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The Shreveport Fire Department has a rich history of service to the citizens of Shreveport. For more than 150 years, Shreveport firefighters have worked tirelessly to provide emergency and non-emergency services to this community while maintaining the high standards of the profession. Each year, this department strives to be more efficient and effective as we meet new challenges. The following is a brief history of
how this department has evolved and how we plan to prepare for the future.
Click on the links below to read our history. Firefighting before 1900
| Volunteer to Career |
Major Fire | New Era On September 11, 1839, the City of Shreveport
passed its first fire regulations pertaining to blacksmiths, bakery shops, maintenance of chimneys, etc.; imposing a $5.00 fine for fire related offenses. Additional volunteer fire companies were organized in later years which included: Germania Hook and Ladder Company #2; Pelican Hook and Ladder Company #1 and #2; Caddo Companies #1, 2 and 3; Allendale; Columbia; and numerous salvage companies.
In 1852, a bond initiative was posted on the ballot and approved by the people to buy one horse drawn
fire engine and one hook and ladder wagon.
The first water reservoirs used for firefighting were huge 50,000 gallon under-ground cisterns.
These cisterns were located at Market and Texas, Texas and McNeil, Fannin and Edwards, and Market and
Crockett. There is a chance that some, if not all, of these are still in the same place, but not filled with
water.
The first water mains and fire plugs were installed in 1887, by Samuel R. Bullech and Company of New York City. On January 1, 1891, under the administration of Mayor Andrew Currie, the city took over the volunteer fire companies; including tow horses and six Missouri mules, and hired six regular fireman and fifteen call men. Later the streets were paved and the fire department changed from mules to horses because of their speed.
They were also easier to train than mules. It generally took about two weeks for a horse to be trained for fire horse
duties. On January 10, 1910, the fire department received its first piece of motorized equipment; an auto-chemical wagon with an engine rating of 55 horsepower and more motorized equipment was gradually bought until all of the horses were retired in 1917.
On September 4, 1925, one of the worse fires in Shreveport’s history occurred when a hot water heater exploded and caught a house on fire. Although Fire Station No. 4 was located across the street from the house, a broken water main prevented the firemen from effectively fighting the blaze. A train with tank cars filled with water was brought to the area, but by the time the train was put together and the tank cars filled with water, it was too late. The fire had quickly spread and between 9:00pm on the 4th and 6:00pm on the 5th, a total of 9 city blocks and 194 homes were lost. Many people were left homeless, but no lives were lost.
Chief Dallas W. Greene was very well liked and respected by the citizens and made major improvements in the Shreveport Fire Department. Under Chief Greene the Department was desegregated and the first minority was hired in 1974; the first Rescue Unit was introduced to the department; the Department apparatus color scheme switched from all red to all white to avoid the possibility of having to go to all yellow coloring. In 1984, the Department took over the EMS services for the City of Shreveport In 1993, under Chief Dale Martin a former Chief of the Fire Prevention, the Department brought back red to the fire apparatus and also put Federal Q sirens back on all new pumper and hook and ladder rigs. In 1994, under Chief Jerl “Bo” Roberts the Shreveport Fire Department was brought up to a Class 1 fire rating by the Property Insurance Association of Louisiana (PIAL).
In 1999, Chief Kelvin J. Cochran was appointed as the Department’s first African American Fire Chief by Mayor Keith Hightower. Under the Chief Cochran the Department maintained its Class 1 rating. He successfully passed a bond initiative in 2001 to build three fire stations - including a new Dallas W. Greene Central Fire Station and Administrative Offices, and renovate a new Fire Maintenance facility. Firefighter staffing and pay also increased during Chief Cochran’s tenure. Cochran is also credited with significantly increasing the department’s EMS capabilities by increasing the number of Medic Units (ambulances) from 7 to 10, implementing 5 ALS Engines, and adding an additional Medical Director. Chief Cochran retired from Shreveport in 2007 to become the Fire Chief in Atlanta, Georgia. In 2009, President Barak Obama appointed Chief Cochran as the United States Fire Administrator.
In 2009, Crawford along with Bossier City Chief Sammy Halphen led efforts and secured Louisiana's Urban Search & Rescue (USAR) Task Force III team for the Shreveport/Bossier City area. Crawford also stepped-up the department's fire prevention efforts by commissioning a public/private Fire Safety Task Force, implementing the Neighborhood Smoke Detector Installation Program, and passing legislation requiring all apartments to install automatic stove-top fire extinguishing systems. |
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