this very serious +defect, this engine had poured 500 gallons of water into a tank 60 +feet distant in 17 minutes and 15 seconds from the time at which the +fire was lighted. After the difficulty of drawing the water had been +surmounted, this engine worked well, and threw an admirable jet, +losing 15 lbs. steam-pressure during the first trial. After three +trials this engine became disabled; it was, however, repaired on the +ground in about an hour and a half, and resumed work at the ninth +trial, continuing to work well until the thirteenth, when it became +again disabled, and was withdrawn by the maker, to the great regret of +the Committee, who were thus left to continue the experiments with +only two engines, both made by one firm. + +Messrs. Shand and Mason's large engine was 18 minutes 30 seconds +getting up steam to 100 lbs., and when started drew water instantly, +losing during the first trial 5 lbs. of steam-pressure. + +This engine was severely tested, and worked without accident +throughout the day, the seventeenth trial lasting no less than 63 +minutes, during which the steam and water were both kept to a pressure +of 90 lbs. on the square inch throughout, working through a 1-3/8 inch +nose-pipe. + +At the eighteenth and last trial this engine threw a good vertical +jet. + +Messrs. Shand and Mason's small engine did not raise the steam to 100 +lbs. in less than 30 minutes, owing, of course, partly to the +mismanagement already mentioned, and partly to the nature of the +boiler and fire-box, which, according to the makers' account, are not +adapted for raising steam in the shortest possible time. After the +engine got to work the steam-pressure was well sustained, and the +engine continued working the entire day without accident, concluding +in the evening by throwing a good vertical jet. + +During the time occupied by the trials the direction of the wind was +W.N.W. to W. by N., pressure 2-1/2 to 4-1/2 lbs. on the square foot. +The barometer stood at 29.97 inches. + + +_Summary._ + +On the whole the Committee find as follows:-- + +Messrs. Merryweather and Son have produced, at a price of 700_l._, a +steam fire-engine, weighing, according to the makers' account, 65 +cwt., with jets and lamps, but without water, coal, suction-pipes, +hose, or other gear, and capable, if no accidents occur, of throwing +in an available stream the following average quantities of water per +minute:-- + + Distance. Angle. Quantity. + + 61 feet. 10 deg. 230 gallons. + 85 " 21 deg. 124 " + +Messrs. Shand and Mason have produced an engine, at a cost of 650_l._, +weighing, according to their statement, 55 cwt., with jets and lamps, +but without water, coals, suction-pipes, hose, or other gear, and +capable of throwing in an available stream the following average +quantities of water per minute:-- + + Distance. Angle. Quantity. + + 61 feet. 10 deg. 250 gallons. + 63 " 18 deg. 165 " + 82 " 14 deg. 172 " + 85 " 21 deg. 137 " + 102 " 11 deg. 94 " + 104 " 17 deg. 19 " + +Messrs. Shand and Mason have also produced, at a price of 370_l._, an +engine which, under the same conditions, weighs 35 cwt., and is +capable of throwing in an available stream the following average +quantities per minute:-- + + Distance. Angle. Quantity. + + 61 feet. 10 deg. 142 gallons. + 63 " 18 deg. 133 " + 82 " 14 deg. 56 " + 85 " 21 deg. 27 " + +The best performance during the five trials from which this last +average was taken being forty-six gallons, and the lowest five gallons +per minute. + +At greater distances, in consequence of the wind, this engine could +not deliver a stream, but continued working without accident +throughout the day, and concluded in the evening by throwing a good +vertical jet. + + SUTHERLAND, CHAIRMAN. + E. M. SHAW, HON. SEC. + + * * * * * + +Shand and Mason's tenth land steam fire-engine was supplied to the +London Brigade in June, 1862, and their twelfth, in February, 1863, +upon orders given on the 4th January, 1862. But as the Committee of +the London Fire Brigade were now negotiating with Government to take +the duty of extinguishing fires off their hands, no orders for +steam-engines were given out by them after the above date. + + * * * * * + +STEAM FIRE-ENGINE COMPETITION, + +CRYSTAL PALACE, LONDON, 1863. + +Towards the close of 1862, several engineers and other gentlemen +interested in the improvement of steam fire-engines, offered prizes to +be awarded at competitive trials to take place in London. The +following is the Committee's published account of these trials which +were held in the grounds of the Crystal Palace Company on the 1st, +2nd, and 3rd July, 1863. + +The Committee consisted of the following gentlemen, viz.:-- + +_Chairman._ + +HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF SUTHERLAND. + + +_Members._ + +THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF CAITHNESS. +LORD RICHARD GROSVENOR, M.P. +J. G. APPOLD, ESQ. +J. T. BATEMAN, ESQ. +W. M'BROWNE, ESQ. +T. R. CRAMPTON, ESQ. +W. M. CROSSLAND, ESQ. +W. FAIRBAIRN, ESQ. +T. HAWKSLEY, ESQ. +J. E. McCONNELL, ESQ. +HENRY MAUDSLAY, ESQ. +J. MATHEWS, ESQ. +J. NASMYTH, ESQ. +J. PENN, ESQ. +WILLIAM SMITH, ESQ. + +_Hon. Sec._ + +CAPTAIN E. M. SHAW. + + +The engines were divided into two classes, the large class consisting +of those weighing over 30 cwts., and not exceeding 60 cwts. and the +small class of those not exceeding 30 cwts. + +The prizes offered were 250_l._ for the best engine, and 100_l._ for +the second best, in each class. + +The chief points to which the Committee directed their attention, in +addition to the consideration of cost and weight, were those relating +to the general efficiency of the machines as fire-engines, combining +among other points of excellence-- + + Rapidity in raising and generating steam. + + Facility of drawing water. + + Volume thrown. + + Distance to which it can be projected with the least amount of loss. + + Simplicity, accessibility, and durability of parts. + + +LARGE CLASS. + +FIRST TRIAL. + +Delivering 1000 gallons into a tank at a true distance of 67 feet, and +27 deg. from the horizon. Depth from which water was drawn, 4 feet 6 +inches. The water in the boiler being cold when the signal was given +to commence, each engine commencing to work on attaining steam +pressure of 100lb. to the square inch. + ++---+-----------------+--------------+----------+---------+--------+ +| | | | Time of | Time of | | +|No.