County
gives city Eloise fire truck
Westland's
historic village will be home to a 1919 Model T fire truck once used on the
old Eloise Hospital site at Michigan Avenue and Merriman Road.
The
county-owned hospital served as an infirmary and housed psychiatric patients.
In its heyday, Eloise served thousands of people.
Wayne
County Executive Robert Ficano signed an agreement Monday with Westland Historical
Commission Chairwoman Jo Johnson to bring the old fire truck to the city's
historic village, on Wayne Road south of Marquette.
"It's
just a wonderful thing," Johnson said. "We're very happy to receive
this, and we'll take very good care of it."
The
fire truck, with its pump mounted on the front of its crankshaft, will be
on display along with historic buildings at the village site.
The
truck also will be displayed during local parades, said Johnson's husband,
Ernie, vice president of Friends of the Westland Historical Museum. Although
the Model T still runs, it will be towed or hauled on a flatbed truck to protect
it, Ernie Johnson said.
He
recalled that a blacksmith shop on the Eloise property burned in 1919 -- the
year the fire truck was made. Historians haven't yet been able to confirm
that the Model T pumper was bought in response to that fire.
Ultimately,
the Eloise complex was so large that it had its own fire department, Ernie
Johnson said.
It
wasn't known this week when the fire truck will be delivered to the historical
museum site, which is open to the public 1-4 p.m. Saturdays.
dclem@hometowlife.com | (734) 953-2110
Originally
published May 21, 2006

This 1919 Model T fire truck, used to fight fires on the old Eloise Hospital
property, will soon have a new home at the Westland Historic Village Park, on
Wayne Road between Marquette and Cherry Hill.
