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{{short description|New York City fireboat}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin |display title=ital}}
{{about|the New York City fireboat|similarly named fireboats|Firefighter (disambiguation)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin
|display title=ital}}
{{Infobox ship image
{{Infobox ship image
|Ship image = File:Firefighter-nhl.JPG
|Ship image=[[File:US Navy 060524-N-9640H-004 A New York City fireboat renders honors to U.S. Navy ships arriving for Fleet Week New York 2006,.jpg|300px]]
|Ship caption=Fireboat ''Fire Fighter''
|Ship caption = Fireboat ''Fire Fighter''
}}
}}
{{Infobox ship career
{{Infobox ship career
|Hide header=
|Hide header =
|Ship country=[[New York City Fire Department]]
|Ship country = [[New York City Fire Department]]
|Ship flag={{Shipboxflag|New York}}
|Ship flag = {{Shipboxflag|New York}}
|Ship name=''Fire Fighter''
|Ship name = ''Fire Fighter''
|Ship operator=[[New York City Fire Department]]
|Ship operator = [[New York City Fire Department]]
|Ship ordered=
|Ship ordered =
|Ship awarded=
|Ship awarded =
|Ship builder=United Shipyards
|Ship builder = United Shipyards
|Ship hull number=856
|Ship hull number = 856
|Ship laid down=1937
|Ship laid down = 1937
|Ship launched=August 26, 1938
|Ship launched = August 26, 1938
|Ship christened=August 26, 1938
|Ship christened = August 26, 1938
|Ship completed=
|Ship completed =
|Ship acquired=
|Ship acquired =
|Ship commissioned=November 16, 1938
|Ship commissioned = November 16, 1938
|Ship decommissioned = July 17, 2010
|Ship recommissioned=
|Ship decommissioned=July 17, 2010
|Ship in service =
|Ship in service=
|Ship out of service =
|Ship homeport = [[New York City]]
|Ship out of service=
|Ship renamed=
|Ship nickname = The Fighter
|Ship honors = 1974 [[Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation]]
|Ship reclassified=
|Ship refit=
|Ship captured =
|Ship struck=
|Ship fate = Museum Ship
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship homeport= [[New York City|NY]]
|Ship nickname= The Fighter
|Ship honours=
|Ship honors= 1974 [[Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation]]
|Ship captured=
|Ship fate=Museum Ship
|Ship status=Operational
|Ship notes=
|Ship badge=
}}
}}
{{Infobox ship characteristics
{{Infobox ship characteristics
|Hide header=
|Hide header =
|Header caption=
|Header caption =
|Ship class=
|Ship tonnage = 220.44 net
|Ship length = {{convert|134|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship tonnage=220.44 net
|Ship beam = {{convert|32|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship displacement=
|Ship height = {{convert|25|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship tons burthen=
|Ship length={{convert|134|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship draft = {{convert|9|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship propulsion = Twin Westinghouse 1000 hp Electric Propulsion Motors
|Ship beam={{convert|32|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship power = Twin 1500 hp, 16-cylinder, 3968 CID General Motors Winton diesel engines
|Ship height={{convert|25|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship draught={{convert|9.24|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship speed = {{convert|14|kn|mph}}
|Ship Pumping = 4 x 5,000gpm DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps
|Ship draft={{convert|9|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship hold depth=
|Ship capacity = 20,000gpm
|Ship ice class=
|Ship crew = 7-11
|Ship sail plan=
|Ship propulsion=Twin Westinghouse 1000 hp Electric Propulsion Motors
|Ship power=Twin 1500 hp, 16-cylinder, 3968 CID General Motors Winton diesel engines
|Ship speed={{convert|14|kn|mph}}
|Ship Pumping=4 x 5,000gpm DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps
|Ship Pumping Capacity=20,000gpm
|Ship test depth=
|Ship boats=
|Ship capacity=
|Ship complement=
|Ship crew=7-11
|Ship time to activate=
|Ship troops=
|Ship sensors=
|Ship EW=
|Ship armament=
|Ship armour=
|Ship armor=
|Ship aircraft=
|Ship aircraft facilities=
|Ship notes=
}}
}}