| MAKER. | Weight. | raising | filling | Total | +| | | | Steam to | Tank. | Time. | +| | | | 100lbs. | | | ++---+-----------------+--------------+----------+---------+--------+ +| | | T. c. q. lbs.| ' " | ' " | ' " | +| 1 | Easton & Amos, | 2 18 3 12 | 13 14 | 6 16 | 19 30 | +| | London | | | | | +| | | | | | | +| 2 | Merryweather & | 2 18 0 8 | 10 25 | 9 42 | 20 7 | +| | Son, London | | | | | +| | | | | | | +| 3 | Shand & Mason, | 2 17 1 0 | 10 51 | 12 19 | 23 10 | +| | London | | | | | +| | | | | | | +| 4 | Butt and Co., | 2 14 0 4 | 16 30 | 6 48 | 23 18 | +| | United States | | | | | +| | | | | | | +| 5 | Roberts, London | 1 19 1 4 | 11 40 | 20 24 | 32 4 | +| | | | | | | +| | | | | +| | Nichols | 2 10 1 4 | Did not work. | +| | (Manhattan) | | | +| | United States | | | +| | | | | +| | Gray & Son, | 1 18 1 4 | Did not work. | +| | London | | | ++---+-----------------+--------------+----------+---------+--------+ + +MERRYWEATHER AND SON began to work at 100 lbs., fell directly to 40 +lbs., and continued so throughout; stopped and steam rose to 130 lbs. + +SHAND AND MASON--Suction-pipe choked; left off working about 2 +minutes. + + +SECOND TRIAL. + +Delivering 1000 gallons into tank at same distance commencing with +full steam. + ++-----+--------------------+------------+--------+---------+ +| | | Steam at | Steam | Time of | +| No. | NAME. | Beginning. | during | filling | +| | | | Work. | Tank. | ++-----+--------------------+------------+--------+---------+ +| | | | | ' " | +| 1 | Shand & Mason | 100 | | 3 0 | +| | | | | | +| 2 | Butt & Co. | 100 | | 3 3 | +| | | | | | +| 3 | Merryweather & Son | 145 | | 3 7 | +| | | | | | +| 4 | Roberts | 80 | | 12 30 | ++-----+--------------------+------------+--------+---------+ + Roberts did not fill the tank. + + +THIRD TRIAL. + +Delivering into large tank at a horizontal distance of 40 feet, a +vertical height of 40 feet, a true distance of 56 feet, and at an +angle of 45 degrees from the horizon, the depth from which water was +drawn being 16 feet 4 inches. + +Key: +A--No. of Deliveries Open. +B--Length of Hose. +C--Average Steam Pressure. +D--Average Water Pressure. +E--No. of Gallons Delivered. + ++-----+-----------+---------+---+---+--------+----+----+-------+-------+ +| | | | | |Size of | | | |Time of| +|No.| Name. | Time. | A | B |Nozzle. | C | D | E |Raising| +| | | | | | | | | |Steam. | ++---+-------------+---------+---+---+--------+----+----+-------+-------+ +| | |hr. m. s.| | | | | | | | +| 1 | Merryweather| 1 24 55 | 2 |440| 1-1/2 | 91 | 89 |16,086 |10' 32"| +| | & Son | | | | | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | | 80lbs.| +| | | | | | | | | | | +| 2 | Shand | 2 0 0 | 2 |440| 1-1/2 &| 96 | 62 |12,917 |11' 21"| +| | & Mason | | | | 1-3/8 | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | |120lbs.| +| | | | | | | | | | | +| 3 | Roberts | 2 0 0 | 1 |420| 1-1/4 | 75 | 75 | 9,936 |11' 20"| +| | | | | | | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | | 80lbs.| +| | | | | | | | | | | +| 4 | Butt & Co. | 0 46 50 | 2 |440| 1-1/2 | 78 | 78 | 8,280 |14' 10"| +| | | | | | | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | | 45lbs.| +| | | | | | | | | | | +| 5 | Easton & | 1 32 35 | 2 |440| 1-3/8 | 98 | 41 | 3,036 |12' 30"| +| | & Amos | | | | | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | | 90lbs.| +| | | | | | | | | | | +| 6 | Nichols | 0 4 55 | 2 |420| 1-1/2 | -- | -- | None. |13' 09"| +| | (Manhattan) | | | | | | | | to | +| | | | | | | | | | 45lbs.| ++---+-------------+---------+---+---+--------+----+----+-------+-------+ + +MERRYWEATHER AND SON--Fire lighted at 4h. 1m. 55s.; gauge moved at 4h. +8m. 20s.; engine started at 4h. 12m. 27s.; water drawn in about 10 +revolutions; pumps not primed, valve box leaked slightly, and engine +worked satisfactorily in every respect. + +SHAND AND MASON--Fire lighted at 11h. 25m. 46s.; gauge moved at 11h. +32m. 53s.; engine started at 11h. 37m. 7s.; pump primed at 11h. 45m. +48s.; drew water at 11h. 47m.; water first through the nozzle at 11h. +48m. 59s.; in hood at 11h. 49m. 19s.; shifted nozzle (3-1/4m. delay); +high wind. + +ROBERTS--Fire lighted at 11h. 17m.; engine, started at 11h. 28m. 20s. + +BUTT AND CO.