Firetruck-hearse to provide final ride
By Joe Burchell
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
For 25 years retired firefighter Frank
Tamayo flew down Tucson streets, often perched precariously on the
running board of a truck, in response to a stranger's cry for help.
All that ended when he retired from the
Tucson Fire Department in 1986.
But Tamayo would like to take one last
ride on the back of one of those old pumpers, although it's a trip
he'd like to put off for as long as possible.
The truck he has in mind is one restored
to carry departed firefighters "with red lights flashing and
sirens wailing, on to the eternal station," fellow former
firefighter J.R. Russell said in his poem "Last Alarm."
Tamayo is a driving force behind a Tucson
Retired Firefighters Association effort to restore an antique
firetruck for "Last Alarm" duty.
The association completed the first step
last week, buying a 1954 Mack pumper truck it found at a salvage yard
on the far South Side, where it's been parked for 20 years.
Now the members need money and manpower to
restore it to a condition befitting a final tribute to those who
dedicated their lives to helping others in emergencies, Russell said.
Tamayo and Russell, along with association
President Ed Montaņo, and fellow retirees Bill Martin and Dave
Spaulding, are the core of a group committed to getting the truck back
on the road. Among them they have more than 134 years of Fire
Department service.
A few months ago, Tamayo was talking to
City Councilman Jose Ibarra, trying to drum up support for a fire
museum, and decided to make a pitch for the Last Call truck, too.
"He told me, 'You find the truck,
I'll find the money,' " Tamayo said.
They looked at trucks in half a dozen
cities around Arizona and Northern Mexico, along with some on eBay,
before finding one right in their own metaphorical back yard. It was
at a salvage yard on South Nogales Highway, which Russell had seen
when he drove past.
"Of all the ones we looked at, it
turned out this is the one the honor guard really liked," he
said. The honor guard is 21 active-duty firefighters who serve as
pallbearers and otherwise help with firefighter funerals.
Jerry Hammond, the truck's former owner,
brought it with him from Long Beach when he retired to Tucson in 1984
and parked it at the salvage yard. Ten years ago, Hammond moved to San
Carlos, Mexico.
Once the firefighters found the truck,
tracking the owner down in Mexico was another challenge, but they
pulled it off.
Ibarra was called on to negotiate with
Hammond, who was asking $4,000. "After he realized what it was
going to be used for, he was very generous," cutting the price to
$1,200, Ibarra said.
Ibarra recruited Neil Capin of Capin's Car
Washes to put up the $1,200, allowing the firefighters to use their
money for the restoration. "It just sounded like a good cause
that I wanted to support," Capin said.
Russell said 20 years in the desert sun
and a pack rat infestation have taken a toll on the truck. But if the
association members can line up the right contributions, either cash
or goods and services, they hope to have it running within a year.
"We have a lot of retirees who are in
poor health who've told me to 'hurry up and get that truck done 'cause
I might need it,' " Tamayo said.
Tucson has about more than 300 retired
firefighters, although not all are active in the association, and five
or six die each year, Martin said. Active firefighters and those from
surrounding fire districts would also be welcome to use it, he said.
The space in back of the truck that would
normally be filled with hose will be converted into a compartment to
hold a casket.
The group also envisions the truck
appearing in parades and antique car shows and being used to promote
fire safety.
The retirees have the paint and chrome
plating they need, but they lack a paint bay large enough to handle
the truck. They also need upholstery, tires, emergency lights and
mechanical work.
Spaulding said having their caskets
transported to the cemetery in a firetruck instead of a regular hearse
would be an important symbol for a lot of firefighters.
"We're a family, more than
most," he said, "because of the time we spend
together."
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