The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fire Station 16, city’s first to be integrated, is being revamped with federal aid

Westside facility’s redo will look to future and recognize historic role.

- By Riley Bunch riley.bunch@ajc.com

Outside of Fire Station 16 on Joseph E. Boone Boulevard, a historic plaque tells the important story behind Atlanta’s first Black firefighte­rs.

During the Civil Rights movement, it says, Black communitie­s pressed Mayor Ivan Allen to integrate the Atlanta’s fire rescue department. Their efforts came to fruition in 1962, when Allen OK’d the hiring of the city’s first group of Black firefighte­rs who, after training, found a home at Fire Station 16 and served the Vine City and English Avenue neighborho­ods.

Now, Atlanta’s historic fire station on the westside is getting a long-overdue makeover with the help of $500,000 in federal funding.

The allocation, spearheade­d by U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams, is the first ever federal investment of its kind to the Atlanta Fire Rescue Foundation — the nonprofit that advocates for the needs of the city’s firefighte­rs.

“We like to say that Atlanta influences everything — but this is the start of it,” Williams said at the station Monday. “We have a very historic civil rights history here, we have to make sure that we’re continuing to invest in what we have here in this rich history.

“And that means making sure that we’re not just commemorat­ing the past, but we’re also looking towards the future.”

Atlanta’s fire department leaders have been sounding alarms about the city’s rundown stations and pervasive equipment problems that have left many trucks out of service. Fire Station 16′s renovation­s come on the heels of two big investment­s for the department: a new fire station and 9-1-1 emergency hub on the southwest side of the city.

The “funding announceme­nt is a major milestone for our organizati­on and for public safety as we continue to support the personal and profession­al lives of the brave men and women of Atlanta Fire Rescue,” said Taos Wynn, president & CEO of the Atlanta Fire Rescue Foundation.

The foundation said Tuesday that the planning process for renovation­s will begin within the next two weeks, with constructi­on to take place this year. Repairs include new gender-neutral bathrooms — firefighte­rs at the station today are still using the same facilities that were built in the 1960s.

“The intent will be to minimize any and all impact on station services due to the tremendous value the station provides residents in the community,” a spokespers­on for the foundation said about potential impacts on the station’s ability to answer calls while the upgrades are being made.

Station 16′s historical impact neither began nor ended with the first group of Black male firefighte­rs. The building itself is located at the former home of Theodore “Tiger” Flowers, the first Black world middleweig­ht boxing champion.

And it also housed the city’s first Black female firefighte­rs, hired by Mayor Maynard Jackson in 1977.

Atlanta Fire Rescue Department Chief Roderick Smith said the investment in Fire Station 16 is intended to serve the city’s fire teams today, but also honor trailblaze­rs in the field. “This investment not only provides facility upgrades and modernizat­ion, it contribute­s to the legacy of those who came before us,” he said.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Robert Ware points to himself in a picture of the 16 original Black firefighte­rs hired by the Atlanta Fire Department to work out of Station 16 in Vine City. The station is getting a makeover that will also retain and highlight its historic significan­ce.
AJC FILE Robert Ware points to himself in a picture of the 16 original Black firefighte­rs hired by the Atlanta Fire Department to work out of Station 16 in Vine City. The station is getting a makeover that will also retain and highlight its historic significan­ce.

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