{{Infobox NRHP
{{Infobox NRHP
| embed = yes
| embed = yes
| name = ''Fire Fighter'' (fireboat)
| name = ''Fire Fighter'' (fireboat)
| nrhp_type = nhl
| nrhp_type = nhl
| locmapin = USA New York Long Island#New York#USA
| image =
| map_caption = Location on [[Long Island]]##Location in [[New York (state)|New York]]##Location in United States
| caption =
| location = [[Greenport, Suffolk County, New York]]
| locmapin=New York City
| coordinates =
| location =
| built = 1938
| nearest_city =
| architect = William Francis Gibbs
| coordinates =
| builder = [[United Shipyards]]
| built = 1938
| designated_nrhp_type = June 30, 1989<ref name="nhlsum"/>
| architect = William Francis Gibbs
| added = June 30, 1989<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|2007a}}</ref><ref name="nrhpdoc">{{cite web|url={{NRHP url|id=89001447}}|title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: FIREFIGHTER |publisher=[[National Park Service]]|access-date=July 14, 2020}} With {{NRHP url|id=89001447|photos=y|title=accompanying pictures}}</ref>
| architecture =
| refnum = 89001447
| designated_nrhp_type = June 30, 1989<ref name="nhlsum"/>
| mpsub =
| added = June 30, 1989<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|2007a}}</ref>
| visitation_num =
| visitation_year =
| refnum=89001447
| mpsub =
| governing_body = [[New York City Fire Department]]
}}
}}
|}
|}
{{Infobox military award
{{Infobox award
|name=Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation
|name = Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation
|caption2 = Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation Ribbon
|image2=[[File:04_MM_GS_R.JPG]]
|presenter = [[United States Maritime Administration]]
|caption2=Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation Ribbon
|awarded_for = Actions on May 30th, 1973 following the collision of the ''[[Esso Brussels|SS Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']] and the rescue of 31 trapped crew from life-threatening fire aboard the [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']].
|awarded_by=[[United States Maritime Administration]]
|type=
|eligibility=
|for=Actions on May 30th, 1973 following the collision of the ''[[Esso Brussels|SS Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']] and the rescue of 31 trapped crew from life-threatening fire aboard the [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']].
|campaign=
|status=
|description=
|established=
|first_award=
|last_award=
|total=
|posthumous=
|recipients=
|individual=
|higher=
|same=
|lower=
|image=
|caption=Gallant Ship Plaque
}}
}}


'''''Fire Fighter''''' is a fireboat which served the [[New York City Fire Department]] from 1938 through 2010, serving with Marine Companies 1, 8 and 9 during her career. The most powerful diesel-electric [[fireboat]] in terms of pumping capacity when built in 1938, ''Fire Fighter'' fought more than 50 major fires during her career, including fires aboard the {{SS|Normandie}} in 1942 and the {{SS|El Estero}} in 1943, the 1973 collision of the ''[[Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']], and the terrorist attacks on [[September 11, 2001]].<ref name="nrhpinv"/>


==Service history==
'''''Fire Fighter''''' is a fireboat which served the [[New York City Fire Department]] from 1938 through 2010, serving with Marine Companies 1, 8 & 9 during her career. The most powerful diesel-electric [[fireboat]] in terms of pumping capacity when built in 1938, the '''''Fire Fighter''''' fought more than 50 major fires during her career, including fires aboard the [[SS Normandie|SS ''Normandie'']] in 1942, the 1973 collision of the ''[[Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']] and the terrorist attacks on [[September 11, 2001]].<ref name="nrhpinv"/>
Authorized for construction in early 1937 by Mayor [[Fiorello LaGuardia]] based on designs submitted by noted naval architect [[William Francis Gibbs]] and his firm [[Gibbs & Cox]], ''Fire Fighter'' was laid down at United Shipyards as Hull #856 and was christened and launched on August 28, 1938, by Eleanor Grace Flanagan. After fitting out and sea trials, ''Fire Fighter'' officially entered service with the [[New York City Fire Department]] at 9:00&nbsp;a.m. on November 16, 1938, with Engine 57 at Pier 1 at [[Battery (New York City)|the Battery]], which would later be organized as Marine Unit 1. Serving from this post through the mid-1960s, ''Fire Fighter'' would respond to two of her most famous actions; the fire and capsizing of the {{SS|Normandie}} in 1942 and the fire aboard the ammunition-laden {{SS|El Estero}} in 1943, among dozens of other vessel and pier fires across [[New York Harbor]].


Shifting with the majority of commercial steamship line freight operations from [[Manhattan]] to the [[Brooklyn]] waterfront, ''Fire Fighter'' served with Marine Unit 8 and Engine 223 at the 37th Street Pier through 1967 before shifting once again to the Homeport Pier in [[Stapleton, Staten Island|Stapleton]] where she joined Marine Unit 9, an assignment which made her the first-due marine firefighting asset at the heavily trafficked [[The Narrows|Narrows]] of New York Harbor and throughout the tight confines of both the [[Arthur Kill]] and [[Kill van Kull]]. With both waterways already heavily utilized by marine traffic calling at ports on the [[Chemical Coast]], the rise of both the [[Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal]] and [[Howland Hook Marine Terminal]] saw an increasing number of [[container ships]] transiting the same waters. These conditions led to several major vessel collisions and shoreside fires during her tenure in Staten Island, but the 1973 collision of ''[[Esso Brussels|SS Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']] would prove to be the largest fires she would ever fight single-handedly. For her and her crew's part in the response, firefighting and rescue of 31 surviving crewmen from the burning [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']], the ''Fire Fighter'' was named a [[Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation|Gallant Ship]]<ref>{{cite book|first2=Janet|last2=Kimmerly|first1=Paul |last1=Hashagen|title=Fire Department City of New York: The Bravest; An Illustrated History 1865-2002|year=2002|publisher=Turner Pub. Co.|location=Paducah, Ky.|isbn=9781563118326|page=142|edition=Rev.}}</ref> and her crew received the American Merchant Marine Seamanship Trophy. To date, ''Fire Fighter'' remains the only fireboat to have received this award.
==FDNY Service History==
Authorized for construction in early 1937 by Mayor [[Fiorello LaGuardia]] based on designs submitted by noted naval architect [[William Francis Gibbs]] and his firm [[Gibbs & Cox]], the ''Fire Fighter'' was laid down at United Shipyards as Hull #856 and was christened and launched on August 28, 1938 by Miss Eleanor Grace Flanagan. After fitting out and sea trials, the ''Fire Fighter'' officially entered service with the [[New York City Fire Department]] on at 0900hrs on November 16, 1938 with Engine 57 at Pier 1 in the Battery, which would later be organized as Marine Unit 1. Serving from this post through the mid-1960s, ''Fire Fighter'' would respond to two of her most famous actions; the fire and capsizing of the [[SS Normandie|SS ''Normandie'']] in 1942 and the fire aboard the ammunition-laden [[SS El Estero|SS ''El Estero'']] in 1943, among dozens of other vessel and pier fires across [[New York Harbor]].


