Los Angeles, CA. Hires Their First Black Firefighter On this date, in 1897, the first Black firefighter of the Los Angeles Fire Department was hired George Washington Bright was appointed by the Fire Commission as a call man and assigned to Engine Co No 6
African American Firefighters Historical Marker During the Jim Crow era, a period of wide-spread discrimination against African Americans that lasted to the mid-1960s, all-black fire stations in Los Angeles were sources of community pride Sam Haskins, born enslaved in Virginia, became the city's first African American firefighter
African American Firefighter Museum – African American Firefighter . . . Captain Davies joined Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) in 1984 after serving in the military as a Telecommunication Specialist She became LAFD’s first African-American female Firefighter and the second uniformed African-American woman
Californian Black Firefighters: A Legacy of Courage - The Sacramento . . . Sam Haskins became California’s first documented Black firefighter in 1892 Born a slave in Virginia, he migrated to Los Angeles around 1880, seeking a better life for his family Haskins worked as a “Call Fireman,” filling in for sick or injured firefighters
history of black firefighters in - The African American Firefighter Ed Mcfaul is the first Black Firefighter Paramedic in the Los Angeles County Fire Department The International Association of Black Professional Firefighters is organized in Hartford, CT , linking all Black firefighter associations nationwide