<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IV</h2>
<h3>FAMOUS RESCUES BY NEW YORK FIRE-BOATS FROM RED-HOT OCEAN LINERS</h3>
<div class='cap'>AFTER all has been said that may be about our admirable
fire-engines, and endless stories have
been told of gallant fights made by the engine lads
for life and property, there remains this fact: that New
York possesses a far more formidable weapon against
fires than the plucky little "steamers" that go clanging
and tooting about our streets. The fire-boat is as
much superior to the familiar fire-engine as a rapid-fire
cannon is superior to a rifle. A single fire-boat
like the <i>New-Yorker</i> will throw as much water in a
given time as twenty ordinary fire-engines: it will
throw twelve thousand gallons in a minute—that is,
fifty tons; or, if we imagine this great quantity of
water changed into a rope of ice, say an inch thick, it
would reach twenty miles.</div>
<p>Suppose we go aboard her now, this admirable
<i>New-Yorker</i>, and look about a little. People come
a long way to see her, for she's the largest and finest
fire-boat in the world. Pretty, isn't she? All brass
and hard wood and electric lights, everything shining
like a pleasure-yacht. Looks like a gunboat with rows
of cannon all around her—queer, stumpy little cannon,
that have wheels above their mouths. Those are hose
connections, like hydrants in a city, where they screw
fast the rubber lines. She has twenty-one on a side;
that makes forty-two "gates," as the engineer calls<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN></span>
them, without counting four monitors aloft—those
things on the pilot-house that look like telescopes with
long red tails. It was the monitors, especially "Big
Daddy," that did such great work against those North
German Lloyders, in their drift down the river, in
1900, with decks ablaze and red-hot iron hulls. We
shall hear all about that day if we sit us down quietly
in the fire quarters ashore and get the crew started.</p>
<p>Stepping over-side again, here we are in the home
of the fire-boat crew. It's more like a club than an
engine-house. No horses stamping about, no stable;
but pictures on the walls, and men playing cribbage
or reading, and nobody in a hurry. Plenty of time
for tales of adventure, unless that gong takes to
tapping.</p>
<p>And here comes Gallagher, sliding down yonder
brass column from the sleeping-rooms. He's the lad
who did fine things in that great fire at the Mallory
pier—saved a man's life and made the roll of honor by
it. We'll never get the story from him, but the other
boys will tell us.</p>
<div class="figright"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus57.jpg" width-obs="361" height-obs="600" alt=""INTO THIS STREET OF FIRE, BETWEEN THE TWO PIERS, STEAMED THE BIG FIRE-BOAT, STRAIGHT IN, WITH FOUR STREAMS PLAYING TO PORT AND FOUR TO STARBOARD, ALL DOING THEIR PRETTIEST."" title="" /> <span class="caption">"INTO THIS STREET OF FIRE, BETWEEN THE TWO PIERS, STEAMED THE BIG FIRE-BOAT, STRAIGHT IN, WITH FOUR STREAMS PLAYING TO PORT AND FOUR TO STARBOARD, ALL DOING THEIR PRETTIEST."</span></div>
<p>If ever fire-boats proved their value, it was that night
in May, 1900, when Pier 19, East River, caught fire,
with all its length of inflammable freight. Close to
three o'clock in the morning it was, and a hurricane
from the northeast was driving the flames toward land.
Before the engines could start, a fire-wave had leaped
across South Street and was raging down the block.
And another fire-wave had leaped across the dock between
Pier 19 and Pier 20, setting fire to a dozen
barges and lighters moored there, and to the steamship
<i>Neuces</i> of the Mallory line. And presently all these
were blazing, some with cargoes of cotton and oil,
blazing until the lower end of the island looked out of
the night in ghastly illumination, a terrible picture in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></SPAN></span>
red and black. They say it was bright enough that
night half a mile away for a man to pick up a pin.</p>
<p>There is no harder problem for the engines than
these fierce-driven water-front fires that sweep in suddenly
shoreward, for they must be taken head on, with
all the smoke in the firemen's faces, and water often
lacking, strange to say, although the river is so near.