A 1974 article in ''[[The New York Times]]'' described how fires in [[New Jersey]] frequently resulted in requests to the FDNY commissioner for the loan of ''Fire Fighter''.<ref name=nytimes1974-12-08/> Once authorized it would take ''Fire Fighter'' approximately 45 minutes to arrive at waterfront communities such as [[Carteret, New Jersey|Carteret]].
Shifting with the majority of commercial steamship line freight operations from [[Manhattan]] to the [[Brooklyn]] waterfront, ''Fire Fighter'' served with Marine Unit 8 and Engine 223 at the 37th Street Pier through 1967 before shifting once again to the Homeport Pier in [[Stapleton, Staten Island|Stapleton]] where she joined Marine Unit 9, an assignment which made her the first-due marine firefighting asset at the heavily trafficked [[The Narrows|Narrows]] of lower New York Harbor and throughout the tight confines of both the [[Arthur Kill]] and [[Kill van Kull]]. With both waterways already heavily utilized by marine traffic calling ports on the [[Chemical Coast]], the rise of both the [[Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal]] and [[Howland Hook Marine Terminal]] saw an increasing number of [[container ships]] transiting the same waters. These conditions led to several major vessel collisions and shoreside fires during her tenure in Staten Island, but the 1973 collision of ''[[Esso Brussels|SS Esso Brussels]]'' and [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']] would prove to be the largest fires she would ever fight single-handedly. For her and her crews' part in the response, firefighting and rescue of 31 surviving crewmen from the burning [[Sea Witch (container ship)|SS ''Sea Witch'']], the ''Fire Fighter'' was named a [[Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation|Gallant Ship]]<ref>{{cite book|last=Kimmerly|first=history from 1865-1999 written by Paul Hashagen ; updated history from 2000-2002 compiled by Janet Kimmerly; book edited by Janet|title=Fire Department, City of New York|year=2002|publisher=Turner Pub. Co.|location=Paducah, Ky.|isbn=9781563118326|page=142|edition=Rev.}}</ref> and her crew received the American Merchant Marine Seamanship Trophy. To date, ''Fire Fighter'' remains the only fireboat to have received this award.


The boat, as ''Firefighter'', was declared a U.S. [[National Historic Landmark]] in 1989.<ref name="nhlsum">{{cite web|url=http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=2075&ResourceType=Structure
The boat, as ''Firefighter'', was declared a U.S. [[National Historic Landmark]] in 1989.<ref name="nhlsum">{{cite web|url=http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=2075&ResourceType=Structure|title=Firefighter (Fireboat)|date=2007-09-14|work=National Historic Landmark summary listing|publisher=National Park Service|access-date=2007-09-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605234414/http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=2075&ResourceType=Structure|archive-date=2011-06-05|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="nrhpinv">{{Cite web|title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Firefighter|url={{NHLS url|id=89001447}} |format=pdf|date=January 20, 1989|publisher=National Park Service}} and {{NHLS url|id=89001447|title=''Accompanying 8 photos from 1939, 1942, and 1988''|photos=y}}&nbsp;{{small|(1.26&nbsp;MB)}}</ref>
|title=Firefighter (Fireboat)|date=2007-09-14|work=National Historic Landmark summary listing|publisher=National Park Service}}</ref><ref name="nrhpinv">{{Cite journal|title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Firefighter|url={{NHLS url|id=89001447}} |format=pdf|author=James P. Delgado|date=January 20, 1989|publisher=National Park Service}} and {{NHLS url|id=89001447|title=''Accompanying 8 photos from 1939, 1942, and 1988''|photos=y}}&nbsp;{{small|(1.26&nbsp;MB)}}</ref>