--Fire lighted at 5h. 55m. 10s.; started engine at 6h. 9m. +20s.; repeatedly stopped from slide valves not acting, and stopped +entirely at 6h. 46m., from cylinder cover breaking. + +EASTON AND AMOS--Fire lighted at 2h. 2m. 35s.; gauge moved 2h. 10m.; +started engine at 2h. 15m. 5s.; pumps primed, worked till 2h. 54m. +5s.; stopped to shift plungers; went to work again, and stopped +entirely at 3h. 35m. 10s., from two fire bars falling out. + +NICHOLS (Manhattan)--Fire lighted at 10h. 51m. 14s.; gauge moved at +10h. 59m. 20s.; drew water directly; steam up to 140lbs. at 11h. 8m. +45s.; stopped two minutes; started again; made a few revolutions, and +fly-wheel broke. + + +FOURTH TRIAL + +Vertical Jet against Tower. + ++-----+--------------------+---------+-----------------+ +| No. | Name. | Size | Greatest Height | +| | | of Jet. | Thrown. | ++-----+--------------------+---------+-----------------+ +| 1 | Shand & Mason | 22/16 | 180 ft. | +| | | | | +| 2 | Merryweather & Son | 26/16 | 180 ft. | +| | | | | +| 3 | Roberts | 14/16 | 150 ft. | +| | | | | +| 4 | Lee & Co | 21/16 | 55 ft. | ++-----+--------------------+---------+-----------------+ + +GRAY'S engine lighted fire at 7h. 7m. 40s.; steam 9lbs. at 7h. 17m. +0s.; got to work at 7h. 23m. 40s. to blow fires; at 7h. 27m. 0s. water +through hose. Owing to some of the pipe connected with the steam gauge +breaking, no further experiments could be made. + + +SMALL CLASS. + +FIRST TRIAL. + +Delivering 1000 gallons into a tank at a true distance of 50ft. and +37 deg. from the horizon. Depth from which water was drawn, 4ft. 6in. The +water in the boilers being cold when the signal was given to commence, +each engine commencing to work on attaining steam pressure of 100lbs. +to the square inch. + ++---+---------------+---------------+-----------+---------+--------+ +| | | | Time of | Time of | | +|No.| Name. | Weight. | raising | filling | Total | +| | | | Steam | Tank. | Time. | +| | | | to 100lbs.| | | ++---+---------------+---------------+-----------+---------+--------+ +| | | T. c. q. lbs.| ' " | ' " | ' " | +| 1 | Shand & Mason | 1 9 2 0 | 11 36 | 5 24 | 17 0 | +| | | | | | | +| 2 | Lee & Co | 1 10 0 0 | 11 55 | 6 3 | 17 58 | +| | | | | | | +| 3 | Merryweather | 1 10 1 12 | 12 15 | 9 14 | 21 29 | +| | & Son | | | | | ++---+---------------+---------------+-----------+---------+--------+ + +Owing to a broken bolt, there was great leakage in water cylinder of +Lee and Co's. engine. + + +SECOND TRIAL. + +Delivering 1000 gallons into tank at same distance, commencing with +full steam. + ++-----+--------------------+------------+--------+---------+ +| | | Steam | Steam | Time | +| No. | Name. | at | during | filling | +| | | Beginning. | Work. | Tank. | ++-----+--------------------+------------+--------+---------+ +| | | | | ' " | +| 1 | Shand & Mason | 85 | -- | 5 49 | +| | | | | | +| 2 | Lee & Co. | 125 | -- | 5 50 | +| | | | | | +| 3 | Merryweather & Son | 100 | -- | 6 17 | ++---------------------------------------+--------+---------+ + The leakage in Lee and Co's. engine was remedied. + + +THIRD TRIAL. + +Delivering into large tank, commencing with Full Steam. At a +horizontal distance of 40ft., a vertical height of 40ft., a true +distance of 56ft., and at an angle of 45 deg. from the horizon; the depth +from which water was drawn being 16ft. 4in. + +Key +A--Number of Deliveries open. +B--Average Steam Pressure. +C--Average Water Pressure. +D--No. of Gallons Delivered. ++--------------+---+---------+---+--------+---------+-----+----+------+ +| | | | | Length | Size of | | | | +| Name. |No.| Time. | A | of | Nozzle. | B | C | D | +| | | | | Hose. | | | | | ++--------------+---+---------+---+--------+---------+-----+----+------+ +| | | h. m. s.| | | in. | | | | +| Shand & | 1 | 1 0 0 | 1 | 420 | 1 & | 146 | 80 | 8142 | +| Mason | | | | | 1-1/4 | | | | +| | | | | | | | | | +| Merryweather | 2 | 1 0 0 | 1 | 420 | 7/8 | 86 | 45 | 4885 | +| & Son | | | | | | | | | +| | | | | | | | | | +| Lee & Co. | 3 | 1 0 0 | 1 | 420 | 3/4 | 80 | 60 | 4278 | +| | | | | | | | | | ++--------------+---+---------+---+--------+---------+-----+----+------+ + +SHAND AND MASON--Steam ready at 150 lbs.; started at 7h. 3m. 32s.; +stopped at 7h. 12m. 5s. to put on an additional length of hose; worked +well throughout. + +MERRYWEATHER AND SON--Steam ready at 110 lbs.; commenced work at 3h. +43m. 30s.; pumps primed. + +LEE AND CO.--Steam ready, started at 2h. 1m. 0s.; worked well, without +any stoppage. + + +AWARDS. + +At a meeting of the Committee held on the 8th July, 1863, his Grace +the Duke of Sutherland in the Chair, the following prizes were +awarded:-- + +LARGE CLASS. + +Messrs. Merryweather & Sons, 1st Prize, 250_l._ +Messrs. Shand & Mason 2nd Prize, 100_l._ +Mr. W. Roberts, highly commended. + + +SMALL CLASS. + +Messrs. Shand & Mason 1st Prize, 250_l._ +Messrs. W. Lee & Co. 2nd Prize, 100_l._ + +(Signed) On behalf of the Committee, + + SUTHERLAND, CHAIRMAN. + E. M. SHAW, HON. SEC. + +From the above trials it was found that the first prize large-class +engine weighed 6504 lbs., and delivered in one hour 11,366 gallons, +being at the rate of 196 gallons for each hundred-weight of the +engine; while the first prize small-class engine delivered in the same +time 8142 gallons, or 276 for each hundred-weight of the engine, +showing that the latter engine delivered nearly one-half more water in +proportion to its weight, than was delivered by the large one, the +conditions of the two trials being the same. + +As the greatest amount of power in the smallest possible bulk and +weight, was considered most available for use at London fires, the +Committee of the London Fire Brigade, although not in a position, for +the reasons already stated, to purchase additional steam fire-engines, +commenced hiring Shand, Mason, and Co.'s prize engines, and at the +close of 1865 had four such in use in this manner. + +The Metropolitan Fire Brigade, an extension of the late London Fire +Brigade, has now (May, 1866) the following steam fire-engines in +use:--The Floating Steam Fire-engine, by Shand and Mason, in 1855; a +Land Steam Fire-engine by Easton and Amos, which was worked at the +Crystal Palace trials, and is now used in a barge as a floating +engine; one by Roberts, which was also worked at the Crystal Palace; +three by Merryweather and Sons; and fifteen of Shand, Mason, and Co.'s +Land Steam Fire-engines. + + +METROPOLITAN FIRE BRIGADE. + +The disastrous results of the great fire at Tooley-street, in 1861, at +which Mr. Braidwood lost his life, fully demonstrated the inadequacy +(in men and appliances) of the fire brigade supported by the insurance +offices, and as these bodies declined extending their establishment so +as to meet the wants of the whole of the metropolis, a Parliamentary +inquiry was instituted, which resulted in the passing of the following +Act:-- + + ANNO VICESIMO OCTAVO & VICESIMO NONO + + VICTORIAE REGINAE. + + CAP. XC. + + An Act for the Establishment of a Fire Brigade within the + Metropolis. [5th July, 1865.] + + WHEREAS it is expedient to make further provision for the + protection of life and property from fire within the + metropolis: Be it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent + Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords + Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present + Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as + follows: + + + _Preliminary._ + + 1. This Act may be cited for all purposes as the + "Metropolitan Fire Brigade Act, 1865." + + 2. For the purposes of this Act the "Metropolis" shall mean + the City of _London_ and all other parishes and places for + the time being within the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan + Board of Works: + + "Insurance Company" shall include any persons corporate or + unincorporate, or any person carrying on the business of + fire insurance. + + 3. The expression "Metropolis Local Management Acts" shall + mean the Acts following; that is to say, "The Metropolis + Management Act, 1855," "The Metropolis Management Amendment + Act, 1856," and "The Metropolis Management Amendment Act, + 1862." + + + _Establishment and Duties of Fire Brigade._ + + 4. On and after the first day of _January_ one thousand + eight hundred and sixty-six the duty of extinguishing fires + and protecting life and property in case of fire shall + within the metropolis be deemed for the purposes of this Act + to be entrusted to the Metropolitan Board of Works; and with + a view to the performance of that duty it shall be lawful + for them to provide and maintain an efficient force of + firemen, and to furnish them with all such fire engines, + horses, accoutrements, tools, and implements as may be + necessary for the complete equipment of the force, or + conducive to the efficient performance of their duties. + + 5. The said Board, hereinafter referred to as the Board, may + take on lease, purchase, or otherwise acquire stations for + engines, stables, houses for firemen, and such other houses, + buildings, or land as they may think requisite for carrying + into effect the purposes of this Act, and may from time to + time sell any property acquired by or vested in them for the + purposes of this Act: + + The Board may also contract with any company or persons + authorized to establish the same for the establishment of + telegraphic communication between the several stations in + which their fire engines or firemen are placed, and between + any of such stations and other parts of the metropolis. + + 6. On and after the said first day of January one thousand + eight hundred and sixty-six, all stations, fire-engines, + fire escapes, plant, and other property belonging to or used + by the fire engine establishment of the insurance companies + in the metropolis shall vest in or be conveyed or assigned + to the Board for all the estate and interest of the said + companies therein, upon trust to be applied by the Board to + the purposes of this Act, but subject to all legal + liabilities and obligations attaching thereto, including the + payment of all pensions that have been granted to the + members of the said Fire Engine Establishment, according to + a list that has been furnished to the chairman of the said + Board by the chief officer of the said fire-engine + establishment, and all trustees for the same shall be + indemnified against such liabilities and obligations. The + Board may also, if they think fit, purchase the stations, + fire-engines, and plant belonging to any parish, place, or + body of persons within their jurisdiction. + + 7. The force of firemen established under this Act, + hereinafter called the Metropolitan Fire Brigade, shall be + under the command of an officer, to be called the chief + officer of the Metropolitan Fire Brigade. + + The chief officer and men composing the said fire brigade + shall be appointed and removed at the pleasure of the Board. + + 8. The Board shall pay such salaries as they think expedient + to the said fire brigade. They may also make such + regulations as they think fit with respect to the + compensation to be made to them in case of accident, or to + their wives or families in case of their death; also with + respect to the pensions or allowances to be paid to them in + case of retirement; also with respect to the gratuities to + be paid to persons giving notices of fires; also with + respect to gratuities by way of a gross sum or annual + payment to be from time to time awarded to any member of the + said force, or to any other person, for extraordinary + services performed in cases of fire; also with respect to + gratuities to turncocks belonging to waterworks from which a + supply of water is quickly derived. + + 9. The Board may by byelaws make regulations for the + training, discipline, and good conduct of the men belonging + to the said fire brigade, for their speedy attendance with + engines, fire escapes, and all necessary implements on the + occasion of any alarm of fire, and generally for the + maintenance in a due state of efficiency of the said + brigade, and may annex to any breach of such regulations + penalties not exceeding in amount forty shillings, but