Rosedale VFD History

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ASSISTANCE NEEDED:

As the Rosedale Volunteer Fire Department nears its 100 Year Anniversary, our History Committee is looking for public submissions on any information and photos you may have from over the years.

Specifically, RVFD is looking for information on the first garage used by the Fire Company, located on Verona Road and, at the time, owned by WC Wilson. If anyone has any information or photos to share, email info@phvfd222.org. Thank you!

The Rosedale Volunteer Fire Department was founded in 1924. Rosedale was the second volunteer fire department formed in Penn Hills.

The thirty original members, led by Chief Matthew M. Alcorn, did not have any equipment and responded out of one of the member’s, W.C. Wilson’s, garage. Later, the members began responding out of Chief Alcorn’s garage until the first firehouse was erected in 1933 on Verona Road.

The original method of dispatching calls was by calling the residence of one of the members, who would sound the alarm at William Penn School.

On July 29, 1924, the Department responded to its first fire call.

The Department’s first apparatus was delivered on August 5, 1924. It was a Model T Ford Chasis with American LaFrance Equipment, however it did not have a pump. The Department bought its first pumper just two years later in 1926.

In 1942, the Department began providing the first ambulance service in Penn Hills, which was developed by Chief Alcorn’s sons in his memory.

A new, “State of the Art” station was built in 1948, which the volunteers still respond out of today.