History
of our Brigade
The Athelstone CFS was started
in 1961 when the area was still considered a country town. The
fire station was opened in 1962, named the Athelstone Unit of
the City of Campbelltown EFS (Emergency Fire Service).(Ellis,
pg 99) Twenty years later, the urban sprawl had caught up with
the town and the Metropolitan Fire Service took over the area.
However, the brigade decided there was still cause for a country
brigade with the Hills so they chose to be kept going under CFS
Headquarters. (Warburton, pg 56)
On the 15 February 1979, Athelstone
CFS had its saddest moment. Barry McLoughlin was killed when an
appliance he was travelling in, rolled over on the way to an incident.
(Ellis, pg 299)
In 1987, Athelstone became one
of the first State-support Brigades, along with Burra, Ceduna/Thevenard,
Hawker, Karkoo, Monash, Morgan, Parndana, Perterborough, Stirling
North, Wudinna,and the Mount Lofty Ranges Training Centre. These
brigades would receive more funding to be available to respond
anywhere in the state or provide specialist services in their
area.(Ellis, pg 236)
In 1994, and again in 2001, the
brigade sent appliances and crew to fight the battle against wildfires
in NSW. A great experience for some of our members as were the
fires in Indonesia in 1997. The CFS role there was to conduct
aerial water bombing operations as well as having control/command
functions.
Just before Chrismas, 1999, Athelstone
was involved in an industrial fire at Olympic Dam with eight other
CFS crews, the MFS and emergency crews operated by the mining
company. It took over eight hours to contain and used 18,000 litres
of foam.(Ellis, pg 280)
In the year 2000, Athelstone took
delivery of their 24P appliance. Twenty-one of these appliances
were ordered and delivered to brigades who attend HAZMAT (HAZardous
MATerial) work, road accidents, or need greater
pumping power for industrial fires.(Ellis, pg 272)
In November 2005
a new ISUZU 34P appliance manufactured by SEM Australia was delivered
to Athelstone CFS to replace the ageing Hino 34.
The new 34P appliance
still had the ability to carry 3000 litres but also contained
the greater pumping capacity of a 'pumper'.
The new appliance
in Athelstone's fleet allowed the ability to separate out the
specialist equipment carried by Athelstone.
Athelstone 34P
became a combination fire and road crash rescue appliance leaving
the 24P to become a dedicated fire and HAZMAT appliance.
The brigade now
had greater flexibility to respond to concurrent fire or road
crash or HAZMAT incidents as separate trucks could now be responded
to separate incidents if required.
Three members of the brigade
have received the Australian Fire Service Medal:
Cheryll May, Australia Day, 1997
George Polomka, Queen's Birthday, 1999
Wayne Atkins, Australia Day, 2000
References
Ellis, Julie-Ann, 2001. Tried by
Fire: The story of the South Australian Country Fire Service.
Published by the South Australian Country Fire Service.
Warburton, Elizabeth, 1986. From
the River to the Hills: History of Campbelltown, 150 years.
Published by the Corporation of the City of Campbelltown.