Honoring the Fire and Rescue Service - London and Beyond - On Web Since 2005
Fire Buffs promote the general welfare of the fire and rescue service and protect its heritage and history. Famous Fire Buffs through the years include Edward VII, who maintained a kit at a London fire station.
February 26, 2015
December 12, 2014
ASYLUM FIRE - 1883
On Aug. 14, 1883, fire destroyed a "lunatic asylum'' at Southall Park, killing six people, according to Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information. Among the dead was Dr. Robert Boyd, a physician and proprieter of the private institution, according to the 1886 Dictionary of National Biography, compiled by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee.
November 03, 2014
LULWORTH CASTLE - 1929
October 23, 2014
DAVE'S STORY

Dave Squires first appeared outside the ‘Station’ in June 1983 (then aged 29 Years). He would walk up and down, looking at the Fire Station but would suddenly disappear and return another day. The Firemen then had no knowledge that Dave was un-employed and had Learning Difficulties. After several weeks Jack Bell went out and invited Dave in.
Dave appeared to be very nervous and shy but was shown around the Appliance Room before he made an excuse that he had to go home, and he was gone.
Dave, however, continued to visit the Station and the Firemen of White Watch warmed to this visitor.
Dave appeared to have little confidence and it took some persuasion on the part of White Watch to get him to join them for a cup of tea in the Mess Room on the 1st Floor. Whilst in the Mess Room there was a two-pump and TL shout leaving just two of us on the Station with Dave. A problem was apparent – Dave could not face going down the stairs and he froze and began to panic. Dave had shown no outward problem when he climbed the stairs but he was clearly not going to descend without help. It took the two of us - fifteen minutes to coax Dave down the stairs, sat on his backside – one step at a time. Later we found out that Dave lived in a Ground Floor Flat with his parents and an Auntie. Dave continued his visits and was welcomed by all the Watches on the Station. Dave never had a problem with the stairs again!
As time went on, Dave was given an old Lancer Fire Tunic, Yellow Leggings, a Helmet and would be ‘allowed’ to ‘Man’ the Land Rover! Eventually, he was given (all donated left-offs) shirts, trousers and cap. Dave gradually became less shy, and his confidence building was not only apparent to the Firemen but also to his family. So much so, that on the first Christmas, Dave’s parents opened their home and invited all Station Personnel to join them in a ‘drink’. Dave’s family were so grateful to the Firemen at Weston for all their interest shown in Dave and for their encouragement in boosting Dave’s confidence.
For all the difficulties Dave has endured he has a wonderful memory (which is more than can be said for a large majority of us Firemen). Dave could remember where every piece of equipment belonged in the Appliance Lockers and would, quite often, find items that we had mislaid.
Dave was working throughout the week but on Saturday and Sunday evenings (Stand-down time) Dave was encouraged to take Parade and make out the Duty Board – this he did efficiently and still does it today!
Dave’s presence on the Station was accepted by Senior Officers throughout the Brigade!
The years went on and Dave’s enthusiasm for the Fire Station never failed.
Dave, who was once introverted and protected by his loving and supportive family now lives an independent life and is self-sufficient. Indeed Dave copes with all his washing, ironing, cooking, cleaning as well as holding down the same job. He finds time for recreation amidst all of the aforesaid mentioned - he plays Skittles with the William Knowles Centre, he attends the Winter Gardens (when Wrestling is taking place) and travels on Public Transport. He even travels on Public Transport to places such as Bodmin in Cornwall where he stays at a specially chosen Centre for his annual Holiday.
October 09, 2014
EXETER THEATRE - 1887
There were 800 people packed inside. Most of the fatalities occurred in the upper gallery. The number of exits proved to be inadequate and the tragedy led to fire safety reforms.
The cause was deemed to be gas lighting that ignited gauze backstage on the opening night of a romantic comedy called Romany Rye.
A witness reported: "Soon after the outbreak the City Fire Brigade were on the spot, but the water they poured on the fire was absolutely without effect."
Only 68 bodies were recovered and victims were buried in a mass grave.
LIVERPOOL - 1941
Workers retrieve fire engine from bomb crater on Roe Street in Liverpool in late 1941.
September 23, 2014
BIRMINGHAM - 1941
September 22, 2014
FALKLANDS HOSPITAL - 1984
On April 10, 1984, fire claimed eight lives - including a hero nurse - at King Edward Memorial Hospital, the only hospital in the Falkland Islands, the remote British overseas territory off Argentina.
Nurse Barbara Chick, 36, who emigrated from Britain a year earlier, "ignored orders to keep out of the burning hospital and stayed with her patients until she was overcome by smoke," the Associated Press reported.
