After more than fifty years of service, the fire horse had lost its job. It was a story about changing technology and its impact on work. Fire horses themselves had previously replaced men in pulling fire engines. Volunteer teams of men and boys had originally pulled these fire engines, but in 1832, when the New York fire department’s force was depleted by the city’s cholera epidemic, horsepower came to the rescue. “Not enough men . . . could be mustered to drag the engine to the scene of the conflagration.” Necessity, being the mother of invention, forced the FDNY to spend a hefty sum of $864
...more
This highlight has been truncated due to consecutive passage length restrictions.