Details for Rockport Volunteer Fire Department

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018115

Data

Marker Number 18115
Atlas Number 5507018115
Marker Title Rockport Volunteer Fire Department
Index Entry Rockport Volunteer Fire Department
Address 212 N. Gagon
City Rockport
County Aransas
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 691130
UTM Northing 3101464
Subject Codes fire departments
Marker Year 2015
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 212 N. Gagon Street, Smith and Wood, Block 9 Lot A
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text As Rockport grew as a center of commerce and a tourism destination in the 1880s, businessman Sam Smith, who owned several homes and businesses, donated the city’s first firefighting equipment. The unit cost about $1400 and consisted of a horse-drawn wagon with chemical tanks. With W. S. Doughty the first to drive the wagon to a fire and Fred Hoopes named as the first fire chief, the Rockport Volunteer Fire Department organized in 1885. In 1913, a Model T Ford was purchased for $300, remaining in use even after larger trucks were acquired. Interest in the Volunteer Fire Department waned in the 1920s but was revived in June 1938, following a nighttime blaze which consumed the Natalie Apartment House (the Old Grewe Place). A fortunate change in wind direction and the help of the Aransas Pass Fire Department helped minimize damage to surrounding properties. In response, the following week Dr. Albert Collier organized the Aransas County Emergency Corps (ACEC), whose first unit was the Rockport Volunteer Fire Department with Collier as Fire Chief. The mission of the ACEC was to provide fire protection, patrol the beaches, and run an ambulance service. Within six months, a city bond election passed, water mains were installed and the city purchased a 600-gallon-per-minute pumper. The first permanent fire station was completed on St. Mary’s street in July 1939. Hurricane Celia damaged that facility in 1970, and a new main station was built on Concho Street in 1972. Satellite stations have been built as the city has grown, beginning with a site on Henderson Street in 1983. While the department has received city and county funding plus donations and grants for equipment, volunteers, some representing multiple generations, remain the heart of the department trained to save lives and property.

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