San Francisco Chronicle

Firehouses in S. F. revive decorating competitio­n

- By Peter Hartlaub

Hoping to brighten an increasing­ly grim holiday season, San Francisco firefighte­rs will revive a tradition last seen during the Harry S. Truman administra­tion: a city fire house decorating contest with prize money going to charity.

From 1948 to 1950, the San Francisco Fire Department and other city agencies came together to transform fire stations into winter wonderland­s, with holiday themes, lights and, in at least one case, live animals.

After the contest was highlighte­d in a San Francisco Chronicle Our SF history column last week, fire officials decided early this week to restart the tradition, with a contest, judging and winners announced before Christmas.

San Francisco Fire Lt. Jonathan Baxter said firefighte­rs typically get closer to their communitie­s during the holidays. With the department’s annual toy drive shifted online, and other inperson events canceled for safety reasons, the contest will be a way to show civic pride and unity.

“We want to do something that’s going to bring as much of that back as possible, while still adhering to the protective measures that are in

place for COVID19,” Baxter said. “The community wants or needs this as much as I think our firefighte­rs do in San Francisco.”

Decorating is voluntary. Participat­ing stations will finish their decoration­s between Dec. 17 and 20, with each of the department’s 44 stations plus three at the San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport invited to participat­e. Decorated stations will be presented on SF Chronicle. com as a Total SF project, with a winner announced after the Dec. 21 final judging.

Judges include the San Francisco Fire Credit Union, Mission High School’s Fire and EMS students, and the department’s Los Bomberos de San Francisco employee group. Adam Ferrara, a comedian who costarred on TV’s “Rescue Me,” will be the grand judge. The credit union is supplying the top prizes of $ 3,000, $ 2,000 and

$ 1,000, which will go to charities of the winning stations’ choice.

Even before the column ran, Baxter said the department had received inquiries about holiday lights in 2020, because “we need it now more than ever.” While the official contest ended in 1950, most San Francisco fire stations have decorated informally in recent years.

The contest started in 1948, when the city was experienci­ng postwar growth and community bonding. By 1950, The Chronicle, Muni and other city agencies were involved, providing maps of the decorated firehouses and tours for children who lived in lowincome areas of the city. Stations featured props, music and in one case live animals, given reprieve from a local slaughterh­ouse for a manger scene. Another station raided broken mannequins from local department stores to create faux carolers.

But the contest ended bitterly, with firefighte­rs voting not to revive it after a citywide measure for costoflivi­ng raises was voted down. The original contest inspired other firehouse decoration traditions, including in Oakland and Vallejo.

Jack McCloskey, a former fire captain who cofounded the St. Francis Hook & Ladder historical society, witnessed the contest as a child. He remembers his father, also an SFFD firefighte­r, giving nuns from St. Cecilia Catholic Church a tour of the holiday stations in the family’s 1937 Studebaker.

“I did not think we’d see it again,” McCloskey said. “It’s a tradition that represents spirit and everything that’s good for the spirit of the city.”

A shelter in place order was enacted statewide on Monday morning. While some holiday traditions are modified — the Macy’s window dogs and cats went virtual — and others canceled, there hasn’t been much room for new traditions. Fire officials hope the end of a 70year hiatus for the tradition will be as welcome in 2020 as it was in 1950.

Baxter said San Franciscan­s are encouraged to visit their local stations at a distance, as the current stayathome order permits, and view the rest of the stations on social media and on The Chronicle’s website, where images of decorated stations will be posted as the contest winds down.

“Our only goal is to bring smiles to the faces of both our firefighte­rs and our communitie­s and raise the cheer and the spirits ... because everything that 2020 has brought to us has been relatively a downer,” he said. “We definitely want a positive thing to end the year with.”

 ?? Art Frisch / The Chronicle 1949 ?? San Francisco firefighte­rs decorated their stations for a holiday decorating contest from 1948 to 1950.
Art Frisch / The Chronicle 1949 San Francisco firefighte­rs decorated their stations for a holiday decorating contest from 1948 to 1950.

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