For the fire-boats, however, the advantage is the other
way; they attack from the rear, where they see what
they are doing, and can pump from a whole ocean.
Besides that, they attack with so formidable a battery
that no hook-and-ladder corps is needed to "break
open" for them. The three-inch stream from Big
Daddy alone will tear off roofs and rip out beams like
the play of artillery; and if that is not sufficient, the
boys have only to hitch on the four-and-a-half-inch
nozzle and set the two pumps feeding it five thousand
gallons a minute, or twenty tons of water. Under
that shock there is no wall built of brick and mortar
that will not crumble.</p>
<p>When the <i>New-Yorker</i> came up on this memorable
night the fifth alarm had sounded and things were
looking serious. Piers 19 and 20 were in full flame,
and every floating thing between them. Into this
street of fire steamed the big fire-boat, straight in, with
four streams playing to port and four to starboard, all
doing their prettiest. She went ahead slowly, fighting
back the flames foot by foot, on pier and steamship
and kindling small craft that drifted by in fiery procession.
And the air in the men's faces was like the
breath of a furnace!</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus58.jpg" width-obs="361" height-obs="600" alt="GALLAGHER'S RESCUE OF A SWEDE FROM THE BURNING BARGE." title="" /> <span class="caption">GALLAGHER'S RESCUE OF A SWEDE FROM THE BURNING BARGE.</span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></SPAN></span>Here it was that Gallagher won his place on the
roll of honor in this wise. For some time they had
heard shouts that were lost in the din of conflagration;
but presently they made them out as a warning from<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></SPAN></span>
somebody somewhere that a man was on a burning
barge just passing them. It seemed incredible that a
man could be there, alive and silent; but, with the
spirit of his trade, Gallagher determined to see if it
were true: he would board the barge anyhow; and as
the <i>New-Yorker</i> swung close alongside, he sprang down
to her deck, where things were a good deal warmer than
is necessary for a man's health. And as he leaped,
John Kerrigan, at the steering-wheel of Big Daddy,
turned its mighty stream against the barge, keeping it
just over Gallagher's head, so that the spray drenched
down upon him while the stream itself smote a path
ahead through the fire.</p>
<p>Down this path went Gallagher, searching for a
man, avoiding pitfalls of smoke and treacherous timbers,
confident that Kerrigan would hold the flames
back, yet see to it that the terrible battering-ram of
water did not strike him—for to be struck with the full
force of Big Daddy's stream is like being pounded by
a trip-hammer.</p>
<p>Gallagher reached the cabin door, found it locked,
put his back against it and smashed it in. Then he
went on, groping, choking, feeling his way, searching
for his man. And at last on one of the bunks he
found him, stretched out in a stupor of sleep or
drowsed by the stifle of gases. The man was a Swede
named Thomas Bund, and he came out of that cabin
on Gallagher's back, came off that burning barge on
Gallagher's back, and if he does not bless the name of
Gallagher all his days, then there is no gratitude in
Sweden.</p>
<p>Here we see the kind of service the fire-boats render.
On this night they saved the situation and a million
dollars besides; they worked against a blazing steamship,
against blazing piers, against blazing runaways;<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></SPAN></span>
worked for eleven hours, until the last smolder of fire
had been drowned under thirty thousand tons of water.
And not a year passes but they do something of like
sort. Now it is a steamship, say the ill-starred <i>Leona</i>,
that comes up the bay with a cargo of cotton burning
between decks. The <i>New-Yorker</i> makes short work
of her. Again it is a blazing lumber district along
the river, like the great McClave yards, where the fire-boats
fought for eight days and nights before they
gained the victory. But they <i>did</i> gain it. Or it may
be a fire back from the river, like the Tarrant horror,
where the land engines, sore pressed, welcome far-carried
streams from the fire-boats as help that may
turn the balance.</p>
<p>"Why, this fire-boat's only ten years old, sir," said
Captain Braisted, "and she's saved more than she cost
every year we've had her." Then he added, as his
eyes dwelt proudly on the trim craft purring at her
dock-side: "And she cost a tidy sum, too."</p>
<p>Let us come now to that placid summer afternoon,
to that terrible Saturday, June 30, 1900, when tug-boats
in the North River looked upon a fire the like of which
the river had never known and may not know again.
