Posts Tagged Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Three generations of CFD FFs with the same name

 

The following note was sent to Firegeezer.com by Thomas Parquette of Branson, Mo., and is printed here with permission from both.

Hi ‘Geezer’,
I thought you may find this interesting. The picture was taken sometime around 1885 and is of Eng. Co. 11 of the Chicago Fire Department. The paper it ran in 40 years later in 1925  is an unknown fire publication.

The second firefighter from left is George Geis, my great grandfather. He was killed in the line of duty about 1902 in a wall collapse. His father before him, also George Geis, was one of the first CFD firefighters and was killed in the Chicago Fire in the 1870’s.

The man in the photo’s son, also George Geis, my grandfather, was also a firefighter in Chicago and saw the transition from horse to motive power. He was part of the final call of Buck, Beauty & Dan, the last horse drawn fire team in Chicago. ( I also have a photo of that)  He was critically injured in the line of duty when a drunk driver t-boned the hook and ladder upon which he was the tiller driver. He died of those injuries in the early 1930’s and never received a dime in compensation from Chicago, as the union was just forming and the protections were barely starting at that time.

All three of these gentlemen were career firefighters. All of the same name excepting their middle initial. All killed in the line of duty or because of it. All CFD. My uncle, Stephen Geis, went on to become Chief of Downers Grove Illinois in the 1950s and his son, my cousin, is a full timer as well.

I thought you may find it of interest. I must thank the Fire Museum of Chicago for their help with the exhaustive research of the history mentioned. This photo is sourced from their archives. Keep up the great work. Your coverage is terrific and your writing is not only inviting but amusing.

Thomas Parquette
Branson, Missouri

 

Chicago Fire Department photo from 1885

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Historical programs offered by the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Fire Museum Program Reviews 1946 LaSalle Hotel Fire
And Crib Fire that Trapped Workers in Offshore Inferno in 1909
Two Chicago fires that together took over 100 lives in the first half of the 20th Century will be revisited in a program presented by the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago on Saturday, June 11, at the Chicago Quinn Fire Academy, 558 W. DeKoven St.
  • First on the 10 a.m. program will be a presentation by a maritime historian on a fire that killed 50 workmen trapped on the Dunne water intake crib off 68thStreet in Lake Michigan on a freezing winter night in 1909.
  • The other tragedy to be reviewed is Chicago’s most disastrous hotel fire, a fast-spreading early morning blaze that took 61 lives at the LaSalle Hotel @ LaSalle and Madison Streets, on June 5, 1946, and led to strengthened fire safety laws.

Anyone interested in Chicago history and the fire service is welcome to attend.  The Fire Museum of Greater Chicago, at 5218 S. Western, will itself be open to the public from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on the following Saturdays through the rest of 2011: June 25, July 30, Aug. 27, Sept. 24, Oct. 29 and Nov. 26.

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Fire museum of Greater Chicago opens!

On Saturday, January 29, The Fire Museum of Greater Chicago, located at 5218 S Western Ave., officially opened. The museum is housed at a firehouse built in 1916 for Chicago Fire Department Engine Co. 123. They occupied this firehouse from 1916 through 1973.  An estimated 60-70 people visited on opening day. There was a preview of the museum that was offered to the public last year.

The exhibits include hand-drawn, horse-drawn, and early motorized apparatus to the 20th Century.  The museum artifacts not only chronicle Chicago, but many of the suburban departments that make up the Chicagoland area. One of the many highlights on display is a 1923 Ahrens-Fox 750-GPM engine that was first assigned to Engine Co. 40 before being reassigned to Engine Co. 98. It was nearly destroyed in 1934 when Engine 98 responded to the Stockyards and was caught in the fire.  The fire department shops rebuilt the engine and gave it back to 98. It’s last assignment was to Engine Co. 70.

The museum will be open the last Saturday of every month from 10am – 2pm. Please come out and enjoy the many displays and the great history that this museum has to offer.

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Denis McGuire, Jr. submitted images from the opening

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Another post on Firegeezer scoops us HERE with an announcement of an upcoming program

… in honor of those who were lost that dark day 100 years ago on the morning of December 22, 1910, at the Nelson Morris cold storage warehouse in the Union Stock Yards, the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago will present an illustrated program chronicling the event at the Chicago Fire Academy on Saturday, October 16, 2010 @ 10:AM.

One might have thought that our own contributors on the board of the museum would have provided us with this information …

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago Fundraiser Reminder!

Don’t forget that Sunday is the date for the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago Fundraiser!

Greater Chicago Fire Museum

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago Fundraiser

Greater Chicago Fire Museum

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

On Saturday, the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago opened it’s doors to allow a preview of the work that has been done to date. The museum is not yet open nor is it finished but a tremendous amount of effort has taken place. There were more than 70 visitors who had the opportunity to look at an Ahrens Fox pumper, several static displays including uniforms, buckets, helmets, scale models, an old fire alarm board, artwork and photographs. The building itself looks great and the red bay doors really dress up the exterior.

The 5-11 Club Canteen offered refreshments and there were homemade pastries for snacking. Steve Redick was on-hand with a camera and has offered a few photos.

Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

The exterior of the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago, which was once the quarters of Engine 123. Photo by Steve Redick

Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Closeup of the exterior stonework on the building which houses the Fire Museum of Greater Chicago. Steve Redick photo

Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Historical painting which is now part of the museum collection. Photo by Stve Redick

Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

A vintage status map from the Englewood Alarm Office. Photo by Steve Redick

Fire Museum of Greater Chicago

Steve Redick posing with the amplifier panel which he used while working at the Englewood Alarm Office . Photo by Larry Shapiro

Englewood FIre Alarm Office

Steve Redick circa 1980 with the then state-of-the-art amplifier panel at the Main Fire Englewood Alarm Office. Photo Courtesy of Steve Redick

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Fire Museum of Greater Chicago opens to the public

On Saturday, May 1st, 2010 the FIre Museum of Greater Chicago will open to the public. Located at 5218-20 South Western Avenue, formerly the home of Engine 123 until 1974, the museum has been the dream of a group dedicated to the preservation of the traditions and history of the fire service. You can read about the long journey HERE which the group had to take to reach this point. Chicago’s channel 7, an ABC affiliate, did a feature on the opening which can be viewed HERE.

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