Saturday, September 4, 2021

Puddletown, Dorset

Here comes the Sun, or, Odd things in churches (14)

People who look carefully at old buildings will know all about the Sun Fire Office. It was an insurance company, founded in 1710, and it’s still going in a different form. It’s familiar to devotees of old houses because the company’s clients used to fix a metal plaque bearing the company name and symbol (the Sun in splendour, naturally) to the fronts of their houses. Then when the Sun sent out their fire-fighters, they would know you’d paid for the service and would attack the blaze with whatever equipment they had.

One aid to fire-fighting was provided by fire buckets filled with water or sand. One often sees bright red metal ones hanging on the platforms of stations on preserved railway lines. But back in the days when the Sun Fire Office first started, canvas buckets were also in use. I’d never seen these in a church before, but at Puddletown several remain, hanging from hooks under the west gallery. There are many more hooks than buckets, so perhaps originally there were more. More would be a good idea, as they’re not very large and a couple would not go very far when extinguishing a fire of any size larger than a smouldering pipe left in an absent-minded church warden’s pocket. These fire buckets now go on an informal list I keep in my head of fire-fighting equipment I’ve spotted in churches – fire hooks for removing burning thatch and the occasional rare hand-pumped fire engine are also included. All a far cry from today’s enormous fire engines with their turntables and ladders, but as welcome in extremis as their diesel-powered descendants can be today.

3 comments:

Vivien Bellamy said...

Hello Philip Wilkinson. I have your buildings book and enjoy the blog, especially recent pix from Much Wenlock where I live. Re odd things in churches, Benthall has a beehive.
Next time you are here you must visit Wenlock Abbey, the private house admired by Pev.
Vivien Bellamy

Anonymous said...

Just like here in California, insurance companies sending private fire fighters to rescued those million dollar houses.

Philip Wilkinson said...

Vivien: Thank you so much. Yes, I must return to Shropshire, and look at Benthall (was actually going to go there on my most recent visit to the area, but had too much to do and ran out of time) and Wenlock Abbey.