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.........................................................(Photo Courtesy of NLRFD Capt. (Retired) Jim Dancy)
This 1939 Seagrave was the first closed cab apparatus in the history of the North Little Rock Fire Department! It seated seven firefighters. Access to the rear seating was gained from a split rear hosebed. This is an incredibly significant photo. The photo is obviously very old. Captain Dancy told me that the story he heard was that the pumper was delivered on the Washington Avenue Platform, which would have been the Rose City Team Track and Platform of the Cotton Belt Railroad. (My Dad was the Freight Agent for Cotton Belt in NLR from 1952-1971, so I am quite familiar with that property.) The people from Seagrave thought the truck was supposed to go to Little Rock, and consequently first drove it to Little Rock, where this picture was taken outside the old L.R.F.D. Central Station at Markham and Arch Streets. The Arkansas Democrat reported on July 27, 1939 that "a seven-passenger cab-type fire truck" was to be When the Rose City Station opened in 1949, the pumper there was known as Company 4 and the pumper at |
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(Above Photo Used With Permission of Bill Treadway)
The '39 Seagrave when it was already a Reserve (No. 8). Either it was filling in for a pumper out of service here, or
Reserve Apparatus had been called to this fire.
The '39 Seagrave became a reserve pumper in 1955 upon the city's purchase of another new Seagrave 1000
GPM pumper. I remember the '39 Seagrave filling in as a standby at the new Station 7 when I was in junior
high school. (The station was in the middle of the woods at that time with only one side of Mc Cain paved as
far as the fire station only. The pumper was sold in 1976 at auction for $1500 or $2500 to Dr. Gary Wallis. He
later sold the pumper.