|
The Ghost of Seagrave
by Walt McCall
You never know what history lies in your
own back yard!
For some years I had noticed a domed private
mausoleum in Windsor Grove Cemetery about two miles from my
Victoria Avenue home.
One day I took a purposeful drive through
this cemetery to take a closer look at this odd structure,
clearly visible from busy Howard Avenue. I was amazed to find
the name "Seagrave" carved in stone above the iron
door. I knew the Seagrave Company of Columbus, Ohio had established
a Canadian branch plant in Walkerville at the turn of the
century (see The Walkerville Times, Issue #7).
There
were certainly no other families with that famous name in
the area. I made an appointment to stop in at the cemetery
office to look at the burial register. The handwritten ledger
was fragile, but readable. I carefully scanned the long list
of "S" internments and was absolutely thunderstruck
to find not only the name of Frederic Scott Seagrave himself
but that of his wife Adelaide, too. Mr Seagrave had been entombed
in February 1923 and his wife nine years later.
The next chapter in this fascinating saga
took place on Labour Day, 1984. I wanted to take a picture
of my very own Seagrave fire engine in front of the last resting-place
of this great company's founder.
I had carefully positioned my 1925 Seagrave
pumper in front of the mausoleum when a woman tending some
nearby graves strolled over and politely inquired why I was
taking a picture of a fire engine in a cemetery.
I showed her the oval Seagrave nameplate
on the radiator of my truck then pointed to the name over
the door of the mausoleum. "Is that...him?" she
asked. I nodded and proceeded to tell her how Mr. Seagrave
had started out making ladders for Michigan's apple orchards
over a century earlier, and had gone on to establish one of
the largest and best-known fire engine companies in the world
- a company still in business today, 119 years later.
Ironically,
the Seagrave nameplate returned to Olde Walkerville in 1991,
when the Windsor Fire Department's Station No. 2 at Walker
Rd. and Richmond St. was assigned one of two new Diesel-powered
Seagrave pumpers. Seagrave Fire Apparatus, a direct descendant
of the original Seagrave Co., relocated from Columbus to Clintonville,
Wisconsin in 1964, built engine 2.
Engine 2's big lime green Seagrave pumper
was stationed on the same block of Walker Rd., on the same
side of the street where the former W.E. Seagrave Fire Apparatus
Co. plant still stands- 96 years after it was built.
On the night of June 30, 1985, the old
fire engine factory almost went up in flames when the former
Gotfredson Corporation plant across the street was destroyed
in one of the most spectacular fires in Windsor's history.
It's unlikely that the firefighters who kept the raging flames
to the east side of the street knew the heritage of the structure
across the street they were protecting!
[Back]
|