Youngstown Fire Department Station 9
1900 E. Midlothian Blvd. Youngstown, OH, 44509
Brief Station History
Up until the completion of YFD station number 9, the station nine designation had been reserved for the downtown fire house. In old YFD publications, you will see station 1 and station 9 as a combined house at the corners of Boardman and Hazel Streets. Plans were in the works to open a second downtown fire house and designate it as station 9. Some of the Youngstown Vindicator and Youngstown Telegram articles in the early part of the 1920's occasionally referred to this station as station 12 which would have been the next number station to be built. Instead the fire department gave it the reserved Station 9 designation. Construction on the fire house was completed in July of 1922 along with the completion of the moving of Station 3 on the Northside. The department would only have the manpower and budget for one station to open and Station 3 won out. Between the time of the completion of the number nine firehouse, it was home to the Brownlee Woods Branch of the Youngstown and Mahoning County Public Library System. Once their building was completed, the library moved out and the city was now in position to open the much awaited firehouse. Finally in October of 1923, the Vindicator announced the opening of the Pine Hollow Fire Station equipped with "a combination ladder and hose truck and a crew of eight men working two shifts." So excited were the residents of the area, neighbors planned a house warming for the new firemen. The station is sometimes mentioned as the Brownlee Woods fire house or the Pine Hollow Fire Station. Pine Hollow was the name for a park that sat where I-680 now runs. Plans are in the works to build a new station to replace Station 9 off of Shady Run Road near Midlothian in 2008.
Current Apparatus
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Engine 9 responds with a 2002 Pierce Contender Engines. The rig has a 1250 gallon per minute (gpm) pumping capability and carries 750 gallons of water on board. The truck went into frontline service as Engine 2 the morning of May 6, 2002. |
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