The 110-year-old fire bell located in the Owego Central Fire Station clock tower is scheduled to be removed on Monday, April 5th, 2021. The 813-pound bell, 24 inches in height and 34 inches wide at its base, will exit through a clock tower vent then be lowered the roughly 100 feet descent from the clock tower via crane to Temple Street. The bell will be transported to a Verdin Bell Company facility in Ohio where it will be sandblasted and polished, then returned to be installed in the Owego House Team’s Steamer House building planned next to Owego Fire Station #2 on North Avenue.
Manufactured by MeNeely Bell Company of Troy, New York, the bell was presented to the Village of Owego by Dr. Sidney Wells Thompson on December 11, 1911, the year Owego Central Fire Station was built. Dr. Thompson, a prominent Owegoean, was well known as the 2nd automobile owner in Tioga County purchasing his first vehicle in 1901. The World War I Veteran was President of the Village (now called Mayor) and Vice President of the New York Automobile Association for several years.
From colonial times through the twentieth century one of the only means of calling firefighters to action in event of fire was the cry of “Fire!” which was taken up block after block until the church sextons could run to their steeples and start ringing church bells. Even where there was a regular fire bell system, as was the case in Owego, churches usually chimed in, so every volunteer firefighter was sure to hear some bell alerting them to respond. The early Owego fire bells called the “Bell of Summons” were in the Tioga County Court House. One of these original bells can be found in the Tioga County Courthouse Square. Nicknamed “Old Joe” the bell operated from 1867 to 1915 before it cracked. Once removed it was dedicated as a memorial to Joseph S. DeWitt an eight-year Owego Fire Chief.
Construction of a “Steamer House” that will showcase the Owego Fire Department’s 1866 Amoskeag Steam Fire Engine and 1939 Sanford Hose Truck should begin later this year funding dependent. The site is currently being cleared by Owego Hose Team volunteers. Modeled after a Steamer House located in Marathon, NY, it will be constructed of cedar wood frame and glass solarium walls for 360 degree viewing with a steeple for the fire bell. The bell will eventually chime on the hour and for special occasions as it did in the past.
The Steamer House phase of the Hose Team project is estimated to cost in upwards of $50,000. The bell addition will increase that cost by $20,000. All funds for the Steamer project are being raised privately by the Hose Team. To help offset additional costs for the bell, the Hose Team is selling “Doc ‘T’ Preferred” bell stock as a nod to Dr. Thompson who donated the bell in 1911. For $25 an individual can buy one pound of the historic bell with only 813 pounds, the bell’s weight, to be sold. A similar campaign was held in the early 1900s that raised funds for the “Old Joe” bell. “Doc ‘T’ Preferred” stock can be purchased on the Hose Team website at www.OwegoHoseTeams.com. All contributions are tax deductible as the Hose Team is a recognized 501c3 Not for Profit organization.
Several benefits for the Steamer House project championed by the Hose Team include bolstering the North Avenue corridor in the Village improving an abandoned property while bringing foot traffic and tourists to the business district; supporting the Village’s commitment to historic preservation and maintaining the downtown charm and character that appeals to residents and visitors; enhancing the Village’s gateway to historic downtown; complimenting Downtown Revitalization Initiatives (DRI) efforts underway in the Village all while costing the Village of Owego taxpayers nothing in restoration, construction, and maintenance costs as the Hose Team is raising funding for the project privately. Hose Team members continue to improve the site and have removed the abandoned barbershop building. The overgrown trees on the property were recently cut down and the Hose Team will harvest the wood for fuel for the steam fire engine. Once complete the Steamer House will provide a unique setting and backdrop for the Owego Fire Department’s existing elementary school fire prevention program. This program is designed to prevent injury, illness, and other unsafe situations for children as part of the department’s mission of saving lives.