This is from the Daily Herald:
Fire department celebrates 100 years in Lombard
The Lombard Fire Department has come a long way — and extinguished a lot of fires — since it was formed in 1913.
Faces from the past helped current employees celebrate their history during a celebration Jan. 3, exactly 100 years after the department held its first meeting.
The first piece of fire equipment, a two-wheeled hose reel firefighters pulled themselves, has been replaced many times over by more modern vehicles, including a horse-drawn model purchased in 1913 with $10 assessed from each of the fire department’s 16 original members.
Fire Chief Paul DiRienzo, who rose to the department’s top spot in September 2012, said the centennial celebration was complete with historical fire helmets, badges and photos, and the opening of a 25-year-old time capsule buried when Station 1 was built.
“We had many artifacts to put on display that people donated,” DiRienzo said.
Former chiefs Jack Jones, who served from 1963-79, and Mike Torrence, who led the department from 2010 to January 2012, were among those in attendance.
DiRienzo said Jones discussed the “old days” when “a siren mounted on top of the fire station would notify members initially that something was going on.”
As the department begins its next 100 years, the contents of the time capsule will be reburied so they can age even further, and the Lombard Historical Societywill display an exhibit of fire department artifacts throughout the year.
thanks Ron
#1 by Mike Ringa on January 19, 2013 - 12:52 PM
Bill,
Thanks for providing Lombard with the historical pictures for the training room. They are a much needed addition to the training room and they do a great job displaying some of Lombard’s proud history.
#2 by Keith Grzadziel on January 16, 2013 - 9:44 PM
Can anyone submit/post their current Lombard pics, please,??
#3 by Bill Friedrich on January 16, 2013 - 6:41 PM
I am proud to say I am serving on the Lombard FD 100th Anniversary Committee. My older apparatus photo gallery is hanging on the wall of the soon to be dedicated Jerry Tonne Memorial training room. Photographing apparatus in the suburbs 35 years ago is paying off now for local fire departments.