On [[September 11, 2001]], ''Fire Fighter'' along with the rest of the FDNY Marine Units, responded to the terrorist attack on the [[World Trade Center (1973–2001)|World Trade Center]] and took up a station at the foot of Albany Street in [[Battery Park City]] and began pumping at her maximum capacity to supply water to landside units fighting fires in the still-standing towers. Following the collapse of both buildings and resultant failure of the majority of the water mains serving lower Manhattan, ''Fire Fighter'' and the rest of the FDNY Marine Units became the sole source of water for firefighting efforts at [[Rescue and recovery effort after the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center|Ground Zero]], a duty which ''Fire Fighter'' maintained for a period of three weeks until sufficient repairs were completed on landside water mains to permit her release from what had become her longest emergency response call. Following a shipyard period in 2003 to rebuild her worn-out engines the ''Fire Fighter'' resumed her post and continued to respond to marine emergencies, including a gasoline barge explosion in Port Mobile, Staten Island in February 2003 and to the [[US Airways Flight 1549|Crash of US Airways Flight 1549]] on the [[Hudson River]] in 2009.
On [[September 11, 2001]], ''Fire Fighter'', along with the rest of the FDNY Marine Units, responded to the terrorist attack on the [[World Trade Center (1973–2001)|World Trade Center]] and took up a station at the foot of Albany Street in [[Battery Park City]] and began pumping at her maximum capacity to supply water to landside units fighting fires in the still-standing towers. Following the collapse of both buildings and resultant failure of the majority of the water mains serving lower Manhattan, ''Fire Fighter'' and the rest of the FDNY Marine Units became the sole source of water for firefighting efforts at [[Rescue and recovery effort after the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center|Ground Zero]], a duty which ''Fire Fighter'' maintained for a period of three weeks until sufficient repairs were completed on landside water mains to permit her release from what had become her longest emergency response call. Following a shipyard period in 2003 to rebuild her worn-out engines, the ''Fire Fighter'' resumed her post and continued to respond to marine emergencies, including a gasoline barge explosion in Port Mobil, Staten Island, in February 2003, and to the ditching of [[US Airways Flight 1549]] on the [[Hudson River]] in 2009.


Replaced in frontline service by the fireboat ''[[Fire Fighter II]]''.<ref>[http://nyfd.com/calderoneA/lerch17.html NYFD.com]</ref> in 2010 at Marine Unit 9, the ''Fire Fighter'' was placed into reserve status at the former [[Brooklyn Navy Yard]] where she remained in FDNY custody until October 15, 2012. Transferred on that date to the ownership of non-profit Fireboat Fire Fighter Museum, the ''Fire Fighter'' is now operated by an all-volunteer group dedicated to preserving the historic fireboat in running condition as a [[museum ship]], befitting her over 70 years of service to the people and mariners of [[New York City]] and [[New York Harbor]].
Replaced in frontline service by the fireboat ''[[Fire Fighter II]]'',<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://nyfd.com/calderoneA/lerch17.html|title=Apparatus updates by Jack Lerch|website=nyfd.com}}</ref> in 2010 at Marine Unit 9, ''Fire Fighter'' was placed into reserve status at the former [[Brooklyn Navy Yard]] where she remained in FDNY custody until October 15, 2012. Transferred on that date to the ownership of the non-profit Fireboat Fire Fighter Museum, ''Fire Fighter'' is now operated by an all-volunteer group dedicated to preserving the historic fireboat in running condition as a [[museum ship]], befitting her over 70 years of service to the people and mariners of [[New York City]] and [[New York Harbor]].


==As a museum ship==
==As a museum ship==
Under the stewardship of the Museum, the ''Fire Fighter'' found a home in [[Greenport, Suffolk County, New York|Greenport, New York]] on Long Island's North Fork and relocated to the village from the [[Brooklyn Navy Yard]] in February 2013. Eventually shifting to the village's commercial pier in accordance with their contractual agreement with the village, the museum has continued to grow in popularity and was granted [[501c3]] status by the [[IRS]] in October 2013 as a tax-exempt non-profit organization. The Museum was awarded a National Park Service Maritime Heritage Grant in 2014 to pursue hull upkeep and preventative maintenance shipyard work.<ref>http://www.nps.gov/maritime/grants/recipients.htm#NY</ref>
Under the stewardship of the museum, ''Fire Fighter'' found a home in [[Greenport, Suffolk County, New York|Greenport, New York]], on Long Island's North Fork and relocated to the village from the [[Brooklyn Navy Yard]] in February 2013. Eventually shifting to the village's commercial pier in accordance with their contractual agreement with the village, the museum has continued to grow in popularity and was granted [[501(c)(3)]] status by the [[IRS]] in October 2013 as a tax-exempt non-profit organization. The museum was awarded a National Park Service Maritime Heritage Grant in 2014 to pursue hull upkeep and preventative maintenance shipyard work.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nps.gov/maritime/grants/recipients.htm|title=Grant Recipients &#124; Maritime Heritage Program|website=www.nps.gov}}</ref>


