Cohasset’s First Fire Engines
David Wadsworth
Reprinted with permission from the Cohasset Historical Society, Cohasset,
MA (Town of Cohasset, Mass., 2005), pp. 113-115.
At the town meeting of March 1848, Cohasset voters decided to provide
the town with its first fire engine and fire headquarters building.
Up until that time there had been no way to prevent the total destruction
of homes and structures by fire, and the rate of attrition among the
town’s buildings had been unfortunately high.
During the early 1800s a citizen’s petition had circulated through
Cohasset asking for the purchase of firefighting equipment, but the
only result . . . was the equipping of a group of volunteer “fire
wards,” or wardens, with fire hooks, buckets, and ladders. The
efforts of the fire wards, though often courageous, usually were in
vain, and numerous Cohasseters were rendered homeless when their houses
and possessions fell victim to conflagrations.
Recognizing the need for improved firefighting capabilities, the 1848
town meeting appointed a committee comprised of Thomas Smith, Zaccheus
Rich, and Samuel Nichols to obtain a fire engine and a building to house
it. The result was the construction of a wood and brick building at
Cohasset Center and the acquisition of a horse-drawn hand-tub pumper
engine named Independence.
The new fire station took the name of its engine and still is known
as the Independence Building. By 1850 the hand-tub pumper occupied the
lower floor of the station . . . A large room in the second story, .
. . called Engine Hall, . . . was the headquarters of the volunteer
group known as the Independence Fire Company, the crew of the pumper.
At that time the town’s fire company received no pay for their
duty but instead received an annual abatement, amounting to a few dollars,
of each man’s poll tax.
A trained team of horses to pull the engine was housed in a large
building then existing at the corner of Ripley Road and Depot Court
and called Tilden’s Stable. When the fire bell sounded, the horses,
accompanied by one man, could be seen to leave the stable at full gallop,
headed for the engine house a short distance away. Pausing just long
enough for the Independence to be attached, the team with its engine
and crew would depart at full speed in the direction of the blaze.
During its long career as the town’s fire engine, Independence
served at the dangerous Lawrence Wharf fire on December 25, 1890, which
threatened to destroy numerous buildings at Cohasset Harbor. Josiah
O. Lawrence’s old fish-packing shed was consumed in that blaze,
but nearby structures were saved, including today’s Old Salt House
and the Historical Society’s Maritime Museum, at that time located
across Border Street near the wharf. In the twilight of its active career,
the old hand-tub was pressed into service again in December 1905 when
Edward Everett Ellms’s barn caught fire at Cohasset Center. Supplementing
the town’s new firefighting system of hydrants, Independence
was stationed near the Hillside Inn (today’s Red Lion Inn) to
quell the spreading conflagration, which for a time threatened to engulf
the entire village.
But by the 1930s the era of hand-operated, horse-drawn fire engines
had ended and the Independence honorably retired. Selectmen,
searching for a suitable place to store the antique engine, finally
had it placed in the old Town Home building on Pond Street, from which
it subsequently passed into obscurity when that building was demolished
in 1943.
A second horse-drawn hand-tub pumping engine, called Konohassett,
appeared on the local scene, owned not by the town but by a group of
firefighters called the Volunteer Veteran Firemen’s Association.
Founded in 1911, the “Vol Vets” maintained their headquarters
in the Guild Hall at the Cove (today’s Legion Hall). Konohassett,
like its municipal counterpart Independence, was operated by
a crew who worked the engine’s pump by pushing up and down a set
of rails that ran along the sides of the carriage. Konohassett
had been constructed in 1865 by the firm of Al Button & Sons of
New York and dwarfed its companion Independence by measuring
some seventeen feet in length.
Konohassett was used primarily for competition in firemen’s
musters and drills but certainly stood ready to be pressed into emergencies
if needed. The old pumper, its brasswork gleaming and resplendent with
its bright red paint, was a familiar sight on the streets of Cohasset
for many years. However, Konohassett eventually faded into
obscurity and finally vanished from the scene, as did the Vol Vets,
its owners.
For years the location of the two old hand-tubs was shrouded in mystery.
Rumors said the relics of Independence and Konohassett
still existed somewhere on the South Shore, but their whereabouts,
if in fact they still survived, were uncertain to many. It was only
a few years ago that that uncertainty became dispelled when an anonymous
donor first contacted the Cohasset Historical Society with word that
both engines did exist and could be returned to Cohasset if the townspeople
wanted them.
Since then, Konohassett has returned, and Independence
appears about to return. Still to be accomplished is the important task
of restoring the old engines to their former glory.
From David Wadsworth, “A Historical Review of Cohasset’s
Fire Engines,” Cohasset Mariner, January 5, 1984. Reprinted
by permission of the author. For more information on Cohasset’s
early fire engines, see Bigelow, Narrative History, pp. 524-525;
Pratt, Narrative History, Vol. II, pp. 121-125; Dormitzer,
Narrative History, Vol. III, pp. 82, 96, 266.