The AP reported that one of the victims was married to a local firefighter.
Royal Air Force firefighters drew water from the sea for the local fire brigade.
The blaze also damaged a prefabricated section of the hospital used by the U.K. military, which defeated Argentine troops in the Falkland Islands War two years earlier.
Speaking in the House of Commons on Aug. 1, MP Michael Stern said:
"Lack of fire doors was perhaps the principal and most obvious cause of the rapid spread of the fire, which was the reason why so many lives were lost.
"There had been many reports in the 1970s of the inadequate fire precautions in this and other public buildings in Port Stanley.
"In 1982, the fire officer, the civilian doctor and the military authorities together demanded the urgent installation of fire doors in the hospital - a wooden building - as the only way of stopping a fire should one break out."
"By the date of the fire, those doors had not even been ordered.
"As a result, whatever the cause of the fire - perhaps inevitably, the report was unclear about the exact cause - it spread rapidly and uncontrollably, and the deaths that occurred were to a large extent inevitable.
"Had fire doors been in situ, the deaths might have been avoided."
A new hospital opened in 1987.
In England, Barbara Chick, a Bristol native, was honored with a ceremony and plaque at Shirehampton Health Centre on Sept. 5, 1984, according to the November 1984 edition of the Falkland Islands Newsletter.
It read:
In Memory of Nurse Barbara Chick, S.E.N
A resident of Shirehampton, who
gave her life on 10th April 1984
trying to rescue patients
trapped by a fire at the
King Edward VII Memorial Hospital
Port Stanley
Falkand Islands
September 03, 2014
August 20, 2014
KING GEORGE VI
King George VI visits Lambeth Fire Station during World War II. Major Frank Jackson, chief of London Fire Brigade during 1940-41 blitz, stands in helmet and uniform in right of photo.
August 19, 2014
OLD PALACE SCHOOL - 1941
On April 20, 1941, a German bomb landed on London Auxiliary Fire Service Sub Station 24U, which was housed at the Old Palace LCC School, St. Leonards Street, Poplar - killing 32 firemen and two firewomen.
Wartime regulations prevented publication of the news and full details of the tragedy remained under wraps for decades. It was learned that a parachute mine crashed through the roof and detonated shortly before 2 a.m.
Some victims died instantly. Others succumbed beneath the rubble.
Twenty-one of the dead were from AFS Beckenham, Kent. They had been sent to London to provide relief, a common practice among wartime brigades.
The roll of honor:
AFS Firewoman (Telephonist) Hilda Dupree – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 21. Of 33 Warwick Road, Walthamstow, Essex.
Firewoman Winifred Alexandra Peters – London Fire Brigade
Died 20th April 1941 aged 39. Of 122 Canton Street
AFS Fireman Percy Charles Aitchison – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 27. Of 20 Copse Avenue, West Wickham, Kent.
AFS Fireman Ronald Mark Bailey – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 25. of 81 Links Road, Tooting.
AFS Fireman Alan Charles Barber – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 26. Of 6 Fairford Close, Shirley, Croydon, Surrey.
AFS Fireman Earnest Reginald Beadle – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 32. Of 211 Birkbeck Road, Beckenham.
AFS Fireman Kenneth John Bowles – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 30. Of 27 Beckenham Road, West Wickham, Kent.
AFS Fireman John Coleman Burrell – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 35. Of 39 North Street, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex.
AFS Fireman Patrick Joseph Campbell – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 24. Of 39 Bannister House, Homerton
AFS Fireman Harry John Carden – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 29. Of 7 Mounthurst Road, Hayes, Bromley, Kent.
AFS Fireman Robert John Deans – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 28. Of 144 The Grove, West Wickham, Kent.
AFS Fireman Frank James Endean – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 36. Of 34 Aviemore Way, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Fireman Cecil Farley – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 43. Of 5 Linden Leas, West Wickham, Kent.
AFS Fireman George John Joseph Hall – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 43. Of 44 Warwick Road, Anerley, Kent.
AFS Messenger Bertie James Frederick Harris – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 17. Of 31 Brabazon Street,
AFS Fireman Leslie Thomas Healey– AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 32. Of 15 Greenview Avenue, Shirley, Surrey.
AFS Despatch Rider Ernest Herbert Henly _ AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 19. Of 2 Grange Cottage, Silver Street, Kinton Langley, Chippenham, Wiltshire.
AFS Fireman Sydney Bartholomew Jones – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 54 Harrogate Road, Hackney.
AFS Fireman Albert Victor Kite – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 36. Of 166 Village Way, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Fireman John Francis Mead– AFS
Died 20th April 1941 aged 29. Of 39 Christie Road, Hackney.
