Emergency Medical Services
Early training consisted of a 10-hour Red Cross first aid course and the only equipment was a portable E. & I. resuscitator.
Early training consisted of a 10-hour Red Cross first aid course and the only equipment was a portable E. & I. resuscitator.
Efforts were made in the early days of the Village of Delaware to regulate hazards that might cause fire. In 1951, the first formal Fire Prevention Code was passed.
Formal housing of apparatus and equipment came with the first organization of Delaware’s Fire protection in 1834. The space needed in the beginning was small but soon grew.
The department hired full-time paid drivers with the change to horse drawn apparatus in 1874. The paid members were supplemented with 10-20 volunteers called Minute Men.
Two family names held the title of Fire Chief in the Delaware Fire Department from Jan. 1st, 1941 until Apri1 16, 1986. This ended more than 45 years of service as Fire Chief by the two families.
Early water supply for fire protection consisted of wells with hand pumps to fill buckets which were passed along a line of men to the hand fire pumps. The empty buckets were then passed back by a second line to the source to be refilled.
ACKERMAN, JONATHAN A. Appointed Marshal on March 10, 1855Served until November 2, 1855 On March 10, 1855 Jonathan Ackerman was
Marshalls and Police Chiefs – 1852 to 2001 1852 to 18531854 1854 1855 1855 1856 1857 1858 to 18591860 to 18631864 1865 to 18661867 1868 1869 1870 to 18731874 to
While gathering information about the Delaware Police Department it was only natural that I came across information on the Sheriffs
February 26, 1816, The Act of Incorporation of the Town of Delaware, Ohio was passed. This document stated “The Mayor and Common