no + byelaw under this section shall be of any validity unless it + is made and confirmed in manner directed by the Metropolis + Local Management Acts; and all the provisions of the said + Acts relating to byelaws shall, with the necessary + variations, apply to any byelaws made in pursuance of this + Act. + + 10. The vestry of any parish or place in the metropolis may + allow such compensation as they think just to any engine + keeper or other person employed in the service of fire + engines who has hitherto been paid out of any rate raiseable + in such parish or place, and who is deprived of his + employment by or in consequence of the passing of this Act, + and any compensation so allowed shall be paid out of the + rate out of which the salary of the officer so compensated + was payable. + + 11. The Board may make such arrangements as they think fit + as to establishing fire escapes throughout the metropolis. + They may for that purpose contribute to the funds of the + Royal Society for the Protection of Life from Fire, or of + any existing society that provides fire escapes, or may + purchase or take by agreement the property of any existing + society in their stations and fire escapes, and generally + may maintain such fire escapes and do such things as they + think expedient towards aiding persons to escape from fire; + and any expenses incurred by them in pursuance of this + section shall be deemed to be expenses incurred in carrying + into effect this Act. + + 12. On the occasion of a fire, the chief or other officer in + charge of the fire brigade may, in his discretion, take the + command of any volunteer fire brigade or other persons who + voluntarily place their services at his disposal, and may + remove, or order any fireman to remove, any persons who + interfere by their presence with the operations of the fire + brigade, and generally he may take any measures that appear + expedient for the protection of life and property, with + power by himself or his men to break into or through, or + take possession of, or pull down any premises for the + purpose of putting an end to a fire, doing as little damage + as possible; he may also on any such occasion cause the + water to be shut off from the mains and pipes of any + district, in order to give a greater supply and pressure of + water in the district in which the fire has occurred; and no + water company shall be liable to any penalty or claim by + reason of any interruption of the supply of water occasioned + only by compliance with the provisions of this section. + + All police constables shall be authorized to aid the fire + brigade in the execution of their duties. They may close any + street in or near which a fire is burning, and they may of + their own motion, or on the request of the chief or other + officer of the fire brigade, remove any persons who + interfere by their presence with the operations of the fire + brigade. + + Any damage occasioned by the fire brigade in the due + execution of their duties shall be deemed to be damage by + fire within the meaning of any policy of insurance against + fire. + + + _Expenses._ + + 13. Every insurance company that insures from fire any + property in the metropolis shall pay annually to the + Metropolitan Board of Works, by way of contribution toward + the expenses of carrying this Act into effect, a sum after + the rate of thirty-five pounds in the one million pounds on + the gross amounts insured by it, except by way of + reassurance, in respect of property in the metropolis for a + year, and at a like rate for any fractional part of a + million, and for any fractional part of a year as well as + for any number of years for which the insurance may be made, + renewed, or continued. + + The said payments by insurance companies shall be made + quarterly in advance, on the 1st of January, 1st of April, + 1st of July, and 1st of October in every year; the first of + such payments to be made on the 1st of January one thousand + eight hundred and sixty-six, and such first payment and the + other payments for the year one thousand eight hundred and + sixty-six to be based upon the amounts insured by the + several companies in respect of property in the metropolis + in the year ending the twenty-fourth of December one + thousand eight hundred and sixty-four: provided that any + insurance company which at the time of the passing of this + Act contributes to the expenses of the said fire engine + establishment may, in respect of all payments to be made by + it in the years one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six and + one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven, but not + afterwards, contribute after the yearly rate of thirty-five + pounds in one million pounds of the business in respect of + which it contributes to the said fire engine establishment + for the present year, according to a return which has been + furnished to the chairman of the said Metropolitan Board, + instead of in the manner in this Act provided. + + 14. All contributions due from an insurance company to the + Board in pursuance of this Act shall be deemed to be + specialty debts due from the company to the Board, and be + recovered accordingly. + + 15. For the purpose of ascertaining the amount to be + contributed by every such insurance company as aforesaid, + every insurance company insuring property from fire in the + metropolis shall, on the thirtieth day of December one + thousand eight hundred and sixty-five, with respect to the + amounts insured in the year one thousand eight hundred and + sixty-four, and on the 1st of June one thousand eight + hundred and sixty-six, and on every succeeding 1st of June, + or