AFS Fireman Vernon Joseph Middleditch – AFS
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 220 Hunders Lane, Darlington, Co. Durham.
AFS Fireman Alfred Edward Minter – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 46. Of 48 Aylesford Avenue, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Fireman Norman Richard Charles Mountjoy – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 30. Of 11 Ash Grove, West Wickham, Kent
AFS Fireman Frederick George Parcell – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 32. Of 28 Love Lane, South Norwood, Surrey.
AFS Fireman Martin Charles Parfett – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 296 Pickhurst Rise, West Wickham, Kent.
AFS Fireman William Charles Plant – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 26. Of 22 Sultan Street, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Fireman Cyril Bertram Porter – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 31 Clinton Road, Forest Gate, Essex.
AFS Fireman William Thomas Rashbrook – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 133 Chatsworth Road, Clapton.
AFS Leading Fireman Leonard Roots – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 31. Of 10 Avenue Court, Avenue Road, Anerley, Kent.
AFS Fireman Albert Alfred Saville – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 35. Of 54 Harrowgate Road, Hackney.
Station Officer Richard William Sinstadt – London Fire Brigade
Died 20th April 1941 aged 46. Of 74 Beccles Drive, Barking, Essex.
AFS Fireman Edgar William Vick – AFS London
Died 20th April 1941 aged 38. Of 234 Eden Way, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Leading Fireman Walter John Woodland – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 41. Of 68 Links Way, Eden Park, Beckenham, Kent.
AFS Leading Fireman Herbert Charles Wotton – AFS Beckenham
Died 20th April 1941 aged 30. Of 78 Upper Elmers End Road, Beckenham, Kent.
May 12, 2014
AUXILIARY FIRE SERVICE
Writing on the 70th anniversary of the Blitz in the Sept. 7, 2010 edition of The Guardian newspaper, Francis Beckett - author of the book "Firefighters and The Blitz" - said the fire service was "about the only thing the government had got right."
In March 1938, the government created the Auxiliary Fire Service to augment the U.K.'s regular fire brigades.
April 30, 2014
SOUTH LONDON - 1980
Firefighters on roof after suspicious blaze at old South London Camping Warehouse in South London in 1980.
January 13, 2014
EMPRESS OF CANADA - 1953
According to an Australian Associated Press dispatch from Liverpool:
"Parts of the superstructure and funnels hit the three-story concrete dock shed and there were resounding crashes from the burnt out interior of the liner.
"The liner slid quickly on to her side and smoke billowed high into the air as the red hot hull hit the water."
January 11, 2014
FINAL SHOUTS - 2014
Ten London fire stations - including Clerkenwell, Europe's oldest - answered their final shouts on Jan. 9, 2014, as the government pressed on with efforts to realize millions of pounds in savings.
The move prompted emotional scenes as well as warnings that the closures - along with the removal of 14 fire engines from the streets of the capital - will lead to greater loss of life.
The Evening Standard reported: "Firefighters on Green Watch were in tears as they walked out of the Clerkenwell station, which opened in 1872, for the last time."
The building is located on Rosebery Avenue, Islington.
Belsize, Bow, Downham, Kingsland, Knightsbridge, Silvertown, Southwark, Westminster and Woolwich also closed, leaving London with 155 engines and 102 fire stations.
At Clerkenwell, the bells went down for the last time at 6:05 a.m.
The Green Watch attended a shout in Oval Road, Regent's Park along with Belsize fire station, which also faded into history.
December 27, 2013
APOLLO THEATRE - 2013
On Dec. 19, 2013, a section of London's famed Apollo Theatre's ornate plasterwork ceiling collapsed during a performance. Scores were injured.
The London Fire Brigade sent eight engines and the London Ambulance Service sent 25 ambulances.
Nick Harding of the Kingsland Fire Station said:
“We believe around 720 people were in the theatre at the time. A section of the theatre’s ceiling collapsed onto the audience who were watching the show. The ceiling took parts of the balconies down with it.
“Firefighters worked really hard in very difficult conditions and I’d like to pay tribute to them. They rescued people from the theatre, made the area safe and then helped ambulance crews with the injured.
“Specialist urban search and rescue crews were also called to the scene to make sure no one was trapped. Fortunately all those who were trapped were rescued and treated for injuries or taken to hospital.'
"London Ambulance Service treated 76 patients, 58 of whom were taken to hospital to be treated for their injuries. Fifty one of these were walking wounded and seven had more serious injuries."
October 17, 2013
ST. KATHARINE'S DOCK - 1940
Fire boats in action at St. Katharine's Dock, near Tower Bridge, on Sept. 7, 1940, at the start of the Blitz.
