Treasure of the Month
Antique Miniature Hand Pumper Fire Engine
Donated by:
Galveston Fire Department Central Fire Station
For more information, please contact Nikkie Ferre,
Museum Collections Manager, by email at
nferre@rosenberg-library.org or by phone at 409-763-8854 x 125.

The Rosenberg Library’s Museum featured a miniature model of an antique hand-pumper fire engine as its
November “Treasure of the Month.” Hand
pumpers, early fire engines that pumped water from underground water
sources or cisterns, were first invented in the 2nd century
B.C. and were revived in the Colonial period to protect wooden
metropolitan areas from the destructive forces of fire.
Constructed of wood, metal and chord, the Rosenberg Library’s
“Number 8” pumper, built in 1912, was donated in 1935 by the Galveston
Fire Department’s Central Fire Station, located at 20th and
Avenue D.
Before the convenience of modern firefighting
equipment, volunteer fire fighters organized bucket brigades to watch
and respond to early signs of smoke or fire.
Bucket brigades consisted of two lines of fire fighters who
passed buckets of water to and from a water source to put out flames.
Colonial laws in America required that every household keep
buckets of water available on the front stoop at night should the
brigades have to fight a fire in the nearby vicinity.
The number of buckets a home or
business was required to own was determined by its potential risk of
fire.
The first fire apparatus in America was built in
1743, beginning the era of hand pumpers.
These early fire engines were designed to spray water with more
force and accuracy than the bucket brigades. Firemen had to pull these
early hand pumpers manually
from the fire houses to the buildings
ablaze. Firefighters operated hand-pumped fire engines with duel pumping
arms that when pushed up and down, would draw water out of the tub into
a pressure chamber and
then out through the hose.
The addition of pressure allowed the water to keep a continuous
flow. With this design, bucket brigades were still used to continuously
supply the tubs with water.
The action of pumping the arms was known as “working on the brakes.” It
required eight men or more to operate the arms on early equipment, and
in a matter of minutes the men would succumb to exhaustion.
Galveston’s Fire Department began in 1843 as a bucket
brigade with a small group of volunteer fire fighters when the city was
still young. Known as the
Galveston Hook and Ladder Company No. 1, this bucket brigade used water
from the Gulf of Mexico and Galveston Bay, as well as the underground
and overhead cisterns to serve the community.
The firemen wore red shirts and white belts and often marched in
town parades. The Firemen’s
Grand Parade was held on San Jacinto Day with a large parade through
downtown Galveston. (Click
the newspaper clipping below to view a portion of the Galveston
Daily News coverage of the fire companies in the parade.)
The invention of pressurized fire hydrants allowed
hand-pumpers to withdraw water straight from a source, which no longer
required the help of the bucket brigades. The addition of horses to lead
the heavy fire engines also enabled quicker response times and less
fatigue on the part of the firemen. With
the help of the fire house Dalmatian, horses were trained to respond to
the sound of the fire bell and stand ready at the front of the hand
pumper. Horses and Dalmatians remained a beloved part of fire services
all over the country through the mid-19th century.
Galveston later organized other volunteer companies
including Washington No. 1 (1847); Island City No. 2 (1856); Star State
No. 3 (1859); Young America No.1 (1866); Eagle No. 7 (1869); and Hook
and Ladder Company No. 2 (1870).
In 1885 after the Great Fire that destroyed 40 blocks of
residential homes and businesses, the first paid fire department was
established. Thirty men and
six hand pumpers, all horse-drawn, made up this first official Galveston
fire department.
Galveston firefighters then and today are known for
their superb abilities in fighting fires in historic buildings and
working through horrific storms. A
memorial in remembrance of past firemen is located at the Central Fire
Station at 2514 Sealy.