on such other days as the Metropolitan Board of Works may + appoint, make a return to the said Board, in such form as + they may require, of the gross amount insured by it in + respect of property in the metropolis. + + There shall be annexed to the return so made a declaration + made by the secretary or other officer performing the duties + of secretary of the company by whom it is made, stating that + he has examined the return with the books of the company, + and that to the best of his knowledge, information, and + belief, it contains a true and faithful account of the gross + amount of the sums insured by the company to which he + belongs in respect of property in the metropolis. + + The return made in the June of one year shall not come into + effect till the 1st of January of the succeeding year, and + shall be the basis of the contributions for that year. + + 16. If any insurance company makes default in making such + returns to the Board as are required by this Act, it shall + be liable to a penalty not exceeding five pounds for every + day during which it is so in default. + + 17. The secretary or other officer having the custody of the + books and papers of any insurance company that is required + to pay a contribution to the Board in pursuance of this Act + shall allow any officer appointed by the Board to inspect, + during the hours of business, any books and papers that will + enable him to ascertain the amount of property insured by + such company in the metropolis, and the amount for which it + is insured, and to make extracts from such books or papers; + and any secretary or other such officer as aforesaid of a + company failing to comply with the requisitions of this + section in respect of such inspections and extracts shall be + liable on summary conviction to a penalty not exceeding five + pounds for each offence. + + 18. The Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury shall pay or + cause to be paid to the Board by way of contribution to the + expenses of maintaining the fire brigade such sums as + Parliament may from time to time grant for that purpose, not + exceeding in any one year the sum of ten thousand pounds. + + 19. For the purpose of defraying all expenses that may be + incurred by the Board in carrying into effect this Act which + are not otherwise provided for, the Board may from time to + time issue their precepts to the overseers of the poor of + every parish or place within the metropolis, requiring the + overseers to pay over the amount mentioned in the precepts + to the Treasurer of the Board, or into a bank to be named in + the precepts, within forty days from the delivery of the + precept. + + The overseers shall comply with the requisitions of any such + precept by paying the sums mentioned out of any monies in + their hands applicable to the relief of the poor, or by + levying the amount required as part of the rate for the + relief of the poor, but no contribution required to be paid + by any parish or place under this section shall exceed in + the whole in any one year the rate of one halfpenny in the + pound on the full and fair annual value of property rateable + to the relief of the poor within the said parish or place, + such full and fair annual value to be computed in all parts + of the metropolis, exclusive of the city of London, + according to the last valuation for the time being acted on + in assessing the county rate, or, where there is no county + rate, according to a like estimate or basis; and no liberty, + precinct, or place, shall be exempt from the rate leviable + for the purposes of this Act by reason of its being + extra-parochial or otherwise; and in default of proper + officers in any liberty, precinct, or place, to assess or + levy the said rate, the Board may appoint such officers, and + add the amount of any expenses so incurred to the amount to + be raised by the next succeeding rate in such liberty, + precinct, or place. + + Overseers shall, for the purposes of levying any amount + required to be levied by them under this Act, have the same + powers and be subject to the same obligations as in levying + a rate for the relief of the poor. + + The word "Overseers" shall include any persons or bodies of + persons authorized or required to make and collect or cause + to be collected rates applicable to the relief of the poor; + and such persons or bodies shall pay to the Board the amount + so mentioned in the precept out of the said rates. + + 20. In case the amount ordered by any such precept as + aforesaid to be paid by the overseers of any parish or place + be not paid in manner directed by such precept and within + the time therein specified for that purpose, it shall be + lawful for any justice of the peace, upon the complaint by + the Board or by any person authorized by the Board, to issue + his warrant for levying the amount or so much thereof as may + be in arrear by distress and sale of the goods of all or any + of the said overseers, and in case the goods of all the + overseers be not sufficient to pay the same, the arrears + thereof shall be added to the amount of the next levy which + is directed to be made in such parish or place for the + purposes of this Act, and shall be collected by the like + methods. + + 21. The Board may, with the consent of the Commissioners of + Her Majesty's Treasury, borrow any sum not exceeding forty + thousand pounds, and apply the same for the purposes of this + Act; and all powers contained in the Metropolis Local + Management Acts authorizing the Board to borrow money, or + any commissioners or persons to lend money to the Board, and + all other provisions as to the mode of borrowing, the + repayment