Buy a brick for Hall Mountain VFD!
|
August 15, 2013 |
For 35 years, the men and women who have
volunteered with the Hall Mountain Volunteer
Fire Department have given of themselves, going
out in all weather, at all times of day or
night, to answer their neighbors calls for help.
To keep that legacy alive, they now ask the
community's help. In so doing, they're building
a lasting legacy.
Fire Hall #1 at Porthill has served the
department and the county well for years.
Generations of volunteer firefighters learned
the ropes and staged from there to answer the
community's call, not only fires, but every
imaginable incident that disrupt the lives of
both people who live here and those passing
through.
They've built a legacy to be proud of, and
they're working to ensure it continues.
Fire Hall #1 is old, built for an era gone by.
It's too small to house the new firefighting
vehicles, or the gear and equipment developed to
make them do all they do better, and more
safely.
The venerable old station needs rebuilt to best
serve the community, and the purchase of a brick
will help.
The Mount Hall VFD is a department, not a
district. It does all it does without the help
of tax dollars. Hence the offer of something as
simple as a brick.
These bricks aren't to become a building, but a
memorial to make the building possible.
A "Wall of Honor," if you will, part of a
display, a park, in which people can come, rest,
and remember.
Each brick, be it four inches by eight or an
eight inch square, will be inscribed with a name
and a memory ... the name of a former fire
fighter, a Hall Mountain dispatcher. A family
member or teacher, an incident that should never
be forgotten.
A small brick is $100, a large $185. Each brick
sold will move Hall Mountain Fire a step into
the future.
To find out how you can be part of the legacy,
or learn what you can do to help, call (208)
267-2496 or (208) 304-9576.
If you just want to help,
click here for a printable order
form, complete with instructions. Either way,
your help will be appreiated. |
Buy a brick for Hall Mountain VFD!
|
August 15, 2013 |
For 35 years, the men and women who have
volunteered with the Hall Mountain Volunteer
Fire Department have given of themselves, going
out in all weather, at all times of day or
night, to answer their neighbors calls for help.
To keep that legacy alive, they now ask the
community's help. In so doing, they're building
a lasting legacy.
Fire Hall #1 at Porthill has served the
department and the county well for years.
Generations of volunteer firefighters learned
the ropes and staged from there to answer the
community's call, not only fires, but every
imaginable incident that disrupt the lives of
both people who live here and those passing
through.
They've built a legacy to be proud of, and
they're working to ensure it continues.
Fire Hall #1 is old, built for an era gone by.
It's too small to house the new firefighting
vehicles, or the gear and equipment developed to
make them do all they do better, and more
safely.
The venerable old station needs rebuilt to best
serve the community, and the purchase of a brick
will help.
The Mount Hall VFD is a department, not a
district. It does all it does without the help
of tax dollars. Hence the offer of something as
simple as a brick.
These bricks aren't to become a building, but a
memorial to make the building possible.
A "Wall of Honor," if you will, part of a
display, a park, in which people can come, rest,
and remember.
Each brick, be it four inches by eight or an
eight inch square, will be inscribed with a name
and a memory ... the name of a former fire
fighter, a Hall Mountain dispatcher. A family
member or teacher, an incident that should never
be forgotten.
A small brick is $100, a large $185. Each brick
sold will move Hall Mountain Fire a step into
the future.
To find out how you can be part of the legacy,
or learn what you can do to help, call (208)
267-2496 or (208) 304-9576.
If you just want to help,
click here for a printable order
form, complete with instructions. Either way,
your help will be appreiated. |
Questions or comments about this
article?
Click here to e-mail! |
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