Inscription
Orno Strong, the editor and publisher of the Nashville News, called for better fire prevention in Nashville by highlighting fire incidents and near disasters caused by outdated firefighting methods, such as the bucket brigade. After a close-call fire in March 1882, the village council approved the purchase of a dedicated fire engine in April and “accepted the services” of a group of volunteers that officially organized as the Nashville Volunteer Fire Department on May 5, 1882.
[Back]: On December 6, 1898, a fire broke out at Burd’s music store in Nashville. As it grew, “someone ran to the Methodist church to ring the bell” used as an alarm. It got stuck upside down, leaving word of mouth to alert the town. The fire destroyed a store and a barbershop, and several other buildings were damaged before firefighters and others put out the fire. This bell was commissioned to modernize the town’s alarm system. It topped a steel tower on Maple Street. Clappers ensured it could not become stuck. It became a memorial for Nashville’s firefighters in 1954.
Location
Sources
More markers in Barry
Methodist Episcopal Church
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The first Methodist Episcopal Society, the oldest congregation in Hastings, erected this Greek Revival structure in 1860.
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In 1850 George Thomas operated a sawmill here, and in the next decade, as settlers began to arrive, he built a gristmill.
Governor Kim Sigler
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Kim Sigler (1894-1953), a native of Schuyler, Nebraska, received his law degree from the University of Detroit in 1918.
Railroad Depot
Hastings, MI
Hastings was first linked with Jackson and Grand Rapids by the Grand River Valley Railroad in 1870.
Hastings Mutual Insurance Company
Hastings, MI
On April 5, 1885, the Michigan Mutual Tornado, Cyclone, and Windstorm Insurance Company became the first mutual windstorm company...
