1220 - 1222 Denton St | National or State Registers Record | Wisconsin Historical Society

National or State Registers Record

1220 - 1222 Denton St

National or State Register of Historic Places
1220 - 1222 Denton St | National or State Registers Record | Wisconsin Historical Society
NAMES
Historic Name:Fire Station No 5
Reference Number:100007159
PROPERTY LOCATION
Location (Address):1220 - 1222 Denton St
County:La Crosse
City/Village:La Crosse
Township:
SUMMARY
Fire Station No. 5
1220 – 1222 Denton Street, city of La Crosse, La Crosse County
Architect: Stoltze and Schick
Builder: Fred A. Gross
Date of Construction: 1895

The La Crosse Fire Station No. 5 was built in 1895. It is located approximately 1 ½ miles south of downtown La Crosse, on Denton Street in the former Eighth Ward. The firehouse is built of brick and is two stories tall. At street level, two large engine bay door openings mark the entry to the large apparatus bay room, used to house firefighting equipment. The second story originally contained a club room, offices, and a dormitory for firefighters; and a rear addition to the building contained stables for the fire horses with a hayloft above. The fire station has a unique structural system: the second-story floor joists are suspended from the upper roof trusses by cast-iron tie rods, in order to allow the first story apparatus bay room to be completely free of columns or supports.

The Fire Station No. 5 was built just as La Crosse was transitioning from volunteer fire companies to a professional, paid, City-run fire department. When the Fire Station No. 5 opened, it had a refurbished 4,000-lb. hose wagon (carrying 1300 feet of 2 ½” hose), a 2,600-lb. ladder truck with a 35-foot extension ladder; four horses; and eight men with yearly salaries ranging from $600 for hose and truckmen to $800 for Captain D. E. Desmond.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, fire departments across the country began to switch from horse-drawn equipment to modern gasoline-powered equipment. Fire Station No. 5 was the last firehouse in La Crosse to continue using its horse brigades – until April 1926, when the entire No. 5 crew was called out on a false alarm, and returned to find a new Pierce-Arrow gasoline-powered hose car parked in front of the firehouse. Station No. 5 continued to serve its surrounding neighborhood for the next four decades. When the firehouse was decommissioned in 1967, it was converted to a senior citizen community center and remained in public use until 2019.

The Fire Station No. 5 remains the oldest surviving firehouse in La Crosse, and it illustrates the historic transition from horse-drawn firefighting equipment to modern gasoline-powered equipment. With its character-defining front engine bay openings and its clear-span apparatus bay room, the Fire Station No. 5 is locally significant as a reminder of La Crosse’s dedication to providing fire protection to the expanding city.

PROPERTY FEATURES
Period of Significance:1895-1967
Area of Significance:Politics/Government
Applicable Criteria:Event
Historic Use:Government: Fire Station
Architectural Style:Late Victorian
Resource Type:Building
Architect:Stoltze & Schick
DESIGNATIONS
Historic Status:Date Received/Pending Nomination
Historic Status:Listed in the State Register
Historic Status:Listed in the National Register
National Register Listing Date:11/24/2021
State Register Listing Date:08/20/2021
NUMBER OF RESOURCES WITHIN PROPERTY
Number of Contributing Buildings:1
Number of Contributing Sites:0
Number of Contributing Structures:0
Number of Contributing Objects:0
Number of Non-Contributing Sites:0
Number of Non-Contributing Structures:0
Number of Non-Contributing Objects:0
RECORD LOCATION
National Register and State Register of Historic Places, State Historic Preservation Office, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, Wisconsin

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