The Nigerian Mvies

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Monday, 23 September 2013

NYC Museums: Fire Department Museum

By Tia Dryer


The Long Island Fire Dep. has a proud and exalted history of saving lives and keeping N. Y. Residents safe, and the New York Fire Museum celebrates that history. The location calls to mind early 20th century New York at the heyday of its success, when quick city expansion and meteoric rise in the immigrant population made firefighting more important than ever. The New York Fire Department Museum looks specifically at firefighting and how it has evolved through the years to what it's become today. From hand painted leather belts and buckets to boots, helmets and even old skool equipment, the Museum of the FDNY has everything you could possibly want to see if you have an interest in the way in which the FDNY has changed and evolved over throughout. If you're the type that is at all interested in the time period or the history of firefighters, it would be a great idea to stop by the New York City Fire Museum.



The Fire Museum is found on the western edge of the hip Soho neighborhood in Manhattan, at 278 Spring Street near Varick and Hudson. This fashionable neighborhood is more well generally known as a locale for eateries and shopping specialised shops than as a hot spot for museums in Manhattan, but if you're having a shopping day and desire to break up the monotony with some history of NYC firefighting, all you have got to do is go west on Spring Street and you will find the museum. The area is pretty simple to get to, as it's located in a major shopping mall for people from all around New York City, and a lot of different of buses and trains service both the Houston St. Station and the Spring St. Station nearby.

The biggest draw of the New York City Fire Museum is the plethora of historical firefighting items like clothing, equipment and trucks from as far back as the 18th century. Those items include leather buckets, lanterns, axes, helmets and one of the first fire engines ever built, the 1790 "Farnam" engine. Rescue and respiring equipment from the early 1900s is also on view, which gives a sense for just how perilous fires were before the arrival of modern firefighting equipment. The development of firefighting is told at the Museum of the FDNY, offering visitors the history and artifacts that help to understand what the life of a NYC firefighter was like and how it has modified through the years.

Also, a favored program for kids held by the New York City Fire Museum mixes the history of firefighting with helpful information to use in the the event of a fire. This guided tour of the museum is provided by a retired New York firefighter who can supplement the data in the museum with real experiences from his life fighting fires as the technology has changed. Kids are also trained on the proper procedures to follow in case of a fire event. A house is set up to look as it may if there were a fire, and youngsters learn where to go, what to do and what not to do. Fire risks are pointed out, and escape strategies are practiced.




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