Hello All. 

I am new to the World of Fire Fighting.  I am looking to find out what this item is (The item going from top right to bottom left in the patch)...  In the patch there is a staff with a bulb at the top that looks like some kind of steamer or something.  Can anyone tell me the name of this item and/or what it's purpose is/was?

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back in the day before sprinklers and fire extinguishers they used chemical globes or water globes that would break when heated to a certain temp kinda like the sprinkler systems of today in fact some of these globes would be at stations like extinguishers and would be thrown at the fire like hand gernades...... no lie. I even saw examples of both at the ventura fire museum which was closed at the time but you could look inside.
by the way welcome to our world
Hi Michael,

The item you are looking at is a parade torch. The round container had a fuel (kerosene probably) and a wick that was lit and carried much like honor guards carry axes or pikes. There are numerous styles and can be found online by searching for fire or parade torch. I have a couple in archives and will try to get some pics and post them for you. Welcome to the brotherhood.

Scott Luedtke
History Docent
North Charleston & American LaFrance
Fire Museum & Educational Center
North Charleston, SC
hey I stand corrected scott
WOW, YEAH, I just found one online... I only found one so far in my Googling but it is DEFINITELY the same thing. Thank you to Both Jim and Scott! There's not much detail about it but there are three pics. here is the site if any of ya'll want to take a look. I'd LOVE to find something like that for our Chief's to present at our annual dinner or something. (could put it in a nice decorative wall case with a small plaque or something). But I've got a feeling that if you Could find one that they would be Crazy expensive. Anyhow, check it out.

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://pmimages.worthpoint.com/...
Michael,

Here are a couple of pics of parade torches. IF you could find one, it would be very expensive. Most are in museums, collections or in the private hands of long established fire companies. Some are very beautiful while others can be somewhat plain. None the less they are part of our hertitage and traditions.

Scott Luedtke
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thanks for the fire history class, I thought it was one of those old fire extinguishing gernades that I've in some fire museums. I'm with the District of Columbia Fire Department and up until the late 80's early 90's we were still carrying pompier ladders on the Truck co.'s and if memory serves me right the last rescue with a pompier ladder was made in that time frame ( If you look hard enough in the Truck Co. houses you can still find them in storage).
I believe pompier ladders have been relegated to training grounds for confidence training for the recruits.
I think it was filled with water and put in a window to measure the heat in a building for safty
Scott's correct, the tool your looking at is a "torch" -- used to light the streets, and the way to the fire scene in the early to mid-1800s. Often these lights (torches) were carried along by "torch-boys" or "runners" -- local kids and teens who were too young to become regular members of a fire company, but who hung-around the station and still wanted to be a part of the action.

Keep in mind all firefighters (fire companies) would use torches, but not all torches were used by fire companies. The same style torches were commonly used for getting-about, at political rallies, and torch-light parades were all the rage.

Though not exactly the same style as the one commonly featured in a fire-service Maltese Cross or logo, you can see a torch-boy carrying a similar torch (lantern) and on of the famous Currier and Ives prints "the Night Alarm" -- http://www.currierandives.info/fire/night-alarm.gif -- and -- http://www.currierandives.info/fire/night-alarm-detail.gif

- David
David Lewis, Curator
Aurora Regional Fire Museum
http://www.AuroraRegionalFireMuseum.org
its a flame pot. its filled with a flammable liquid and lit to provide light. construction crews use to outline work zones with them when i was a kid back in the 60's. iremember they were quite resistant to weather and lit up about a 1 foot area

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