Gathering matching funds for the National Park Service grant lasted through December 2016,<ref name=SuffolkTimes/> when the ''Fire Fighter'' reported to Goodison Shipyard in [[Kingston, Rhode Island]] for four months of shipyard work, overhaul and hull inspection.<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-04-03/> Completed in April 2017, ''Fire Fighter'' returned to [[Greenport, Suffolk County, New York|Greenport, New York]] in her as-built, late 1930 FDNY color scheme, with a black hull, white topsides and buff smokestack, and with all topside brass returned to its bare metal appearance.<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-06-09/>
Gathering matching funds for the National Park Service grant lasted through December 2016,<ref name=SuffolkTimes/> when ''Fire Fighter'' reported to Goodison Shipyard in [[Kingston, Rhode Island]], for four months of shipyard work, overhaul and hull inspection.<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-04-03/> Completed in April 2017, ''Fire Fighter'' returned to [[Greenport, Suffolk County, New York|Greenport, New York]], in her as-built, late 1930 FDNY color scheme, with a black hull, white topsides and buff smokestack, and with all topside brass returned to its bare metal appearance.<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-06-09/> As of the summer of 2021, the vessel is currently on exhibit at the [[Mystic Seaport|Mystic Seaport Museum]] in Mystic, CT.<ref>{{cite web |title=Fire Fighter |url=https://www.mysticseaport.org/explore/vessels/fire-fighter/ |website=Mystic Seaport Museum |access-date=13 August 2021}}</ref>


==Photo gallery==
==Photo gallery==
<gallery mode=packed>
{{multiple image

| align = center
File:Fireboat Firefighter Engine Room.jpg|Fire Fighter's engineering space containing her four DeLaval 5,000gpm fire pumps, twin 16-cylinder 1500HP main engines and electric propulsion motors
| direction = horizontal
File:Fireboat Firefighter - One of Fireboat Firefighter 's smaller 2,000gpm monitors. -.JPG|One of Fire Fighter's smaller 2,000gpm monitors, located on her fore Portside top deck
| header =
File:Fireboat Firefighter 's water monitors during September, 2014 Greenport Water Display.jpg|Fire Fighter 's water monitors in operation
| header_align = left/right/center
File:Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room Telegraph.JPG|Fire Fighter's original 1938 engine order telegraph
| header_background =
File:Pyrometer from Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room.jpg|[[Pyrometer]] from Fire Fighter's Engine Room
| footer
File:Builder's Plate from FDNY Fireboat Firefighter.jpg|Fire Fighter's Builder's Plate
| footer_align = left/right/center
File:One of four two-stage centrifugal DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps on Fireboat Firefighter.jpg|One of four 5,000gpm two-stage centrifugal DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps.
| footer_background =
File:Nameplate for one of Fireboat Firefighter 's 600V DC Marine Motors.jpg|Builder's plate for one Fire Fighter's Westinghouse Electric motors
| width =
| image1 = Fireboat Firefighter Engine Room.jpg
File:Engineer's console in Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room, used to control almost the entirety of the ship..jpg|Chief Marine Engineer's control console
File:Port engine of Fireboat Firefighter 's installed power system, she has Twin V16 1500HP Winton Diesel Engines of which power a diesel-electric system.jpg|Port side 16-cylinder GM/Winton Diesel Engine
| width1 = 110
File:Big Bertha & the bow of the Firefighter.jpg
| caption1 = Fire Fighter's engineering space containing her four DeLaval 5,000gpm fire pumps, twin 16-cylinder 1500HP main engines and electric propulsion motors.
| image2 = Fireboat Firefighter - One of Fireboat Firefighter 's smaller 2,000gpm monitors. -.JPG
File:FDNY Fireboat Firefighter at shipyard in primer.jpg
File:FDNY Fireboat Firefighter's National Landmark Plaque.jpg
| width2 = 110
File:Fireboat Firefighter.jpg
| caption2 = One of Fire Fighter's smaller 2,000gpm monitors, located on her fore Portside top deck.
| image3 = Fireboat Firefighter 's water monitors during September, 2014 Greenport Water Display.jpg
File:FDNY Fireboat Firefighter during 2016-2017 shipyard work. .jpg
</gallery>
| width3 = 110
| caption3 = Fire Fighter 's water monitors in operation
| image4 = Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room Telegraph.JPG
| width4 = 110
| caption4 = Fire Fighter's original 1938 engine order telegraph.
| image5 = Pyrometer from Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room.jpg
| width5 = 110
| caption5 = [[Pyrometer]] from Fire Fighter's Engine Room
| image6 = Builder's Plate from FDNY Fireboat Firefighter.jpg
| width6 = 110
| caption6 = Fire Fighter's Builder's Plate
| image7 = One of four two-stage centrifugal DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps on Fireboat Firefighter.jpg
| width7 = 110
| caption7 = One of four 5,000gpm two-stage centrifugal DeLaval Marine Fire Pumps.
| image8 = Nameplate for one of Fireboat Firefighter 's 600V DC Marine Motors.jpg
| width8 = 110
| caption8 = Builder's plate for one Fire Fighter's Westinghouse Electric motors.
| image9 = Engineer's console in Fireboat Firefighter 's Engine Room, used to control almost the entirety of the ship..jpg
| width9 = 110
| caption9 = Chief Marine Engineer's control console.
| image10 = Port engine of Fireboat Firefighter 's installed power system, she has Twin V16 1500HP Winton Diesel Engines of which power a diesel-electric system.jpg
| width10 = 110
| caption10 = Port side 16-cylinder GM/Winton Diesel Engine.
}}
{{Clear}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|refs=
{{Reflist|refs=
<ref name=nytimes1974-12-08>
{{cite news
| url = https://www.nytimes.com/1974/12/08/archives/n-y-fireboats-help-state-vessel-cost-924000-no-payments-offered.html
| title = N. Y Fireboats Help State
| work = [[The New York Times]]
| author = Longin W. Marzecki
| date = 1974-12-08
| page = 130
| location = [[Carteret, New Jersey]]
| access-date = 2020-07-15
| quote = Marine Fire Company No. 9, which operates the largest fireboat in the world, the Firefighter, is usually the first unit on the scene of a Jersey waterfront blaze; it has its headquarters adjacent to the Staten Island‐Manhattan ferry slips in St. George.
}}
</ref>

