Updated Feb. 1, 2019: With a last-day push, Alexandria residents rallied the votes to put the 1858 Prettyman Hose Carriage in first place in an endangered artifacts competition. That means Alexandria has won the $4,000 conservation grant from the Virginia Association of Museums.
In second place was the Virginia Living Museum's Mastadon bone collection.
These "People's Choice Awards" winners will be recognized at a legislative reception at the Virginia Museum of History & Culture in Richmond.
Original story posted Jan. 23, 2019:
An 1858 hose carriage in Alexandria is in the running for a conservation grant.
Voting is open through Jan. 31 for a variety of grants for the Virginia Association of Museum's Top 10 Endangered Artifacts. The carriage has been listed as one of the top 10 endangered items after a thorough review by a committee of historic scholars and professionals.
The two artifacts that get the most votes between Jan. 22 and 31 will get $4,000 (first place) and $3,000 (second place) for conservation and preservation. The other eight honorees on the endangered list will be eligible for smaller awards from the selection committee.
The Friendship Firehouse's 1858 Prettyman Hose Carriage was used by the City's first volunteer fire company as a replacement for the much-less-efficient bucket brigades. Powered by wells and cisterns, the carriage carried a reel of hose up to 600 feet long. The carriage is now inside the Friendship Firehouse museum.
Voting is open at www.vamuseums.org/virginias-top-10-endangered-artifacts and residents can vote once per day through Jan. 31. The winner will be announced in February.
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Here are additional details from the City of Alexandria:
Help Friendship Firehouse’s 1858 Prettyman Hose Carriage win up to $4,000 for much-needed conservation. Vote online at https://www.vamuseums.org/virginias-top-10-endangered-artifacts daily between January 22 and 31. The Virginia Association of Museums (VAM) listed the carriage as one of Virginia’s Top 10 Endangered Artifacts. This nomination places the carriage among a highly regarded and diverse group of artifacts competing for several conservation grants, with generous support from the Community Foundation for a Greater Richmond and Blandford Rees Foundation. Learn more about the program at www.vamuseums.org.
The hose carriage represents a technological innovation in fighting fires during the 19th century. It replaced the less efficient bucket brigades, carrying a reel of up to 600 feet of hose that supplied fire engines with a steady source of water from wells and cisterns. Alexandria’s Friendship Fire Company purchased this Prettyman Hose Carriage in 1858 from local coachmaker and Friendship member Robert F. Prettyman. More than a technological advancement, the hose carriage became a recognized part of parades much as the fire engine is today, celebrating the essential roles fire company members played in the community. The Friendship Firehouse Museum will have a special free open house on Saturday, January 24 to allow visitors to view this unique artifact.
Virginia’s Top 10 Endangered Artifacts is a program of the Virginia Association of Museums (VAM). VAM is a statewide network serving the museum community with the vision of a united museum community inspiring the world around us.
The Friendship Fire Company was established in 1774, as the first volunteer fire company in Alexandria. The current firehouse was built in 1855, was substantially remodeled in 1871, and was restored by the City of Alexandria in 1992.