Mineola celebrates 100 years for Engine Co. 3

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Mineola celebrates 100 years for Engine Co. 3
Mineola Mayor Paul Pereira speaks during the 100th anniversary celebration of Engine Co. 3. (Photo courtesy of the Mineola Volunteer Fire Department)

Residents, first responders and elected officials gathered Saturday to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Mineola Volunteer Fire Department’s Engine Co. 3.

Engine Co. 3 officially turned 100 years ago on Aug. 22. 

The Mineola Board of Trustees and Nassau County Comptroller Elaine Philips were among the many to celebrate the moment alongside the department.

The Engine 3 fire company was formally organized on Aug. 22, 1922, at the original firehouse that still stands and currently acts as the headquarters for the Mineola Volunteer Ambulance Corps. 

Lifelong resident and Chief Andrew Martone Jr. previously told Blank Slate Media it’s an honor to belong to the institution that is the Mineola Fire Department. 

“It feels great to be part of the legacy our ancestors started and to be part of celebrating something they started,” Martone said.

The original structure, which opened in 1923, was erected by founding members of the company in their spare time. Prior to the original firehouse, the only firefighting equipment on the east side of the railroad tracks was a hose reel stored in a small building, according to the department. 

Company meetings were either in public buildings, members’ homes or barns throughout Mineola. 

The current Elm Place headquarters was opened on March 19, 1983. 

Engine Co. 3 also organized the first ladies auxiliary organization in Mineola in 1937 before its success led to an expansion of the program throughout the whole department in 1956. 

The first female firefighter in Mineola Fire Department history joined Engine Co. 3 in September 1988. 

Another celebration is planned when construction on the Fire Department headquarters is completed by the end of the year. 

Work on the new headquarters on Jericho Turnpike began last summer.

The old headquarters opened in 1913 as the firehouse for the department’s Company No. 2, which had been established six years earlier.

With Company No. 1’s home in bad shape on Main Street — which was also serving as Village Hall at the time — the village decided in 1925 to expand the Jericho Turnpike building so it could house both companies.

The revamped headquarters was dedicated in 1928 and served the village for more than nine decades before its demolition

The construction has displaced Truck Company No. 2 and its roughly 100 members have had to move their gear, vehicles and equipment to Engine Company No. 3 on Elm Street, Martone Jr. told Blank Slate Media last year.

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