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Croydon Fire Brigade
Operational area
CountryUnited Kingdom
CountySurrey
DistrictCounty Borough of Croydon
Agency overview[1]
Established1867
Dissolved1965
Annual calls2,634 (1964)
Staffing167 full-time firefighters

14 control staff

110 AFS firefighters (1964)
Chief Fire OfficerR.R Lloyd (1964)
Facilities and equipment
Stations5 (1964)

The Croydon Fire Brigade was the fire and rescue service for the County Borough of Croydon. Established in 1867, it was absorbed into the London Fire Brigade in 1965.[2]

History

The first recorded fire station in Croydon was the Surrey Street fire station created in 1745, housing three hand-transported fire pumps.[1]

By 1866, Croydon had a paid fire brigade of 18 men with a single fire engine and a fire escape ladder vehicle, paid for by the rates, plus two brigades set up by the local health board totalling 35 volunteers with two engines, part-financed from the rates. In addition, there was a brigade established by tradesmen, independent of the board. This comprised 24 volunteers and one professional with a single engine, paid for by voluntary subscriptions.[3]

The Croydon Fire Brigade was formed in 1867 as the result of the amalgamation of the rival board and independent fire brigades. At the time, Croydon was a parish of Surrey. In 1889, Croydon gained county borough status and control of the brigade passed to the county borough corporation.[1]

The brigade purchased their first steam engine in 1897, and by 1914 the entire fleet was motorised upon the purchase of a motor ambulance.

In January 1898, several members of Croydon's Fire Brigade Committee called for the dismissal of the Superintendent, Thompson, for allowing lax procedure and discipline. It was cited that brigade members visited licensed houses in contravention of formal rules, with the Superintendent's full knowledge and consent. In the event, the committee recommended the Superintendent be severely censured and that two members of the brigade be discharged.[4]

After attending a large timber conflagration on 8 May 1905, Croydon Fire Brigade was criticised by the head of the London Salvage Corps, Colonel Fox, who considered it "20 years behind the times for a prompt turn-out on a call of fire in a town of over 100,000 inhabitants."[5]

In 1911 a short, silent, black and white cine film was made demonstrating the duties carried out by the Croydon Fire Brigade. Footage includes extinguishing fires, the fireman's lift and catching a person jumping from a tower on to a safety sheet held by firemen.[6] Three years later during a drill, a member of the brigade was killed when a rope snapped while he was descending from a tower. Examination of the rope found it to be in excellent condition, other than the part that broke which had been weakened by acid. The coroner's jury announced a verdict of accidental death and apportioned no blame.[7]

The Great War saw reservist firefighters called up to serve. Replacement volunteers were provided from the workforce of local department stores, Grants, Kennards and Allders. On 13 October 1915, a Zeppelin airship dropped 18 bombs over Croydon. No fires broke out but the fire brigade was involved in rescue efforts and the recovery of bodies from the many damaged buildings.[8]

In the years following the appointment of Chief Fire Officer Frederick Delve, the brigade became the first in Britain to fit radio communications to headquarters in all appliances.[9]

The brigade formed an Auxiliary Fire Service in 1938 in preparation for the outbreak of World War II, and the main brigade was amalgamated into the National Fire Service in 1941, until being reformed in 1948 following the enactment of the Fire Services Act 1947. The AFS was reformed in 1949 as part of the Civil Defence Corps, intended to respond to a nuclear attack; two stations - Woodside and Old Town - were home to AFS units, and these remained until the brigade's dissolution.[1]

Throughout World War II, the brigade fought 2,542 major fires caused by bombing.

The brigade ceased to exist on 1 April 1965 upon the formation of the London Borough of Croydon. All stations were passed over to the London Fire Brigade, as well as the stations of Sanderstead and Purley of the Surrey Fire Brigade located in the Coulsdon and Purley Urban District which merged with the county borough to form the new London borough. The Old Town fire station became the headquarters of the LFB's southern command, and the Croydon Fire Brigade's last Chief Fire Officer, R.R Lloyd, became the commander of the southern command of the LFB, holding the rank of Assistant Chief Fire Officer.[1]

Chief Officers

Stations

Notable incidents

The brigade responded to many notable incidents during its time, including the following:[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Baker, Eddie (2004). On the Run. Jeremy Mills. ISBN 0-9546484-0-4.
  2. ^ "London Fire Brigade | History, key dates (Our history)". 18 June 2008. Archived from the original on 18 June 2008. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  3. ^ Young, Charles Frederick T. (1866). Fires, Fire Engines, and Fire Brigades: With a History of Manual and Steam Fire Engines, Their Construction, Use, and Management; Remarks on Fire-proof Buildings ... Statistics of the Fire Appliances in English Towns; Foreign Fire Systems; Hints for the Formation Of, and Rules For, Fire Brigades; and an Account of American Steam Fire Engines. Lockwood & Company. p. 359.
  4. ^ "The Croydon Fire Brigade". Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper. 16 January 1898. p. 8. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  5. ^ "Fire at Croydon. Damage estimated at £30,000". The Standard. 9 May 1905. p. 8. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  6. ^ "Action Call Croydon Fire Brigade". London's Screen Archives. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  7. ^ "Fireman's fatal fall". The Standard. 13 July 1914. p. 4. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  8. ^ Moore, Ald H. Keatley; Sayers, W. C. Berwick (28 March 2012). Croydon and the Great War: The Official History of the War Work of the Borough and its Citizens from 1914 to 1919. Andrews UK Limited. pp. 157–159. ISBN 978-1-78151-085-8.
  9. ^ a b "Sir Frederick Delve". www.london-fire.gov.uk. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Croydon". www.london-fire.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Air Travel – The Revolution – Historic Croydon Airport Trust". Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  12. ^ Truelove, Sam (3 December 2017). "How 400 firefighters tackled the famous Crystal Palace fire". croydonadvertiser. Retrieved 28 March 2023.