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Out of the Ashes
Volunteers support fire fighters
behind scenes
By Linda L. Anderson, KP News
Very few people still around can
remember a time when there was no fire department on the
Key Peninsula. Many local residents are involved with
the department in some way: career firefighters and
paramedics, civilian staff, commissioners, volunteers.
The fire department is such an integral part of Key
Peninsula life, one could easily assume it has always
been here.
Fire District Division Chief Chuck West is “on
duty” at one
of the brand new grills at the department’s
family picnic.
Ashes Photo courtesy Diane Johnson |
Fifty years ago, a house blaze on
the KP kept burning until men and equipment arrived from
Gig Harbor to douse it. By the time of their arrival,
they found nothing but a pile of ashes where the house
once stood. The name for the women’s auxiliary group
became, appropriately, called Ashes.
Nearly 50 years ago, a battalion
chief from Tacoma came out to the Key Pen and began the
first fire department in Longbranch. Both men and women
trained to serve local residents.
Marguerite Bussard, the current
president of Ashes and longtime resident of Longbranch,
was the wife of one of those early firefighters. “One
day, the battalion chief handed me $20 and told me to
start an auxiliary group,” she says.
Bussard began the group, serving as
its president for several years. Ashes has grown and
dwindled and grown again over the years, as people moved
on and off the peninsula, retired or passed away. Some
20 years ago, while the group was floundering due to
lack of members, Bussard was asked to resume her role as
president and help keep it together. She has held that
position ever since.
For years, Ashes has worked to
raise money for the ambulance fund and other needs
within the department. It has provided scholarship money
for young men and women to use for department-related
education. Earlier this year, the group joined with the
firemen’s union and the firefighters association to buy
a barbecue for each of the three full-time stations. On
July 7, the firefighters hosted a barbecue picnic and
invited the women of Ashes and their families to join
them, as they used the barbecues for the first time.
Most recently, Ashes donated $100
to the M&M Ministry at Lakebay Community Church for a
“Good To Go” pass for the church van used by ministry
leader Howard Johnson and his team to pick up food
donations across the bridge.
Diane Johnson of Lakebay, new
secretary for the group, says, “Ashes helps people in
our community in many ways. In addition to monetary
help, they also send out get well, sympathy and
hello-neighbor cards.”
The primary fundraiser for Ashes is
an annual rummage sale at the Key Center firehouse,
which was held on July 21. This event is usually
accompanied by a pancake breakfast organized by the
department.
The current membership of Ashes is
12 to 15 women. “It’s very hard to recruit new members,”
Bussard reports with sadness. “We need more women,
especially the younger ones, to help us be effective
support for our fire department and our community.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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