Review of Frank Cooper's book Bradwell Fire Service - The First Fifty Years 1939-1959, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 19th April 2004, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
BRADWELL FIRE SERVICE
THE FIRST FIFTY YEARS 1939-1989
Frank Cooper, author of this comprehensive and entertaining
book, is one of 12 men to have served over 20 years with
Bradwell Fire Brigade in its first half-century. So he is well
placed to go behind the scenes, up the ladders, down the shafts
and places where others would fear to tread - for little
financial reward but an abundance of community spirit and job
satisfaction.
Bradwell is a retained fire station, meaning that its
firefighters are part-time volunteers rather than full-time
employees. Over the years many of them have been released to
save lives and property through the generosity of their
employers: Newburgh Engineering and Blue Circle cement works,
now part of the Lafarge Group. At one time a typical crew might
also have included an insurance man, a painter and decorator and
an electrician/TV repairer.
After years of talk about a local fire service, Bradwell was
provided in 1938 with two lengths of hose, one brass fitting, a
stirrup pump and two buckets of sand. The war years were looming
and the story continues under shades of Dad's Army. The
Auxiliary Fire Service premises was a wooden hut, firefighting
equipment was transported on a builder's handcart, two wooden
ladders were borrowed on trust, and uniforms consisted of navy
blue boiler suits, wellingtons and army tin helmets painted fire
service grey. A later change from black to yellow was achieved
with a tin of paint. The village fire hydrants were originally
supplied from a reservoir which dried up every summer, the first
sign being tadpoles coming out of the taps!
From these humble beginnings Bradwell Fire Brigade has
progressed to modern-day equipment via a Green Goddess fire
engine - with a bell! - new premises with a telephone, and a
siren fixed to the chimney of Mr Johnson's ironmongery shop.
The author has unearthed stories of indenciary bombs, the
'rescue' of a tin containing a farmer's life savings, animals
hauled from mine shafts, and moorland fires extinguished after
weeks of gruelling effort. Things once grew really hot when the
parish council faced charges of trespass on fire service
property.
Frank Cooper spices his yarns with humour while taking pains to
record the immeasurable service given by colleagues past and
present. With 204 pages and over 70 photographs 'Bradwell Fire
Service, The First Fifty Years' is published by Ashridge Press
at £8.50. On sale locally or to order by quoting
ISBN 1-901214-16-8.