Temperature 11°c (52°f)
Clouds are Unknown
Humidity 93%
From 'This is The West Country'
History
The New Fire Stations
The earliest reference to a fire engine in Bridgwater was in 1725 when
the controversial George Bubb Doddington donated one to the town. In 1830
the engine, almost certainly not the 1725 version, was kept near the south
gate. By 1880, the brigade was based around the back of the Town Hall in
Clare Street where a new fire station was built in 1906. At that time Bridgwater
was much smaller than it is today. There was no housing as such beyond
the railway line, no Hamp or Durleigh estates. The fire brigade was made
of volunteers who lived and worked near the town centre. When the alarm
bell sounded, they would run to the station and the first two to arrive
would drag out the wheeled water pump and start running with it to the fire,
the later arrivals catching up on bicycles. On one occasion they were timed
at eight minutes from arrival at the station to reaching the fire. In 1935,
life got easier when a petrol-driven engine arrived. In 1964 the brigade
moved to its current headquarters in Colley Lane, after a short spell based
at the cattle market in Bath Road.
Text Copyright © 2008 Roger Evans