October 02, 2013
WOMEN'S BRIGADE - 1916
DUCK FIRE - 2013
June 28, 2013
WOOLWORTH'S MANCHESTER - 1979
The Fire Brigades Union called the store a "death trap."
The blaze started in an electrical cable and spread to furniture made of flammable polyurethane foam.
"When crews arrived they found thick smoke billowing from the six-storey building and people screaming for help from the windows," according to the Fire Brigades Union. "Firefighters fought the blaze for two and a half hours while helping people escape by the shop's doors, windows and roof."
"The store had no sprinkler system, so the fire had plenty of time to spread before firefighters arrived," the union said. "There were thick bars on the upper-floor windows that fire crews attempted to pry off with axes and crowbars, but so strong were the bars that they had to wait for specialist cutting machinery. Meanwhile, a vital means of rescue was frustrated."
There were about 500 people inside when the alarm sounded. Among the victims was Woolworth employee Cyril Baldwin, 68, who served as an auxiliary fireman during World War Two and died trying to save others.
June 27, 2013
STRATFORD-UPON-AVON - 1926

On March 6, 1926, fire struck Stratford's Shakespeare Memorial Theatre. A passing cyclist raised the alarm.
May 24, 2013
ESSEX HOTEL - 1969
BUTLERS WHARF - 1931
December 1966
“Moderate or fresh East or North East winds; bright intervals; snow showers; very cold” - This was London’s gloomy forecast for Saturday 7 March, 1931.
BOLTON NIGHT CLUB - 1961
The occupied the top floors of an old mill warehouse on Crown Street. Five of the victims jumped to their deaths.
Once the alarm was sounded, "Bolton Fire Brigade arrived within three minutes, but were unable to enter due to the intense fire. It was not possible to access the back with ladders, due to the river, and the turntable ladder was not long enough to bridge the river to reach the upper floors," according to Wikipedia.
The cause of the blaze was never established though chemicals in a paint closet contributed to the intensity of the blaze.
HEATHROW HORSES - 1968
On July 3, 1968, an Airspeed Ambassador propeller aircraft carrying eight racehorses slammed into two parked jets at London's Heathrow Airport and cartwheeled into Terminal 1, which was then under construction.
Six of eight people aboard the aircraft were killed. The racehorses also died.
Another 31 people on the ground were injured.
The accident was blamed on a mechanical problem. The aircraft was operated by BKS Air Transport. It had been recently converted to carry horses.
May 23, 2013
WORLD WAR I ZEPPELINS
By Friends of London Fire Museum
A motor engine was subsequently stationed at LFB’s North Woolwich station while Silvertown Fire Station was reconstructed.
Consequent upon this and other fires and explosions in munitions plants and military depots elsewhere in Britain, in July 1918 a further order, the Fire Brigades (Metropolitan Area) Order 1918, provided for fire brigade reinforcement throughout the Metropolitan Fire Brigade Area to be extended to fires in such establishments.
WEST INDIA DOCKS - 1901
April 02, 2013
HOSTEL FIRE - 2002
On Sept. 2, 2002, London firefighters rescued seven people from a fire at a four-story hostel on Montagu Place, Marylebone. Eight engines and two turntable ladders attended the fire, with crews using six jets and two ladder monitors to extinguish the flames.
At 7:19 p.m., the fire brigade's control room at Lambeth received the first of 23 telephone calls about the fire, and ``a few minutes later firefighters from Manchester Square and Paddington fire stations arrived at the scene to find people calling for help from a number of the upper floor windows and the roof,'' according to a fire brigade press release.
``They quickly raised their ladders and rescued one man, two women and a child, all suffering from smoke inhalation from a second floor window and one man from the roof who was uninjured,'' the press release said. ``Two other men escaped from the premises before the brigade arrived, one from the basement and another who jumped from a first floor window. Two other people were assisted from the building by breathing apparatus crews.''
Divisional Officer Lee Phillpotts, incident commander, said: ``All the firefighters who attended this incident worked very hard to fight what was a very severe fire. The first crews to arrive in particular did an excellent job as they were confronted by a number of people in great distress at windows and the roof of the building, and an already well developed fire below them.''
April 01, 2013
BRIXTON - 1981
In April 1981, the streets of Brixton erupted in flames.
The disturbance started after police attempted to assist a stabbing victim. Rumors spread that officers were arresting the stabbing victim rather than helping him.
According to the Metropolitan Police:
"299 police were injured, and at least 65 civilians. 61 private vehicles and 56 police vehicles were damaged or destroyed. 28 premises were burned and another 117 damaged and looted. 82 arrests were made."