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3 minute read
Fire Department history finds place to rest
Vintage helmets, ladder dog, big ball of string among collectibles
BY CHRIS STEVENS
An old glass-fronted bookcase has been given a new life holding antique objects at Marblehead Fire Headquarters.
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“We’ve always wanted to start making a place where we could collect historical stuff,” said Fire Chief Jason Gilliland, showing off his latest acquisitions.
“It’s only been here a couple of months, and I’ve already had people send stuff in.”
The huge piece of furniture has sat in the Building Commissioner’s office in the Mary Alley Municipal Building for decades until recently, when the current commissioner said he had no use for it. Gilliland said he put in a call to the Historical Society, but they had no room for it, so he asked if he could have it. Everyone said yes.
A relic itself, the threesection-cabinet is original to the Mary Alley from its days as a hospital, Gilliland said. Now it holds old fire helmets, several made of leather, as well as a chief’s hat of wool and leather, which Gilliland called a rare find. There is also an all-service mask that’s more than a little scary looking.
“Could you imagine wearing that thing,” Gilliland said of the awkward-looking mask connected to a small metal tank. “You used to have to have 1-percent oxygen to make it work, and those things would get really hot against your chest. That’s what they used to wear instead of the air tanks. It’s got activated charcoal in there, which heats up.”
Gilliland said they also found a “ladder dog,” a chain with a hook and a spike on the end. The chain would wrap around the ladder, anchored with the hook, and the spike would then be tapped into a wall to keep the ladder from falling away from the building, he said. But perhaps the most unusual thing in the bookcase thus far is a ginormous ball of string.
“It’s heavy,” Gilliland said of the volleyballsized mass.
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According to Gilliland, back in the day, the laundry service, used for linens and other items, delivered fresh laundry wrapped in brown paper tied with string. When firefighter Nathaniel Rodgers, who served from
1942 to 1971, started with the department, he also began a habit of collecting the string and winding it into a ball.
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“The laundry stopped using string, probably in the late ’90s, but this ball got passed from firefighter to firefighter,” Gilliland said. “Scott Murray, Captain Murray, saved it, which is why we still have it.”
Gilliland has also acquired a large portrait of William Atkins, who served with the department from 1920 to 1928 and was interim chief for a short while. That came along after he received a call from Atkins’ granddaughter, asking Gilliland if he would like the portrait for the collection.
“They said no one wanted it, so I said yes,” he said.
They also have a pair of his turnout boots sitting high on a shelf.
Gilliland said eventually he will make cards to explain the history of each item.
“I have a huge appreciation for history; I want this stuff,” he said. “And as we continue to find stuff, we’ll continue to put it in there.”
CU rrENT rECOMMENDATIONS
In “Current Recommendations,” roving reporter Frances Hill pops into local business to ask people about their media recommendations.
O’RAMAS, 148 Washington St. INTERVIEWEE:
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Suzi Noble, owner LISTENING (music, podcasts): “I’m an NPR listener in general.”
STREAMING (watching on TV):
“I’m rewatching ‘The Borgias’ and am taken by the history, politics, setting and costuming. Also watching the last season of ‘The Crown’ and am taken by the same things. And watching ‘Wednesday’ [by] Tim Burton. I watch anything he directs.”
READING (or Audible): “Recently, I moved after 37 years in the same place. I moved many many books and decided to start reading them: Henry James’ ] Goodbye Sweetwater’ and Alice Munro’s ‘Dear Life.’”
SOMETHING PEOPLE MAY NOT KNOW ABOUT YOU OR YOUR CAREER: “I was a bicycle messenger in Boston — pre-fax machine!”
SHUBIE’S
INTERVIEWEE:
Doug Shube, general manager LISTENING
(music, podcasts): “Lizzo, the new Beyonce album, big fan of Greyson Chance — actually saw Lizzo and Greyson live — oh, and Rüfüs Du Sol (more house music).”
STREAMING (watching on TV): “Really into ‘Yellowstone.’ Just finished Wednesday. Waiting for (season two of) ‘Heartstopper’!”
READING (or Audible): “Just started ‘Trust Exercise’ by Susan Choi. My goal is to read a little more this year.”
SOMETHING PEOPLE MAY NOT KNOW ABOUT YOU OR YOUR CAREER: “I literally wanted to be a farmer growing up (thus my love of ‘Yellowstone’!) I searched the Yellow Pages for tractors. But now, instead of a farm, I got a store!”
ARNOULD GALLERY
INTERVIEWEE: Gene Arnould, owner
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BUSINESS: Arnould Gallery
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LISTENING (music, podcasts): “Jazz all the time, and here are a couple of new ones: Brian Auger, ‘Full Circle’ and Esperanza Spalding, ‘Alive at the Village.’ Esperanza is the best new artist of the year in every genre. Had her two times at the Marblehead Summer Jazz Festival.” STREAMING (watching on TV): “‘PBS NewsHour’ and ‘Masterpiece Theatre’”
READING (or Audible): “I’m reading ‘All Quiet on the Western Front.’ I’d seen it on one of the streaming networks. Also reading Steve Martin’s ‘Number One is Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions.’”
SOMETHING PEOPLE MAY NOT KNOW ABOUT YOU OR YOUR CAREER: “Keith Richards and his wife stayed at my B&B, Brimblecomb Hill, in 2001. And he was very well behaved!”
— Compiled by Frances Hill