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FIRE STATION #2 1001 E North Foothills Dr.

SPOKANE FIRE STATION 2

Spokane Fire Department (SFD) Station 2 has a long and storied history with SFD. Originally, it was located on Front Street and Division Street in the 1890s. It was moved to the intersection of Indiana Ave and Standard Street in the 1920s, and finally to North Foothills Drive and Nevada Street in 1992, where it resides today and continues to serve the Logan neighborhood. Station 2 houses (2) two full time staffed apparatus: Spokane Tower 2, with a crew of (4) four, and Spokane Engine 2, with a crew of (3) three, including a Paramedic. Station 2 houses (1) one of SFD’s (2) two water rescue teams and Water 2, a jet boat used to respond to water, river, and/or ice related emergencies. Station 2 is located at 1001 E North Foothill Drive and prides itself in being a part of the Logan neighborhood community, taking part in many local functions with Gonzaga Preparatory School, Gonzaga University, and other nearby organizations.

Station 2 Captain - Dave Kovac

Station 2 Phone - (509) 625-7102

Spokane Fire Administration - (509) 625-7000

STATION 2 APPARATUS

ENGINE 2- 2016 built Pierce Arrow XT PUC. These pumpers are built as compact as possible to deal with the narrow, rough streets of Spokane, carrying 500 gallons of water and nearly half a mile of hose with a 1500GPM pump.
TOWER 2 - 2018 Pierce Arrow XT PAP with a 100’ aerial ladder. Tower 2 has a platform at the tip of the ladder allowing firefighters to work off an elevated platform.
RESCUE 2 - 2012 Ford F350 4x4 Crew Cab-Used by the Water Rescue Team to Transport Kayaks and Equipment

STATION 2 HISTORY

Spokane’s Fire Department began with Station No. 1 and Station No. 2. After forming the Spokane Falls Volunteer Fire Department in 1884, Rescue Hose No. 1, made up of “white-collar men,” and Spokane Hose Company No. 2, made up of “working boys,” shared the same original meeting place in Glover Hall, later the first wood-frame fire station-located on Howard Street-, and fire equipment.

No. 2’s chemical cart with Howard Parish driving, circa 1891. Located at 217 E. Main.

Finally, in the summer of 1885, the cramped quarters became too much for the two companies. On August 1, volunteers physically moved an old lumber-yard office building from the corner of Howard and First, and positioned it one block away on Howard and Railroad. This relocated building was soon occupied by Spokane Hose Company No. 2. A 1500-pound bell had been purchased by the City Council in June of the same year and was placed in a custom thirty-foot tower situated behind the new Hose House No. 2, and chimed for the department for the very first time on September 11, 1885.

Stations No. 1 and No. 2 succumbed to the Great Fire of 1889, only the bell from Station No. 2 was salvaged. Both companies operated out of tents on Howard and Railroad Avenue after the fire. Their equipment began to rust and fall apart as they were exposed to one of the most severe winters in Spokane history. City officials planned new fire stations. In five months, two new fire stations were designed to house the firefighters and their horses, with plenty of room for their equipment to be protected from the harsh elements.

Spokane Fire Station No. 2 : Circa 1930

Station No. 2 has been relocated multiple times, sited variously at Sprague and Bernard, Main and Division, and the N.E. corner of Standard and Indiana. No. 2 housed the hospital for injured and ill horses, and was the only station to have firehouse dogs (according to photo archives). One early twentieth century firefighter distinctly recounted his days as a Station No. 2 firefighter.

In 1978, 93 year old Henry C. Smith, was the oldest living firefighter in Spokane. Hired on in 1918, Smith was first assigned to Station No. 7, however within two weeks was transferred to No. 2, then located on Standard and Indiana. In his twenty-three years of service, he remained there until his retirement.

Endearingly termed "the old people's home," Smith playfully described No. 2 as the station firefighters went when they were old, and ready for retirement; Smith was 33 years old at the time of his transfer. Smith would probably have thought differently if he knew the lengths the first volunteer firefighters went in order to establish professional stations, including moving a building by hand.

By Caitlin M. Shain, “Spokane Fire Station No. 2: Spokane's First Firefighters,” Spokane Historical, accessed May 4, 2021, https://spokanehistorical.org/items/show/441.