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Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House

Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department (emblem).jpg
Our Family Helping Your Family
Agency overview
Established 1898
Employees 50
Staffing Volunteer
EMS level

BLS

Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House.jpg
The Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House in 2005
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House is located in District of Columbia
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House is located in Virginia
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House is located in the US
Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House
Location 3900 N. Lee Hwy., Arlington, Virginia
Coordinates 38°53′14″N 77°6′26″W / 38.88722°N 77.10722°W / 38.88722; -77.10722Coordinates: 38°53′14″N 77°6′26″W / 38.88722°N 77.10722°W / 38.88722; -77.10722
Area less than one acre
Built 1919
Architectural style Colonial Revival
NRHP reference # 95000927
VLR # 000-0044
Significant dates
Added to NRHP July 28, 1995
Designated VLR April 28, 1995
Facilities and equipment
Stations 1
Engines 0
Trucks 2
Squads 0
Rescues 0
Ambulances 0

BLS

The Cherrydale Volunteer Fire House is home to the Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department in the Cherrydale neighborhood of Arlington, Virginia. Constructed in 1919, it has been a focal point for community attention and affection ever since.

The building served as Arlington County Fire Station #3 until a new station opened nearby in July 2011. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 28, 1995

The Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1898 by a group of twelve men. It is the oldest volunteer fire department in Arlington County. Since its beginnings, the Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department has remained active in the community, serving in many ways - from fighting fires and saving lives to sponsoring Christmas and Halloween parties, dances, parades, youth sports activities, and Bingo games. During the first few years after the CVFD was organized, the equipment (consisting of leather buckets, bells, and ladders) stayed out in the open. By 1906, a small shed (later referred to as "House #2") on what is now Taylor Street was erected to house the County's first mechanized equipment - a hand-drawn water and hose cart.

"Engine House #1," another small shed with a hose tower atop, was completed on the grounds of the old Cherrydale School in December 1912. It housed the first real fire engine in Arlington, a 60-gallon pumper engine which was purchased by the Cherrydale Volunteers in 1913. In 1914, "Engine House #3" was erected in the Maywood area. "Engine House #4" was completed a few months afterwards. These buildings housed additional firefighting apparatus owned by the Volunteers, including a ladder truck and chemical engine.

In 1915, after years of site searches, the Volunteers purchased a lot for $362 on Lee Highway for a new "Central Station House," the name given to the same station that serves Cherrydale today. The Volunteers used various methods to raise money to purchase the land and begin construction of the new station. One unique method was selling bricks. Prominent citizens were asked to contribute and a brick would be placed in their name. President and Mrs. Woodrow Wilson were among those who purchased bricks for the Cherrydale Station. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Volunteers sold the four original engine houses to help pay for the "Central Station House."


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