The Fire Department Question
The Board of the City Fire Department held a meeting on Tuesday
evening, to protest against the movement now in progress at Albany for the
abolition of the existing organization, and the substitution of a small paid
department. The speakers were very energetic in their defence of the present
system, and declared it to be their intention to contest the passage of the
bill now before the Legislature to the last. What strikes us as singular about
all this is, that the firemen should be so dreadfully reluctant to go out, when
nobody wants them. They are all volunteers, the services they render to the
public are of a very trying and arduous nature, and they receive no
compensation. The sole basis of their organization is in fact the desire of the
public for their assistance. They have no divine right to extinguish fires any
more than anybody else. Those who live in houses and are liable to be burnt up,
are the only persons who have the right to decide what should be the nature of
the measures taken for their protection. It is neither very dignified nor very
civil, therefore, for the Fire Department to persist in forcing their good
offices on people who have, as distinctly as good manners and gratitude for
past favors will permit, signified their desire to be rid of them.
For there is hardly any difference of opinion among the citizens
and insurance companies on this point. The experience of other cities proves
conclusively that paid firemen do their work better than volunteers, that fewer
fires occur under their management, that they cost less, and that they do no
damage to the public morals. And all classes of the community, except the
"roughs," are shocked and disgusted by the horrible scenes of
disorder attendant on every fire in New-York-the shrieking, yelling, hallooing,
confusion, absence of all discipline and subordination, or even show of
discipline which mark every "gathering of the companies." Such scenes
are a disgrace to any civilized city, and would not be permitted for one hour
in any other city the size of ours.
The board has drawn up an ordinance, which was read at the
meeting, containing an excellent body of rules, which, if they were carried
out, would, no doubt, go far to work a reform in the department. But the trouble
is that they will not be carried out, and the public knows that they will not,
and so does the board. If putting rules down on paper was all that was
necessary to make things go well, every department of our Government would run
like clock-work.
There is nothing easier than to make rules. It is not for want of
ability in this direction that we find fault with the department. It is because
we are satisfied, that as long as the members and officers are appointed as at
present, and consist of the same classes as the present, discipline, order and
economy will be impossible, no matter what the regulations may be. Regulations
have to be enforced by such officers as can be obeyed by the men in the
position of those who now fill the companies. Some of the more important
sections of the ordinance open the phraseÑ"it shall be the duty,"
which sounds very well. But it is now "the duty" of the companies to
do a great many good thing; but unfortunately they don't do their duty. If they
did, there would be no ground for the complaints made of them before the
Legislature. What the world wants now-a-days is not the definition of
"duty" in any walk of life. Men's duties are all pretty well known.
The great desideratum of the age is means of making people do their duty. The
best way of making firemen do theirs, is, in our opinion, to select the proper
persons for the service, pay them for their whole time, and keep them day and
night under strict discipline; and we believe the public agrees with us.
New York Times March 31, 1865
The End of the New-York Volunteer Fire Department
There is an end to the Volunteer Fire Department system of
New-York. The senate bill, substituting for that system a paid department,
passed the Assembly yesterday by a vote which lacks but one of a two-thirds
majority, and which thus relieves the measure effectually of any partizan or
even party character.
No single act of the Legislature probably owed its passage to
influences of more unquestioned fairness. Reason, experience, undisputed
figures, concurrent testimony of the most comprehensive bearing, all came to
the support of those who advocated the change. The opponents of the reform have
had open ground on which to fight their battle, from the beginning to the end
of the contest. They have lost in a fair fight; although the odds against them
from the beginning were overwhelming and irresistible.
It needs some space even to give the baldest summary of the pleas
on which the advocates of the measure demanded its enactment. On the ground of
economy, they were able to show that the soi disant volunteer system of
New-York has involved an outlay in the mere annual money votes for its
maintenance, twice or thrice that of the principal cities of Europe where the
paid system exists. A comparison even with the American cities, where a Paid
Fire Department has been established so recently as to have scarcely yet got
thorough working order, shows a decided saving over the volunteer plan.
Baltimore, in proportion to its population paid, last year, at the rate of ten
percent less than New-York, for an efficient force of firemen with all the
appurtenances of the department complete. Boston, Cincinnati, and St. Louis
showed apparently less thrift in maintaining their paid systems. But in all
these cities the rates of insurance for buildings of a similar class were lower
than those of New-York.
The gradual overthrow of everything that could be called
discipline in the majority of the Volunteer Fire Companies, which has marked
their history of late years, was one of the prime reasons in favor of a change,
as it was one of the prime sources of the numberless evils attending the whole
practical working of the system for a series of years. Every citizen, honest
enough to own the truth, knows what these evils included. Recklessness, where
order and steady effort were most essential; turbulence where probably all
depended on concerted action; fights for apparent precedence, where solid and
useful labor were of prime account; indiscriminate co-mingling of crowds of
professional thieves with those professedly assuming the protection of
property; drunkenness running riot unchecked in the very crisis of calamity;
contemptous [sic], defiant, and all but uniform disrespect of whatever moveable
and assessible [sic] property might be saved from burning; promiscuous
plundering by hangers on of the Fire Department. These have been some of the
fruits of the insufficient discipline. And for years and years all these evils
have gone on multiplying and fructifying, until it had become a question
whether the losses to propertyÑespecially to the insurance interest, from the
utter recklessness and the want of responsibility which marked the fireman's
servicesÑdid not, in many cases, over-balance the account of property actually
saved by his exertions.
The contingent social and political abuses, which have grown out
of this organization, scarcely need to be emphasized. They have been patent to
every citizen capable of estimating the difference between right and wrong.
Idleness, dissipation, contempt for steady hard and persevering labor, baneful
associations, unwarranted aspiration for political rewards, and official
preferments, [sic] combinations for opposing every attempt at municipal
economyÑall these have been more or less fostered in the late degenerate days
of the Volunteer Fire Department.
Much of the history of the Volunteer Fire Organization, as it once existed, will always be remembered with pride and gratitude by the citizens of New-York. It had, unquestionably, in less sophisticated age than this, a satisfactory record to show. And many of those who served as volunteers in those better days, have taken high and honorable positions in the service of the State in maturer life. Even in its most degenerate days, no organization in the country could hope to equal our volunteer firemen as contributors to the success of a public celebration. And it deserves emphatic mention that their Widows' and Orphans' Fund has remained through all the vicissitudes of the Department, one of the noblest charities that this or any other community can boast.