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Survey and
Research Report
On The
Charlotte Fire Station No. 2

History
of Structure:
The preservation
of the Old Dilworth Fire Station provides
future
generations a unique vision of the past.
Completed in 1909, the structure is
characterized
by its original design for horse-drawn
firefighting apparatus. It
stands
today a monument to that forgotten era. The
City of Charlotte
operated several other stations at that time,
but they have all been demolished,
The Old Dilworth Station is now the oldest
extant station in the city.
At
the beginning of the Twentieth Century,
Charlotte was a fast-growing city. City
government was supported by a mayor, a recorder,
and a Board of
Aldermen. The Board of Aldermen included seven
members, one from each of the
four
wards of the city, and three elected at large.
According to the
Federal
Census of 1900, the city's population within its
corporate limits
was 18,091.The municiple census of 1901
indicates 27,752 people living
in
the city and its surrounding suburbs. The city
fathers were building
and
expanding the foundations of services necessary
to support its growing
population.
By the year 1902 the city owned the city hall,
the water works, a
sewerage
system, a crematory, three school buildings, two
fire departments,
a modern
fire alarm system, and over forty miles of
macadamized roads.
The street
car system and lighting plants were excellent.
Latta Park,
at
the southern end of the street car line, was a
"popular pleasure resort.
Latta Park
was located outside the city limits in an area
known as
Dilworth. The Charlotte Consolidated
Construction Company, the 4-Cs, owned
the
land within this suburb. Edward Dilworth Latta,
for whom the development
was named, was President of the 4-Cs.
In
1891 the 4-Cs launched, a campaign
to
attract
industry as well as private residents to settle
in Dilworth. At
an
April meeting of the Chamber of Commerce "it was
decided to raise $10,000
for
advertising our city abroad.
The
4-Cs agreed to contribute $5,000 to
that end . . ."
On May
20, 1891, the 4-Cs held a large land auction in
Dilworth. It
was a gala affair with a festival atmosphere.
"In three days several hundred
lots were sold ranging from $5 to $16 a front
foot. The bidding was lively and the 4-Cs have
every reason to be gratified at the result of
their sale." One of the lots sold that week was
to be the future location of the Dilworth
Fire Station.
"Lot
number four in square number 9
...
being fifty feet by one hundred
fifty
feet fronting on the street known as 'Boulevard'
..."
was purchased
by James M. Gates on May 23, 1891. According to
early real estate maps of
Charlotte,
James Dates owned several lots in downtown
Charlotte and probably was a local real
estate speculator. He paid the 4-Cs $375 for lot
number
four.
Gates held the property for 16 years until it
was purchased by the
City of Charlotte as the location for its new
fire station to serve the
fast-growing street car suburb of Dilworth.
The growing population in Dilworth, both
residential and industrial,
began to show concern over the lack
of
a conveniently located fire station.
Before
the new station was constructed, Dilworth
residents received fire protection from the
downtown station headquartered at 6 East 5th
Street.
Even
when a fire was detected in its early stages,
horse-drawn apparatus
was
slow in reaching a fire in the prosperous
suburb. Residents were aware
that
precious minutes during a fire crisis could be
saved if a station were
located in their neighborhood.
Yet, before
a station could be built in Dilworth, the suburb
had to
be designated an official borough of the City of
Charlotte. The great
desire of
Dilworth residents for local fire protection was
their main
concern
when a committee from the suburb appeared before
the Board of
Aldermen on
May 7, 1907 asking that a fire station be
constructed in the
southern
section of the city
and
that Dilworth be admitted as a borough of
Charlotte. That
evening Dilworth
was admitted as a borough of Charlotte.
The request
concerning the establishment of a fire station
was deferred.
Nearly nine months passed before the issue of a
fire station for
Dilworth was renewed. The concern was ". . .
agitated anew since a recent fire in that ward."11
At a meeting of the Finance Committee on
February 27,
1908, Colonel T. L. Kirkpatrick, Alderman from
Dilworth, requested an appropriation
for the establishment of a station. Still,
funds for such
a
project were
not
available, and the committee could only give
assurances that efforts
were
being made to raise money needed for such a
project.
