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History of the Hamburg Township Fire Department:
In December, 1945 tragedy struck the township which caused the people of Hamburg Township to stop and look more closely at their community and to take steps toward improving it. John Moore, the local mail carrier was also responsible for maintaining Hamburg Hall. The Hall had been constructed over 100 years ago in 1835 and served as the local pool hall, meeting room and as the social gathering place for the community. On that frigid December night, John Moore attempted to light an old oil burning stove. The stove exploded, engulfing Hamburg Hall in flames. John Moore was fatally burned and died shortly after the accident. Hamburg Township had no fire department at the time. Previously, fires had been fought by bucket brigades, garden hoses or simply hand to hand as neighbors helped one another in time of need. In the case of large fires, outside help was summoned from fire departments in neighboring communities.
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Photo courtesy of Livingston Daily Press & Argus
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The City of Brighton Fire Department was called to respond to the fire at Hamburg Hall but their fire truck broke down en route to the fire and was unable to respond. By the time other surrounding fire departments had arrived, the townspeople had the fire under control but Hamburg Hall was a total loss. As a result of this incident, the townspeople realized that waiting for help from neighboring communities wasted precious time and that it needed to form its own fire department.
Manly Bennett was elected as the first fire chief and put together his roster of thirty volunteers. It was decided that the fire department would incorporate independent of the local government to save money and that no volunteers would receive any pay for their services. The Hamburg Fire Department, Inc. was chartered on August 25, 1946 and incorporated the following January. In 1948, the fire department was able to purchase their first fire truck, replacing the trailer pumps that were no longer adequate for the rising demands of the township
In July of 2001, Hamburg Fire Inc. turned over the reigns to Hamburg Township. Today the force is made up of approximately 40 paid-on-call firefighters, a full time Fire Chief, and full time Fire Marshal dedicated to servicing their community. The Hamburg Township Fire Department is considered to be a full service department. Services include fire and emergency medical response, ice rescue, auto accidents with or without extraction and many other services as needed. There is not a separate EMT division as all of the firefighters are medically trained.
What is a paid-on-call fire department?
• A paid on call fire department is made up of members of the community.
• All of the paid-on-call members have full time jobs outside of the fire department
• When an emergency occurs, all available paid-on-call members respond.
• All paid-on-call members are always on call
• All members are expected to respond to a minimum of 10% of our calls.
• The average firefighter responds to 22% of our calls.
• Paid-on-call members are paid hourly for calls and training.
• Becoming a fully trained firefighter involves more than 675 hours of training during the first two years.
• That is more than 16 weeks of training at 40 hours/week.
• Fully trained firefighters spend more than 175 hours in training to maintain their skills and keep up with the latest technology.
• We are always looking for more dedicated individuals to join our team.
Click here to learn more about becoming a Hamburg Township firefighter.
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