S Site Firestation2 1946 Opt

Snapshots of post-Manhattan Project firefighters

Share

Photos show staff and station from Los Alamos in the 1940s

September 1, 2021

While the easy access to nature gives Los Alamos many benefits, it also brings a high risk of wildfire. Fire mitigation has a long history in our region, and these photos provide a glimpse of operations just after the Manhattan Project.

One image shows Fire Station No. 2, located at S-Site, in 1946. The station was commissioned just two years earlier, when Project Y was in full swing. The assigned crew mostly responded to brush fires in the ample surrounding forest. Structure fires were handled by Fire Station No. 1, which was located downtown.

From late 1943 to mid-1947, enlisted service members staffed the Los Alamos Fire Department, led by a civilian chief. Some of those firefighters are seen in the second image. On the back of the original photo, a note reads: “Fall of 1946. All are GI's Holding fire house with 400 lb pressure” (sic). Eventually, experienced civilians replaced Army personnel in the department.

Do you like taking a look at history? Explore more archival photos from the ‘40s and later years in our online collections.

G Is Fall 1946 Firehose Use

More @theBradbury Stories

@theBradbury Home
Jim Eckles Opt 00825 Card

History of wildlife at White Sands Missile Range

Enjoy a public talk at Fuller Lodge and reception for BSMA members

Benigno Color Card

The Periodic Table: Engineering for space with Benigno Sandoval

Your chance to ask questions about technology that is out of this world

Taraka Dale Card

Frontiers in Science: Breaking the cycle of plastic pollution

Biochemist Taraka Dale discusses the smart cells that could clean up our future

Kwage Mesa Trail Interp Panel Unveiling 7071c Card

Discover Pajarito Plateau history along Kwage Mesa Interpretive Trail

The Laboratory is one of project’s collaborators

Trucks on A Highway Cdc2b Card

NSS: The future of trucking is hydrogen

A new Los Alamos project could soon bring clean-energy semi-trucks to a highway near you