Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Old Engine Company 26 (Washington, D.C.)

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Area
  
less than one acre

NRHP Reference #
  
07000536

Added to NRHP
  
8 August 2007

Built
  
1908

Opened
  
1908

Old Engine Company 26 (Washington, D.C.)

Location
  
2715 22nd St. NE Washington, D.C.

MPS
  
Firehouses in Washington DC MPS

Architectural style
  
Tudor Revival architecture

Similar
  
Engine Company 26, Folger Shakespeare Library, Arena Stage, Ford House Office Bui, Takoma station

Old Engine Company No. 26, also known as the Langdon Firehouse and Chemical Company No. 3, located at 2715 22nd Street, NE, Washington, D.C. is a historic firehouse built in 1908 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.

The firehouse was built in response to a petition by the Northeastern Citizens’ Suburban Association for better fire protection. The Langdon neighborhood where it is located lay outside Washington's hydrant system, so fires were extinguished with chemicals and the station was originally known as Chemical Company No. 3. The station was renamed Engine Company 26 in the 1920s and closed in 1940.

Originally built to house Chemical Company 3, the firehouse was renamed Engine Company 26 in 1913. In 1940, a year after a major restructuring of the fire department, Engine Company 26 moved in with Truck Company 15 at 1340 Rhode Island Avenue, N.E. The city then proposed to adapt the building for use as a library. The Rhode Island Avenue Citizens’ Association countered the proposal with one to use the firehouse as a community center. The city decided, instead, to sell the building to the highest bidder. Shortly thereafter, the building was purchased by a church. It was later resold to the New Memorial Temple of Christ Apostolic Faith, Inc., which currently occupies the property.

References

Old Engine Company 26 (Washington, D.C.) Wikipedia