Pocasset Firehouse No. 7

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Pocasset Firehouse No. 7
Pocasset Fire House FR.jpg
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Location1058 Pleasant Street,
Fall River, Massachusetts
Coordinates 41°41′40″N71°8′19″W / 41.69444°N 71.13861°W / 41.69444; -71.13861 Coordinates: 41°41′40″N71°8′19″W / 41.69444°N 71.13861°W / 41.69444; -71.13861
Built1873
Architect Hartwell & Swasey
Architectural styleGothic
MPS Fall River MRA
NRHP reference No. 83000706 [1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 16, 1983

Pocasset Firehouse No. 7 is a historic former fire station in Fall River, Massachusetts. Built in 1873, it is one of four extant firehouses within the city designed by Boston architects Hartwell & Swasey in the Ruskinian Gothic style. The others include the Quequechan No. 1 on Prospect Street, the Massasoit No. 5 on Freedom Street, the Anawan No. 6 Firehouse on North Main Street.

In 1895, an extension was built on the west side of the main structure to accommodate of a hook and ladder truck. A portion of the building was used as a police station. The Pocasset Firehouse was built to serve the Flint Village section of the city. It operated as a fire station until 1988, when the Flint Reney/Eastwood Fire Station opened on Eastern Avenue. [2]

The station was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. It now privately owned, and occupied by Baker Sign Works. [3]

See also

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Fire Station No. 7, and variations, may refer to:

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Hartwell & Swasey was a short-lived 19th-century architectural firm in Boston, Massachusetts. The partnership between Henry Walker Hartwell (1833-1919) and Albert E. Swasey, Jr. lasted from the late-1860s to 1877, when Swasey went on his own. In 1881, Hartwell formed a partnership with William Cummings Richardson – Hartwell and Richardson – that lasted until his death.

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. Reney/Eastwood Station
  3. Baker Sign Works