<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-06-09>
<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-06-09>
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url = http://www.eastendbeacon.com/2017/06/09/fire-fighter-returns-to-greenport/
| url = http://www.eastendbeacon.com/2017/06/09/fire-fighter-returns-to-greenport/
| title = Fire Fighter Returns to Greenport
| title = Fire Fighter Returns to Greenport
| publisher = [[East End Beacon]]
| publisher = [[East End Beacon]]
| author = Beth Young
| author = Beth Young
| date = 2017-06-09
| date = 2017-06-09
| access-date = 2017-06-10
| page =
| quote = In the dead of the night overnight June 8, the FDNY Fireboat Fire Fighter returned to Greenport, after spending the winter getting an overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
| location =
| archiveurl =
| archivedate =
| accessdate = 2017-06-10
| deadurl = No
| quote = In the dead of the night overnight June 8, the FDNY Fireboat Fire Fighter returned to Greenport, after spending the winter getting an overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
}}
}}
</ref>
</ref>


<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-04-03>
<ref name=EastEndBeacon2017-04-03>
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url = http://www.eastendbeacon.com/2017/04/03/americas-fireboat-gets-a-makeover/
| url = http://www.eastendbeacon.com/2017/04/03/americas-fireboat-gets-a-makeover/
| title = America’s Fireboat Gets a Makeover
| title = America's Fireboat Gets a Makeover
| publisher = [[East End Beacon]]
| publisher = [[East End Beacon]]
| author = Beth Young
| author = Beth Young
| date = 2017-04-03
| date = 2017-04-03
| access-date = 2017-04-04
| page =
| quote = But by the time you read this, Fire Fighter will soon be on its way back to its home berth with a fresh new coat of paint, after a winter spent undergoing a major overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
| location =
| archiveurl =
| archivedate =
| accessdate = 2017-04-04
| deadurl = No
| quote = But by the time you read this, Fire Fighter will soon be on its way back to its home berth with a fresh new coat of paint, after a winter spent undergoing a major overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
}}
}}
</ref>
</ref>


<ref name=SuffolkTimes>
<ref name=SuffolkTimes>
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url = https://suffolktimes.timesreview.com/2016/12/72275/fireboat-in-greenport-receives-loan-to-get-project-moving/
| url = https://suffolktimes.timesreview.com/2016/12/72275/fireboat-in-greenport-receives-loan-to-get-project-moving/
| title = Loan allows Fire Fighter to relocate to shipyard for possible repairs
| title = Loan allows Fire Fighter to relocate to shipyard for possible repairs
| publisher = [[Suffolk Times]]
| publisher = [[Suffolk Times]]
| author = Krysten Massa
| author = Krysten Massa
| date = 2016-12-16
| date = 2016-12-16
| access-date = 2016-12-17
| page =
| quote = The vessel’s revitalization has been at a standstill because the museum needed to move the Fire Fighter to a shipyard to have the hull surveyed for possible repairs. Mr. Ritchie called this process the first phase and the “most crucial” part of the project.
| location =
| archiveurl =
| archivedate =
| accessdate = 2016-12-17
| deadurl = No
| quote = The vessel’s revitalization has been at a standstill because the museum needed to move the Fire Fighter to a shipyard to have the hull surveyed for possible repairs. Mr. Ritchie called this process the first phase and the “most crucial” part of the project.
}}
}}
</ref>
</ref>
Line 243: Line 167:
== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commons category|Fire Fighter (ship, 1938)}}
{{Commons category|Fire Fighter (ship, 1938)}}
* [http://www.americasfireboat.org/ Museum Website]
* [http://www.americasfireboat.org/ Museum Website] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160629152345/http://www.americasfireboat.org/ |date=June 29, 2016 }}
* [http://www.greenportvillage.com/fireboat-fire-fighter/ Official Greenport Village Website]
* [http://www.greenportvillage.com/fireboat-fire-fighter/ Official Greenport Village Website]
* [http://nyfd.com/marine/Marine_9.html Marine 9]
* [http://nyfd.com/marine/Marine_9.html Marine 9]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y69d44jQQ1o "Fire Fighter" Youtube video of 2003 rechristening and operation on the water]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y69d44jQQ1o "Fire Fighter" Youtube video of 2003 rechristening and operation on the water]
* [http://oldtacomamarine.com/other/firefighter.html Information about ''Fire Fighter's'' Winton diesel engines on Old Tacoma Marine Inc.]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081119142937/http://oldtacomamarine.com/other/firefighter.html Information about ''Fire Fighter's'' Winton diesel engines on Old Tacoma Marine Inc.]
{{New York City Fire Department}}
{{New York City Fire Department}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in New York}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in New York}}