of principal or interest, or in anywise relating + to borrowing by the Board, shall be deemed to apply and to + extend to this Act in the same manner as if the monies + borrowed in pursuance of this Act were monies borrowed for + the purpose of defraying the expenses of the Metropolis + Local Management Acts, or one or more of those acts. The + Board shall apply the monies received by them under this Act + in liquidation of the principal and interest of the monies + so borrowed, but no creditor shall be concerned to see to + such application, or be liable for any misapplication of the + monies received or borrowed by the Board in pursuance of + this Act. + + + MISCELLANEOUS. + + 22. Where any chief officer, or other person who has been + employed by the Board in any capacity under this Act, and + has been discharged therefrom, continues to occupy any house + or building that may be provided for his use, or any part + thereof, after one week's notice in writing from the Board + to deliver up possession thereof, it shall be lawful for any + police magistrate, on the oath of one witness, stating such + notice to have been given, by warrant under his hand to + order any constable to enter into the house or building + occupied by such discharged chief officer or other person as + aforesaid, and to remove him and his family and servants + therefrom, and afterwards to deliver the possession thereof + to the Board, as effectually, to all intents and purposes, + as the sheriff having jurisdiction within the place where + such house or building is situate might lawfully do by + virtue of a writ of possession or a judgment at law. + + 23. If the chimney of any house or other building within the + metropolis is on fire, the occupier of such house or + building shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twenty + shillings; but if such occupier proves that he has incurred + such penalty by reason of the neglect or wilful default of + any other person, he may recover summarily from such person + the whole or any part of the penalty he may have incurred as + occupier. + + 24. All penalties imposed by this Act, or by any byelaw made + in pursuance thereof, and all expenses and other sums due to + the Board in pursuance of this Act, in respect of which no + mode of recovery is prescribed, may be recovered summarily + before two justices in manner directed by the Act of the + session holden in the eleventh and twelfth years of the + reign of her present Majesty, chapter forty-three, or any + Act amending the same, and when so recovered shall be paid + to the treasurer of the Board, notwithstanding any police + act or other act of parliament directing a different + appropriation of such monies. + + 25. Any dispute or other matter which is by this Act + directed to be determined summarily by two justices shall be + deemed to be a matter in respect of which a complaint is + made upon which they have authority by law to make an order + for payment of money within the meaning of the said Act of + the session holden in the eleventh and twelfth years of the + reign of her present Majesty, chapter forty-three, or any + Act amending the same. + + 26. Any act, power, or jurisdiction hereby authorized to be + done or exercised by two justices may be done or exercised + by the following magistrates within their respective + jurisdictions; that is to say, by any metropolitan police + magistrate sitting alone at a police court or other + appointed place, or by the Lord Mayor of the City of London, + or any alderman of the said City, sitting alone or with + others at the Mansion House or Guildhall. + + 27. The accounts of the Board in respect of expenses + incurred by them under this Act shall be audited in the same + manner as if they were expenses incurred under the said + Metropolis Local Management Acts, and the Board shall in + each year make a report to one of her Majesty's principal + Secretaries of State of all acts done and expenditure + incurred by them in pursuance of this Act, and that report + shall be laid before Parliament within one month after the + commencement of the session. + + 28. The Board may delegate any powers conferred on them by + this Act to a committee of their body; and such committee + shall, to the extent to which such powers are delegated, be + deemed to be the Board within the meaning of this Act. + + 29. If the companies insuring property within the + metropolis, or any such number of them as may in the opinion + of the said Board be sufficient, establish a force of men + charged with the duty of attending at fires and saving + insured property, it shall be the duty of the Fire Brigade, + with the sanction of the Board, and subject to any + regulations that may be made by the Board, to afford the + necessary assistance to that force in the performance of + their duties, and, upon the application of any officer of + that force, to hand over to their custody property that may + be saved from fire; and no charge shall be made by the said + Board for the services thus rendered by the fire brigade. + + 30. It shall be lawful for the Board, when occasion + requires, to permit any part of the fire brigade + establishment, with their engines, escapes, and other + implements, to proceed beyond the limits of the metropolis + for the purpose of extinguishing fires. In such case the + owner and occupier of the property where the fire has + occurred shall be jointly and severally liable to defray all + the expenses that may be incurred by the Fire Brigade in + attending the fire, and shall pay to the Board a reasonable + charge for the attendance of the Fire Brigade, and the use + of their engines, escapes, and other