JFD History | Community | Contact | Members | Gallery | Contribute | Shop | Guestbook | JFD Home

Jerome Fire Department History
By Gary
Felix, Fire Marshal and Dept. Historian
Jerome is a town born from fire.
In 1876 copper was discovered by American pioneers on the steep
hillsides of Mingus Mountain in the wild, untamed reaches of the
Arizona territory. Claims were registered immediately, and a rough and
tumble mining camp was quickly established.
As was
the case in many of the early mining camps in the wild west, no thought
was given to any long term planning. The only plan was to get the ore
out of the mountain and to market. Men dreamed of riches and gave
little thought to anything else. As a result, only the most temporary
of structures were built at the camp. This situation created extemely
dangerous fire conditions. And fire, given half a chance, will exploit
those kinds of conditions. Inevitably, the mining camps was devastated
by a series of fires in its early years.
Four
fires in the late 1890’s alone were sufficiently devastating
to be placed in the category of disasters.
Jerome’s conflagrations occurred in rapid succession. There
were many conditions that existed at the time which contributed to
Jerome’s ability to burn so easily: pine buildings, some
covered in canvas; structures packed closely together on a steep
hillside; the use of kerosene lamps and wood burning stoves with clay
and wood chimneys. Other factors which contributed greatly to the fires
were quoted in the local paper as wind, lack of adequate water supply,
and alcohol consumption among the populace.
This formula for disaster produced a series of destructive fires. After
each burn, citizens lived in tents while reconstructing the their
structures only to have them burn again. In 1897 a madam of one of the
houses of pleasure ran into the street in a panic and offered free
business to the entire fire department from then on if they would save
her house. Her house was saved.
Bill Adams, editor of the Jerome Mining News,
remarked that he might as well have left the type set up for the next
big conflagration, “Jerome Burns Again.”
In the late 1890's the town was devastated by one conflagaration after
another:
- April
24, 1894 - Two blocks in the commercial district burned down.
- December
24, 1897 - Christmas fire destroyed the business district and many
homes.
- September
17, 1898 - Once again the business district and many homes went up in
flames..
- May8,
1899 - 24 saloons, 15 Chinese restaurants and many homes were burned.

After the 1899 fire consumed buildings freshly rebuilt from the last
two fires, the burnt out mining camp organized and decided that in
order to protect itself from further conflagarations, it must
incorporate as a legally recognized town.
The Yavapai County Board of Supervisors granted incorporation in 1899.
The new town council acted promptly to correct the woeful lack of an
adequate supply of water and fire fighting equipment. Incorporation
allowed the citizens to collect taxes in order to raise the money to
erect water tanks, bury fire lines, construct a fire station, outline a
fire district, and adopt one of the first building codes designed to
lessen the occurrence of fire. The new code didn’t go very
far; its main provision was to compel the construction of stone or
brick fire places and chimneys and prohibit tents. Fortunately, it did
allow for the creation of the Jerome Volunteer Fire Department.
Jerome was still susceptible to fire, however. Fires that occurred in
later years include:
- 1902 -
Four homes on the hogback.
- 1907 -
Eight homes in the foreign quarter.
- 1911 -
Four homes and the TF Miller warehouse.
- 1915 -
The
famous Montana Hotel burned.
- 1917 -
An entire block burned including rooming houses and homes, displacing
90 families.
- 1918 -
60 homes burned in the gulch.
- 1926 -
Jerome Hotel and 26 homes burned.

Through the years that followed, the Department continued to develop by
acquiring new members and equipment. The town itself went through
cycles of boom and bust. In the early thirties, at the beginning of the
Depression, the mines closed down, and many people had to move to other
parts of the state and country in order to find work. In 1934 Phelps
Dodge took over and began extensive blasting less than a half of a mile
from Jerome's commercial district. This blasting, sometimes amounting
to as much as 225,000 pounds of dynamite at one time, shook the town
down to its foundations week after week. Eventually, one whole block of
Main St. on the downhill side slid so far down the hill that all of the
buildings had to be dismantled. These structures included a J.C.
Pennys, a full size movie theater, a drug store, a billiard parlor, a
general store, and a barber shop. No structures have been built in the
slide area to this day.
During
World War II there was a brief boom in copper prices and the town
prospered briefly, but when the war ended, copper prices collapsed, and
it was no longer feasible for mining to continue. The quality of the
ore coming out of the mountain was of an inferior grade, and Phelps
Dodge ceased operations in 1952.
It was
at this point that Jerome became one of the most famous ghost towns of
the American West. From a population height of 15,000 in the twenties,
by the middle fifties there were only a few people who were still
calling Jerome home. This ghostly condition lasted through the fifties
and through most of the sixties. During this period the Fire Department
fell into disrepair because of the lack of active members. Fortunately,
during this period the town must have been under a certain state of
grace, because no devastating fires threatened the town, as in the
past. In the late sixties, the town was discovered by members of what
was then called "the Counter Culture". Young people moved to Jerome
from all parts of the country, bought houses for next to nothing,
opened shops, started businesses, and, in general, started to restore
the town.
In the
early seventies, a group of these young people (both men and women)
joined the Fire Department and starting working to bring the department
into the modern age. Slowly but surely newer equipment was acquired.
Training was brought into the modern age. A Prevention program was
initiated. An Emergency Medical Service group was formed. Recruitment
swelled the ranks, and by the early eighties, Jerome once again had a
Fire Dept. that could deal with emergencies in an efficient and
professional manner. And, like the majority of fire departments around
the country, it was an all volunteer organization.
During this period,
the town and the department were fortunate to have a fire chief whose
leadership paved the way for the Jerome Volunteer Fire Department to
become one of the most respected departments in the region. David Hall
served as Chief from the early eighties until June of 2001. Under his
leadership the department evolved into a modern, well equipped, well
trained unit with a selfless team spirit that allowed it to handle
various structural and brush fires during the eighties and nineties
that, in the past, might have burned large sections of town.
In the
middle nineties the department obtained, through a grant, a custom
built Pierce pumper with a short wheel base, low geared rear-end, and
transverse engineering deck.In 1998 the Department acquired a new
station in the uptown area with the help of a Community Block
Development Grant, sale of ten acres of Town property in the Verde
Valley, and fund raising efforts by the community through the auspices
of the Jerome Vol. Fire Dept. Aux.
Since
then, the department has continued to upgrade its services. It
established a rope rescue team to deal with rescue calls up on the
mountain above town and those of neighboring agencies. It has acquired
a new Compressed Air/Foam pumper (again, through a grant) for
structural and wildland fires.
The
current membership honors the colorful tradition of the Town of Jerome
and its Volunteer Fire Department. In 1999 the Department was
officially one hundred years old and to this day is still going strong.

Photo
by Ron Chilson - click here for his website
JFD History | Community | Contact | Members | Gallery | Contribute | Shop | Guestbook | JFD Home