[[Category:Ships on the National Register of Historic Places in New York City]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Suffolk County, New York]]
[[Category:National Historic Landmarks in Manhattan]]
[[Category:Southold, New York]]
[[Category:Ships on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)]]
[[Category:National Historic Landmarks in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Fireboats of New York City]]
[[Category:Fireboats of New York City]]
[[Category:1938 ships]]
[[Category:1938 ships]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Museum ships in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Museum ships in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Ships built in Staten Island]]

Latest revision as of 06:11, 1 September 2024

Fireboat Fire Fighter
History
New York City Fire Department
NameFire Fighter
OperatorNew York City Fire Department
BuilderUnited Shipyards
Laid down1937
LaunchedAugust 26, 1938
ChristenedAugust 26, 1938
CommissionedNovember 16, 1938
DecommissionedJuly 17, 2010
HomeportNew York City
Nickname(s)The Fighter
Honors and
awards
1974 Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation
FateMuseum Ship
General characteristics
Tonnage220.44 net
Length134 ft (41 m)
Beam32 ft (9.8 m)
Height25 ft (7.6 m)
Draft9 ft (2.7 m)
Installed powerTwin 1500 hp, 16-cylinder, 3968 CID General Motors Winton diesel engines
PropulsionTwin Westinghouse 1000 hp Electric Propulsion Motors
Speed14 knots (16 mph)
Capacity20,000gpm
Crew7-11
Fire Fighter (fireboat)
Fire Fighter (fireboat) is located in Long Island
Fire Fighter (fireboat)
Location on Long Island
Fire Fighter (fireboat) is located in New York
Fire Fighter (fireboat)
Location in New York
Fire Fighter (fireboat) is located in the United States
Fire Fighter (fireboat)
Location in United States
StandortGreenport, Suffolk County, New York
Built1938
Built byUnited Shipyards
ArchitectWilliam Francis Gibbs
NRHP reference No.89001447
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJune 30, 1989[1][2]
Designated NHLJune 30, 1989[3]
Merchant Marine Gallant Ship Citation
Awarded forActions on May 30th, 1973 following the collision of the SS Esso Brussels and SS Sea Witch and the rescue of 31 trapped crew from life-threatening fire aboard the SS Sea Witch.
Presented byUnited States Maritime Administration

Fire Fighter is a fireboat which served the New York City Fire Department from 1938 through 2010, serving with Marine Companies 1, 8 and 9 during her career. The most powerful diesel-electric fireboat in terms of pumping capacity when built in 1938, Fire Fighter fought more than 50 major fires during her career, including fires aboard the SS Normandie in 1942 and the SS El Estero in 1943, the 1973 collision of the Esso Brussels and SS Sea Witch, and the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.[4]

Service history

[edit]

Authorized for construction in early 1937 by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia based on designs submitted by noted naval architect William Francis Gibbs and his firm Gibbs & Cox, Fire Fighter was laid down at United Shipyards as Hull #856 and was christened and launched on August 28, 1938, by Eleanor Grace Flanagan. After fitting out and sea trials, Fire Fighter officially entered service with the New York City Fire Department at 9:00 a.m. on November 16, 1938, with Engine 57 at Pier 1 at the Battery, which would later be organized as Marine Unit 1. Serving from this post through the mid-1960s, Fire Fighter would respond to two of her most famous actions; the fire and capsizing of the SS Normandie in 1942 and the fire aboard the ammunition-laden SS El Estero in 1943, among dozens of other vessel and pier fires across New York Harbor.

Shifting with the majority of commercial steamship line freight operations from Manhattan to the Brooklyn waterfront, Fire Fighter served with Marine Unit 8 and Engine 223 at the 37th Street Pier through 1967 before shifting once again to the Homeport Pier in Stapleton where she joined Marine Unit 9, an assignment which made her the first-due marine firefighting asset at the heavily trafficked Narrows of New York Harbor and throughout the tight confines of both the Arthur Kill and Kill van Kull. With both waterways already heavily utilized by marine traffic calling at ports on the Chemical Coast, the rise of both the Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal and Howland Hook Marine Terminal saw an increasing number of container ships transiting the same waters. These conditions led to several major vessel collisions and shoreside fires during her tenure in Staten Island, but the 1973 collision of SS Esso Brussels and SS Sea Witch would prove to be the largest fires she would ever fight single-handedly. For her and her crew's part in the response, firefighting and rescue of 31 surviving crewmen from the burning SS Sea Witch, the Fire Fighter was named a Gallant Ship[5] and her crew received the American Merchant Marine Seamanship Trophy. To date, Fire Fighter remains the only fireboat to have received this award.