implements. In case of + difference between the Board and the owner and occupier of + such property, or either of them, the amount of the + expenses, as well as the propriety of the Fire Brigade + attending such fire (if the propriety thereof be disputed), + shall be summarily determined by two justices. In default of + payment, any expenses under this section may be recovered by + the Board in a summary manner. + + The Board may also permit any part of the Fire Brigade + Establishment to be employed on special services upon such + terms of remuneration as the said Board may think just. + + 31. The Metropolitan Fire Brigade shall in the morning of + each day, with the exception of Sundays, send information, + by post or otherwise, to all the insurance offices + contributing for the purposes of this Act, of all fires + which have taken place within the metropolis since the + preceding return, in such form as may be agreed upon between + the Board and the said companies. + + 32. All the powers now exercised by any local body or + officer within the metropolis as respects fireplugs shall + henceforth be exercised by the Board, and the Board shall be + entitled to receive copies or extracts of all plans kept by + any water company under the provision of the Act of the + session of the fifteenth and sixteenth years of her Majesty, + chapter eighty-four; and every such water company shall + provide at the expense of the Board in any mains or pipes + within the metropolis plugs for the supply of water in case + of fire at such places, of such dimensions, and in such form + as the Board may require, and the Fire Brigade shall be at + liberty to make such use thereof as they may deem necessary + for the purpose of extinguishing any fire; and every such + company shall deposit keys of all their fireplugs at such + places as may be appointed by the Board, and the Board may + put up on any house or building a public notice in some + conspicuous place in each street in which a fireplug is + situated, showing its situation. + + 33. "Owner" in this Act shall mean the person for the time + being receiving the rackrent of the premises in connexion + with which the word is used, either on his own account or as + agent or trustee for some other person, or who would receive + the same if the premises were let at rackrent. + + + _Repeal._ + + 34. On and after the first day of January, one thousand + eight hundred and sixty-six, there shall be repealed so much + as is unrepealed of an Act passed in the fourteenth year of + his late Majesty King George the Third, chapter + seventy-eight, and intituled an Act for the further and + better regulation of buildings and party walls, and for the + more effectually preventing mischief by fire, within the + Cities of London and Westminster and the liberties thereof, + and other the parishes, precincts, and places within the + weekly bills of mortality, the parishes of St. Marylebone, + Paddington, St. Pancras, and St. Luke, at Chelsea, in the + County of Middlesex, and for indemnifying, under certain + conditions, builders and other persons against the penalties + to which they are or may be liable for erecting buildings + within the limits aforesaid contrary to law, with the + exception of sections eighty-three and eighty-six which + shall remain in full force, but such repeal shall not affect + any penalty or liability incurred under the repealed + sections. + + 35. On and after the first day of January, one thousand + eight hundred and sixty-six, section forty-four of an Act + passed in the session holden in the third and fourth years + of the reign of King William the Fourth, chapter ninety, + shall be repealed so far as respects any parish or place + within the limits of the metropolis as defined by this Act; + provided that the repeal of the said section shall not + affect the power of the churchwardens and overseers of any + parish or place to contribute to the funds of any society + that at the time of the passing of this Act maintains fire + escapes in such parish or place, unless and until the Board + purchase the property of such society, or otherwise provide + fire escapes in such parish or place. + + * * * * * + +In accordance with the provisions of the above recited Act of +Parliament, the London Fire Brigade of the Insurance Offices is now +being extended to meet the requirements of the whole of London, under +the title of the Metropolitan Fire Brigade, with Captain E. M. Shaw, +Mr. Braidwood's successor, as chief officer. + + + + +LONDON: + +SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET, +COVENT GARDEN. + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's Notes + +Variations in spelling, hyphenation, capitalization, and punctuation +have been retained from the original book. The Table of Contents and +List of Illustrations do not exactly match the chapter, section, and +illustration titles in the text. + +The following changes have been made: + +Page 70: Missing word "of" added (avail themselves of the means). + +Page 183: Typo estalishment changed to establishment (establishment of +telegraphic communication). + +Tables in the Appendix have been modified in format, but not in +content, to fit the plain-text spacing constraints. + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Fire Prevention and Fire Extinction, by +James Braidwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIRE PREVENTION AND FIRE *** + +***** This file should be named 26440.txt or 26440.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/4/4/26440/ + +Produced by Bryan Ness, Diane Monico, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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