Sat Apr 12, 2008 6:39 am
I'm in North Greece, a few miles from the last location of Sterling Siren Fire Alarm which was 1619 Manitou Rd.
I've dug up everything I can find pertaining to Sterling, and I don't have a shipping list. I know a lot of them went to the Southerntier of NY and during the 50s, Civil Defense was buying sirens by the truckload taking them in single lot delivery for warehousing and redistribution. I think there is a major problem among younger folks understanding things didn't work in the 50s the way they do today in terms of shipping.
Civil Defense might order 50 sirens in a batch, and when they left Sterling's plant on Plymouth Ave S in Rochester the whole load went to a single Civil Defense warehouse. The machines were all individually crated, and manhandled onto the truck hauling them. Where they went after leaving the plant might never be known to the plant, unless the final user called or even more likely mailed in for information.
About the farthest one I ever serviced from Rochester was in a village called Canasaragua down by Dansville. I drove there in a blizzard because the firehouse had caught fire Christmas Eve day, and the siren was the only way they had to summon firemen, and they needed it. With no expressways, it took about 3 hours to get there, and I left Rochester with the Chief's phone number in my pocket along with the instruction if I got stuck or lost to call so his men could come and get me.
After I got the machine back on line around midnight, I was offered a few free overnight stays if I didn't want to drive back. I figured I'd drive back and was given a sheet of paper with half a dozen highway barns and firehouses I had to check in with along the way to make sure I wasn't stuck in a snowdrift someplace. That's just the way things were done back then, and I made every one of the checkins too.
I even caught hell from Wild Bill for not checking in with him when I got back around 4 in the morning.
Unfortunately, all of the company records went in the dumpster around 81 when Wild Bill auctioned off everything and retired. Well, his wife said he retired, and his doctors said he retired, but a few months later he was back in action operating a couple dozen automatic blood pressure testers in supermarkets around here, and building a 6 bay garage for his grandson's Tonka trucks.