A 1974 article in The New York Times described how fires in New Jersey frequently resulted in requests to the FDNY commissioner for the loan of Fire Fighter.[6] Once authorized it would take Fire Fighter approximately 45 minutes to arrive at waterfront communities such as Carteret.

The boat, as Firefighter, was declared a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1989.[3][4]

On September 11, 2001, Fire Fighter, along with the rest of the FDNY Marine Units, responded to the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center and took up a station at the foot of Albany Street in Battery Park City and began pumping at her maximum capacity to supply water to landside units fighting fires in the still-standing towers. Following the collapse of both buildings and resultant failure of the majority of the water mains serving lower Manhattan, Fire Fighter and the rest of the FDNY Marine Units became the sole source of water for firefighting efforts at Ground Zero, a duty which Fire Fighter maintained for a period of three weeks until sufficient repairs were completed on landside water mains to permit her release from what had become her longest emergency response call. Following a shipyard period in 2003 to rebuild her worn-out engines, the Fire Fighter resumed her post and continued to respond to marine emergencies, including a gasoline barge explosion in Port Mobil, Staten Island, in February 2003, and to the ditching of US Airways Flight 1549 on the Hudson River in 2009.

Replaced in frontline service by the fireboat Fire Fighter II,[7] in 2010 at Marine Unit 9, Fire Fighter was placed into reserve status at the former Brooklyn Navy Yard where she remained in FDNY custody until October 15, 2012. Transferred on that date to the ownership of the non-profit Fireboat Fire Fighter Museum, Fire Fighter is now operated by an all-volunteer group dedicated to preserving the historic fireboat in running condition as a museum ship, befitting her over 70 years of service to the people and mariners of New York City and New York Harbor.

As a museum ship

[edit]

Under the stewardship of the museum, Fire Fighter found a home in Greenport, New York, on Long Island's North Fork and relocated to the village from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in February 2013. Eventually shifting to the village's commercial pier in accordance with their contractual agreement with the village, the museum has continued to grow in popularity and was granted 501(c)(3) status by the IRS in October 2013 as a tax-exempt non-profit organization. The museum was awarded a National Park Service Maritime Heritage Grant in 2014 to pursue hull upkeep and preventative maintenance shipyard work.[8]

Gathering matching funds for the National Park Service grant lasted through December 2016,[9] when Fire Fighter reported to Goodison Shipyard in Kingston, Rhode Island, for four months of shipyard work, overhaul and hull inspection.[10] Completed in April 2017, Fire Fighter returned to Greenport, New York, in her as-built, late 1930 FDNY color scheme, with a black hull, white topsides and buff smokestack, and with all topside brass returned to its bare metal appearance.[11] As of the summer of 2021, the vessel is currently on exhibit at the Mystic Seaport Museum in Mystic, CT.[12]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: FIREFIGHTER". National Park Service. Retrieved July 14, 2020. With accompanying pictures
  3. ^ a b "Firefighter (Fireboat)". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. September 14, 2007. Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved September 15, 2007.
  4. ^ a b "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Firefighter" (pdf). National Park Service. January 20, 1989. and Accompanying 8 photos from 1939, 1942, and 1988 (1.26 MB)
  5. ^ Hashagen, Paul; Kimmerly, Janet (2002). Fire Department City of New York: The Bravest; An Illustrated History 1865-2002 (Rev. ed.). Paducah, Ky.: Turner Pub. Co. p. 142. ISBN 9781563118326.
  6. ^ Longin W. Marzecki (December 8, 1974). "N. Y Fireboats Help State". The New York Times. Carteret, New Jersey. p. 130. Retrieved July 15, 2020. Marine Fire Company No. 9, which operates the largest fireboat in the world, the Firefighter, is usually the first unit on the scene of a Jersey waterfront blaze; it has its headquarters adjacent to the Staten Island‐Manhattan ferry slips in St. George.
  7. ^ "Apparatus updates by Jack Lerch". nyfd.com.
  8. ^ "Grant Recipients | Maritime Heritage Program". www.nps.gov.
  9. ^ Krysten Massa (December 16, 2016). "Loan allows Fire Fighter to relocate to shipyard for possible repairs". Suffolk Times. Retrieved December 17, 2016. The vessel's revitalization has been at a standstill because the museum needed to move the Fire Fighter to a shipyard to have the hull surveyed for possible repairs. Mr. Ritchie called this process the first phase and the "most crucial" part of the project.
  10. ^ Beth Young (April 3, 2017). "America's Fireboat Gets a Makeover". East End Beacon. Retrieved April 4, 2017. But by the time you read this, Fire Fighter will soon be on its way back to its home berth with a fresh new coat of paint, after a winter spent undergoing a major overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
  11. ^ Beth Young (June 9, 2017). "Fire Fighter Returns to Greenport". East End Beacon. Retrieved June 10, 2017. In the dead of the night overnight June 8, the FDNY Fireboat Fire Fighter returned to Greenport, after spending the winter getting an overhaul at Goodison Shipyards in Rhode Island.
  12. ^ "Fire Fighter". Mystic Seaport Museum. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
[edit]