Harvard Shield masthead element Harvard University Gazette
Search the Gazette
HOME : Community COMMUNITY Prev issues | Contact us | Harvard News Office
Current Issue:
September 26, 2002


News
News, events, features

Science/Research
Latest scientific findings

Profiles
The people behind the university

Community
Harvard and neighbor communities

Sports
Scores, highlights, upcoming games

On Campus
Newsmakers, notes, students, police log

Arts
Museums, concerts, theater

Calendar
Two-week listing of upcoming events

 

 


Firefighting boots and pants
Firefighting boots and pants are at the ready for a quick getaway from the fire station.

HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES

In the hot seat:

Local firefighters protect Harvard's people and property

By Beth Potier
Gazette Staff
Staff photos by Kris Snibbe

Even before Sept. 11, professional firefighters enjoyed the glow of a heroic mystique. Stock characters in picture books and childhood stories, they've long captured the imagination of children and remained in our adult psyches as steadfast, brave men and women who protect our lives and property.

At the Cambridge Fire Department's Engine 8 and Ladder 4 station, at the intersection of Garden and Sherman streets (aka Taylor Square), the legend endures, tempered by the low-key, almost "aw-shucks" demeanor of the firefighters there. Relaxed in their down time, browsing the morning's paper, and preparing for the station's upcoming move for renovations, the eight men and women on each 24-hour shift are at the ready, their boots and coveralls waiting at the open doors to the trucks.

Firefighter Chuck Anderson
Firefighter Chuck Anderson responds to a false alarm at Austin Hall at the Law School. Anderson works out of Cambridge's Engine 8 and Ladder 4 station, which serves the area north of Harvard Square.

Joe Thorp, a firefighter for 34 years who has worked out of this station for 25 years, shows off the station's equipment: a ladder truck with a 105-foot ladder, an engine truck, and two training vehicles. He also debunks a few common myths. The station hasn't had a firehouse dog in many years, he said, and the ladder truck does not make kitty-rescue calls. Thorp recited a standard firefighter justification: "Have you ever seen a dead cat in a tree?"

Serving the area north of Harvard Square, including the nearby Radcliffe Quad, Law School, and Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, these firefighters are no strangers to Harvard property. Student cooking accounts for many visits to the University, said Lt. John Lund.

Firefighter Phil Dooley
Firefighter Phil Dooley arranges fire hoses in rows.

"Harvard is a very good college as far as helping us out," said Lund, adding that the University has spent significant dollars on systems that assist the firefighters. Lund has high praise, too, for Harvard's facilities and maintenance workers, who always meet his crew on the scene with the appropriate keys and deep knowledge of the buildings they're protecting. "Those guys do a great job."

In addition to Harvard, the station protects some of Cambridge's toniest properties, but that doesn't add to the firefighters' stress level.

"The more affluent the community, the less runs you're going to have," said Lund, noting that residents of multimillion-dollar homes generally take extraordinary care to protect them from fire.

"But when you do get a call, they say 'are you coming in here with those dirty boots?'" added Thorp.









Copyright 2002 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College