They looked from a distance, we may be sure, these
tug-boats; for when a great liner swings down-stream,
a roaring, red-hot furnace, it is time for wooden-deck
craft to scurry out of the way. And here were three
liners in such case, the <i>Bremen</i>, the <i>Saale</i>, and the
<i>Main</i>, all burning furiously and beyond human help,
one would say, for their iron hulls were vast fire-traps,
with port-holes too small for rescue, and the decks
swept with flame. It was hard to know that back of
those steep sides were men in anguish, held like prisoners
in a fortress of glowing steel that sizzled as it
drifted—three fortresses of glowing steel.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then up steamed the <i>New-Yorker</i> and the <i>Van
Wyck</i>, with men behind fire-shields against the blistering
scorch and glare, with monitors and rail-pipes
spurting out all that the pumps could send. The <i>New-Yorker</i>
took the <i>Bremen</i>, the <i>Van Wyck</i> took the
<i>Saale;</i> and there they lay for hours, close on the edge
of the fire, like a pair of salamanders, engines throbbing,
pumps pounding, pilots at the wheel watching
every movement of the liners, following foot by foot,
drawing in closer when they gained on the fire, holding
away a shade when the fire gained on them, fighting
every minute.</p>
<p>"It's queer," said Captain Braisted, "but when you
play a broadside of heavy streams on a vessel's side,
say at fifty feet, there's a strong recoil that keeps driving
the fire-boat back. It's as if you were pushing off
all the time with poles instead of water. And you
have to keep closing in with the engines."</p>
<p>"How near did you get to the <i>Bremen?</i>" I asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, we finally got right up against her, say after
forty-five minutes. You can cool off a lot of red-hot
iron in forty-five minutes when you've got forty-five
tons of water a minute to do it with."</p>
<p>It was just as they came alongside that one of the
crew made out a human shape in the coal-chute some
ten feet up the <i>Bremen's</i> side. And presently they
saw others there, blackened faces, fierce and fearful
eyes. And above the fire crackle and the crash of
water they heard men's cries.</p>
<p>Straightway a ladder was brought, and three of the
crew, Breen, Kerrigan, and Hartmann, lifted it on
their shoulders until the top rung came up level with
the coal-chute. But this, instead of bringing relief to
the fire-bound company, brought madness; for now
they fought and struggled so, each one wishing to go<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249"></SPAN></span>
first, that none were able to go at all. "They were like
wild beasts," said one of the crew.</p>
<p>In this crisis Gallagher sprang up the ladder to the
top, where he could look in through the hole, the one
hole in all the vessel's sides that was large enough for
a man's body to pass. And reaching in here, he
grabbed what was nearest, arm, leg, or shock of hair,
and hauled it out and lowered it down the ladder to
Captain Braisted, who stood below him and passed the
bundle on. Then Gallagher grabbed again and again,
pulling forth by sheer strength one man at a time, taking
them as they came, Germans or Italians, officers
or coal-handlers, anything that was alive. Down
came the tumbling mass, yelling, praying, fighting, a
miserable human stream; and when it was all over
and the count was taken, they had saved thirty-two
lives.</p>
<p>Now one of the rescued men spoke up in broken
English, and said that there were others still on the
<i>Bremen</i>, down in the engine-room. And Gallagher
volunteered to go aboard for the rescue if one of the
men who knew the vessel would come along to guide
him. But no man offered this service. It was too
hazardous a thing, they said; where the fire was not
raging there was smoke and darkness, and the engine-room
was far down in the vessel. They had groped
about themselves for half an hour in despair, searching
for the way out, and now that they had found it,
they were not fools enough to go in again.</p>
<p>"But you say there are others in there alive!" insisted
Gallagher.</p>
<p>The rescued ones shook their heads blankly at this;
in their minds the law of self-preservation rode over
all other things at this moment. Poor men, they
were half dazed by their sufferings and the shock!<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus59.jpg" width-obs="367" height-obs="600" alt="SAVING THE MEN OF THE "BREMEN."" title="" /> <span class="caption">SAVING THE MEN OF THE "BREMEN."</span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"All right," cried Gallagher; "I'll go in and find
