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Fire Patrol: 84 West Third Street  created by  niznoz

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Fire Patrol: 84 West Third Street

created by  niznoz  

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fire patrol

The Fire Patrol is not the FDNY, although their jobs are just as dangerous. They hark back to a time when each insurance company had their own firefighters. This Patrol house dates from 1907.

From The Wall Street Journal  Mar 16, 1987:

NEW YORK—Garbed in black fire-resistant coats and heavy red helmets, sirens on their red trucks wailing, three crews from the New York Fire Patrol race to an early-morning fire in an office building. They aren’t firefighters. Their trucks carry no hoses or other equipment for dousing flames.

Instead, the fire patrolmen troop into the burning building and set about protecting the interests of their private-sector employers: insurance companies that write fire policies. Working mainly on the two floors directly below the firemen and the fire, the patrolmen deploy heavy canvas tarpaulins and electric pumps to minimize water and smoke damage—and thus cut insurance claims.

Almost unknown to city residents, the New York Fire Patrol has been rushing to fires here since the 1830s. It traces its roots back even further, to 1803, when merchants organized the Mutual Assistance Bag Co. to haul out goods from one another’s premises (in bags) during fires. The patrol, in fact, predates the city’s paid fire department.

Once there were fire patrols in more than 20 American cities. But for 25 years, since closings in Chicago, Philadelphia and Baltimore, New York’s has been the only one. London insurers ended a similar operation in 1983.

Patrol House 2, shown above, in Greenwich Village, is located opposite the site of a house where Edgar Allen Poe used to live. It is, apparently, haunted.

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