Several
days later, on March 2, 1908, the matter was
again discussed
at
a meeting of the Board of Aldermen. At this
meeting a resident of Dilworth,
Mr.
Joseph Garibaldi, offered to purchase a lot and
build a station if the
city
was not financially able
to
undertake the project. He offered to
"... accept the cities note for 4 or 6 years at
6% interest for same."
The Chairman of the Fire Department, Colonel A.
L. Smith, agreed at that
meeting
that ". . .a station in Dilworth was a necessity
. . . but owing
to the
financial condition of the city
he would
not press the matter."
He
suggested that the city might instead consider
purchasing an automobile
that might
provide more efficient service
to
that part of the city. The
matter of
establishing a fire station in Dilworth
"...
was referred to
the Finance
Committee with power to
act." Seven
months later at a meeting of the Finance
Committee, a committee
from
the Public Safety Committee reported that
several locations for a
Dilworth Station had been examined. "Col. T. L.
Kirkpatrick moved that
it be recorded that it is the sense of the
committee that a sub fire station be established
in a
convenient
point for the .purpose of serving the Dilworth
section and Ward II at
a cost not
exceeding $4,000."16 Ten days later,
on October
17, 1908,
the
Finance Committee unanimously authorized the
purchase
of the lot owned by James M. Gates
on the
west side of South Boulevard. The
purchase
price was $1,000, and the deed to the property
was signed October 20,
1908.
Finally,
residents of Dilworth would get their new
station. The wheels
of
bureaucracy turn slowly, but
Dilworth
would not be deprived of its right
to efficient city services. Three branches of
city government were responsible
for the creation of the Dilworth Station. The
aldermen authorized and
paid for
it. The Board of Public Safety was responsible
for the equipment,
and
the Board of Public Service would build it.
Chosen as architect for
project was the Charlotte firm of Wheeler,
Galliher and Stern. The
building contract was awarded to J. A. Jones at
a cost of $3,000. The
construction of the station began on January 7,
1909. According to a
local newspaper article, the Dilworth Station
was the same size and design
as Station No. 1, headquarters on E. 5th Street.
Two
months later Chief of the fire department, W. S.
Orr, reported
to
the Board of Public Safety that the station was
"completed and equipped."
Applications were received from 25
men
for positions in the new fire station.
Five
were chosen: J. E.
Morris,
Cliff
Spense,
J. A. Lawing, T. M. Davis, and G. P. Caldwell.
These men were not assigned to the Dilworth
Station
in particular.
Chief Orr would
fill
some of the openings at the Dilworth
Station
with experienced men from other stations. The
new station would have three men on duty at all
times.23
W. B.
Glenn, who was already employed
by the city fire department, was chosen Captain
for the new station. Equipment for the
station would consist of a combination hose and
chemical wagon
with two ladders attached and a
steamer.
Two horses were
also
purchased
for
the
station."
Most
of Charlotte's early firefighting was
accomplished with chemical engines. Developed
by
French
scientists
in
1864, mixtures of bicarbonate
of soda,
sulfuric acid
and
water
created
a
pressurized gas, carbon dioxide.
Being heavier than air, the chemical solution
removed oxygen from air thus
smothering a fire.27 Eighty-five
percent of the fires in Charlotte were fought
with chemicals in
the early
20th century.28 At first these
engines
were
pulled by hand, but in
the
1870s, horse-drawn chemical engines were
introduced.29 The Dilworth station
was equipped with two horse-drawn
engines,
one chemical and
one steam.
When horses
were first used in firefighting, it was
customary to board
them outside the fire stations in nearby
stables. But much time was lost
bringing
the horses to the station for harnessing after
an alarm was received.