'em without any guide. Hold the ladder, boys."</p>
<p>And up he went!</p>
<p>"I'm with you, Ned," called Captain Braisted; and
without more words these two climbed in through the
coal-chute and started down the black, hot, stifling
ways for the engine-room. And somehow they got
there safely, and found eight men still alive, all Germans,
engineers and their assistants. But when the
firemen called to them to hurry out for their lives,
they refused to move. Their duty was with their engines,
said they; they had to run the engines; they
were much obliged to the American gentlemen, but
they could not leave their post.</p>
<p>Gallagher and Braisted could scarcely believe their
ears.</p>
<p>"But you will die!" they urged.</p>
<p>The Germans thought it very likely; still they could
not leave.</p>
<p>"But it won't do any good; the vessel is past hope;
you will be burned to death."</p>
<p>The Germans understood perfectly: they would be
burned to death at their engines; and as they were all
of this mind and not to be shaken, the firemen could
only say "good-by" and set forth sadly on the return
journey. And this time they nearly lost themselves,
but at last their good star prevailed, and they came
without harm to their comrades, who listened in wonder
to the news they brought. It seemed such utter
folly, the decision of that unhappy engine-room crew,
yet there was something almost splendid in their stubborn
devotion to duty. Quietly they had looked death
in the face, a horrible, lingering death, and had not
flinched; and days later, when the steamer had burned
herself out and lay grounded in the mud, cold and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></SPAN></span>
black, the wreckers found these faithful though mistaken
men still at their posts, still by their engines,
where they had waited in spite of everything—where
they had perished.</p>
<p>All this time the <i>Van Wyck</i> had been working on
the <i>Saale</i>, but in a harder fight, for the flames raged
here as fiercely as on the <i>Bremen</i>, while the smaller
fire-boat could throw against them only twenty-five
tons of water a minute, which was not enough.</p>
<p>So, now, when all had been done that could be for
the <i>Bremen</i>, orders came that the <i>New-Yorker</i>, too,
turn her streams against the <i>Saale</i>, and a little later
the two fire-boats were in massed attack upon the unhappy
liner, which swung down the bay like a blazing
island, and presently grounded by the bow on the Communipaw
mud-flats, and rested there for the last agony.</p>
<p>The story of those tragic hours is not for telling
now. There were more heroic rescues. There were
brave attempts at rescue that availed nothing. The
fire lads stood on the hurricane deck, with flames roaring
about them and water up to their knees surging
past like a mill-race; it was the return torrent from
their own nozzles. Foot by foot the stern settled and
the water crept nearer, nearer to the open port-holes.
In a large stateroom aft fourteen men and one woman
gave a noble picture of resignation in the face of an
awful death. Hemmed in there between fire and
water, they prayed quietly, and thanked the fire lads
for cups of water passed in through the port-hole, and
waved "good-by" as the stern gave a final lurch and
went down.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus60.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="352" alt="FIRE-BOATS WORKING ON THE "BREMEN" AND THE "SAALE."" title="" /> <span class="caption">FIRE-BOATS WORKING ON THE "BREMEN" AND THE "SAALE."</span></div>
<p>Nor does this end the record of that day, for
there was still the <i>Main</i> to fight for, and at eleven
o'clock that night the <i>New-Yorker</i> steamed up the
river and caught the third liner as the flood-tide bore<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></SPAN></span>
her stern first toward the flats of Weehawken. She
had been blazing for eight hours, and was red-hot
now from the water-line up. It seemed incredible
that there could be a living thing aboard her, yet they
went to work in the old way, and within an hour had
dragged out through the coal-hole a blackened and
frightened company, more than a score of boiler-cleaners
and coal-handlers who had somehow lived through
those fearful hours by burrowing down in the deepest
bunkers far below the water-level.</p>
<p>After this the fire-boats did other things.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />