Early area residents lived in constant fear of fire to homes, barns, and crops. When tragedy struck, neighbor helped neighbor, often to no avail. After World War I, with population and concern growing, the Young Men's Club of St. John's Episcopal Church and the Brookeville post of the American Legion placed pump tanks in strategic spots around the neighborhood. With a
fund of $700 the Sandy Spring Volunteer Fire Department was formed in 1924, led
by those two groups and residents A. D. Farquhar and Spencer J. H. Brown. Women traditionally brought refreshment to hot, thirsty men battling the fires, and in 1930 Mary Reading Miller and Helen Farquhar formed the Ladies Auxiliary--
the county's first.
Over the years the Department has grown with the population. Funding until the 1950s came from donations, suppers, dances, annual carnivals, and other events. Rising costs brought about a controversial fire tax in 1954. Ensuing years brought more county involvement and a need for career firefighters to assist the volunteers--also controversial.
Today area residents enjoy the comfort of knowing "that gallant body of men" and women are there to give swift assistance in preventing disaster, a security earlier Sandy Springers could never have imagined. |
| Perhaps the largest gathering of Sandy Springers ever photographed assembles in support of the first Firemen's Carnival and Parade in 1926. Immensely popular, the annual Parades and Carnivals featured dinner, bingo, and other entertainment; from the 1930s on they were put on by the Ladies Auxiliary, with Mrs. Dean Acheson a leading sponsor. The Department was the fourth to be established in the county. A second Sandy Spring station, No. 40, opened in 1971 on Georgia Avenue south of Olney. |

Queen for a day, Annie Latleif (Tyler) reigns as Miss Sandy Spring Volunteer Department in the 1949 Firemen's Parade. She rides in Marie Snowden Edsinger's 1937 Ford coupe. To her left is the future Sandy Spring Museum site and behind it the Snowden home. |

The Department's first pumper was a 1924 International chemical unit, which carried two 30-gallon tanks of soda and acid. Mixed in a booster tank, the chemicals caused a reaction that pressurized the water for extinguishing fires. Here, Herbert H. Adams, owner of
the Sandy Spring Store, mans the wheel beside Henry Becraft of Montgomery Mutual Insurance.
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