Eventually,
the horses were stabled in the fire station
along with the
equipment
and the men. The idea took some getting used
to, but soon firemen
horses began "more than half a century of mutual
affection."
Dilworth's station was originally
designed to house its horses
on
its
first
floor level. Architectural specifications
indicate there were
two
stalls,
one located on each side of the first
floor.
The stalls are
no longer
there,
but worn flooring
bears witness
to the years of impatient
pawing
of horses hoofs. To save
time in harnessing
the horses after an
alarm was
received, the heavy harnesses
were
hung from
the
ceiling directly
above
the
stalls.
Using a system of
chains
and pulleys the harness could
be dropped onto the horse and fastened by the
men in a matter of seconds. Remnants of
the "quick hitch" system can still be seen in
the old station.
In 1912 the City of Charlotte purchased its
first motorized firefighting apparatus.-*3
By 1917 the
era
of horse-drawn apparatus ended in Charlotte.
By the late 1940s the Dilworth station could no
longer accommodate the larger,
more sophisticated motorized equipment. The
city purchased a lot across the
Boulevard from the old
station
and built a new one. The new Station No. 2 .
still serves
the
Dilworth section today. The old station on lot
number four
was sold to W. E. Price and Ethel R. DeLaney on
June 29, 1948.
Price and DeLaney held the property until
January 1976. At that time
the station
was deeded to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Fire
Museum, Inc.,
a non-profit corporation dedicated to the
preservation and restoration of the
old Dilworth Station No. 2. It is their desire
that the station be adaptively
utilized as a
museum of firefighting history of Charlotte and
Mecklenburg
County.
Nothing
will more graphically demonstrate Charlotte's
early firefighting history than the preservation
and restoration of the Old Dilworth Station.
While the City of Charlotte has destroyed, lost,
and forgotten much of its past, the Old Dilworth
Station has survived. Its preservation will
provide the citizens of Charlotte and
Mecklenburg County a unique understanding of
turn-of-the-century life in Charlotte.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Primary Sources:
Index to City Minutes. A
to M.
From
June
24, 1816 to May 6,
1935.
City
Clerk's
Office, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Minutes
of the Meetings of the Board of Aldermen.
BooJks 10 and 11, 1907-1908.
City Clerk's Office, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Minutes of the Meetings of the Finance Committee
of the Board of Aldermen.
City Clerk's Office, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Minutes
of the Board of Public Safety. May 1, 1908 -
April 6, 1909. City
Clerk's
Office, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Minute
Book - Executive Board. City of Charlotte. May
6, 1909
-
February 12,
1913. City Clerk's Office, Charlotte, North
Carolina.
State
of North Carolina, Mecklenburg County Record of
Deeds. Office of the Register of Deeds,
Charlotte, North Carolina.
Daily Logs of the Charlotte Fire Department.
1891-1909. Charlotte Fire Department,
Headquarters Office, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Charlotte,
North Carolina, City Directory. 1904-5
through 1911. Charleston,
South
Carolina:
The Welsh Directory Company.
Charlotte
Daily Observer.
1907
-
1909.
Charlotte
Public Library, Carolina
Room,
Microfilm.
Charlotte Evening Chronicle.
1907 - 1909. Charlotte Public Library,
Carolina Room, Microfilm.
Mecklenburg Times.
1907 - 1909. Charlotte Public Library, Carolina
Room,
Microfilm.
Original architectural specifications of the
Dilworth Fire Station. Office
of Jack
0. Boyte, AIA, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Sanborn
Insurance Maps. 1905-1909.
Charlotte
Public Library, Carolina
Room.,
Microfilm.
Tompkins, D. A. History of Mecklenburg
County and Charlotte. Charlotte,
North
Carolina: Observer Printing House, 1903.
Secondary Sources:
Atkins, Jesse, Chief of Charlotte Fire
Department. Interview 22 January 1979.
Ditzel, Paul C. Fire Engines Firefighters.
New York, N.Y.: A Rutledge Book,
Crown Publishers, Inc., 1976.
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