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This episode brings together nearly 150 years of combined volunteer firefighting experience as three Bridgewater Fire Department (https://bridgewaterfire.ca/) leaders, Honorary Chief Reid Whynot, Honorary Chief Wayne Thorburne, and Chief Michael Nauss, sit down to reflect on the department’s 150th anniversary and the evolution of service, technology, and community over a century and a half.

Host Tim Conrad guides a conversation filled with history, humour, and hard‑earned wisdom from decades on the front lines.

What You’ll Hear in This Episode

• How fire calls used to be dispatched
From rooftop sirens to early pagers and today’s digital systems, the chiefs describe what it was like to get a call before modern communications existed.
• Stories from the calls that shaped them
Propane explosions, downtown block fires, fatality incidents, ice jams, major floods, and multi-day industrial fires. Each chief shares the moments that tested them and the ones they’ll never forget.
• The evolution of public interaction
Crowds used to gather by the hundreds at fire scenes. The chiefs talk about how community expectations, support, and behaviour have changed from the 1970s to today.
• Volunteer culture across generations
What it meant to be a firefighter decades ago, how the role has changed, and why volunteerism remains the backbone of the department’s identity.
• Leadership under pressure
Split-second decisions, mutual aid coordination, and the emotional weight of being responsible for your crew and your community.
• The calls that impacted the whole town
Including the tragic mother‑and‑three‑sons fire, the Lunenburg church fire, and the Main Street fire that threatened to repeat the devastation of 1899, which led to the town’s incorporation.

00:00 – Land Acknowledgement & 150‑Year Fire Dept History
 00:23 – How Bridgewater’s Fire Service Began (1876)
 01:11 – Meet the Three Chiefs: 150 Years of Combined Service
 02:00 – How Firefighters Got Calls Before Pagers
 05:05 – Sirens, Power Outages & Firehall Renovation Stories
 05:55 – Propane Explosion Call: Wayne’s Most Intense Incident
 08:48 – Reid’s Toughest Calls: Winter Fires, Fatalities & Fish Plant Blaze
 10:12 – Michael’s Hardest Call: Responding to a Friend in Cardiac Arrest
 11:21 – The Main Street Fire: Stopping a Downtown Disaster
 13:16 – 2023 Bridgewater Floods: 104 Calls in 9 Hours
 15:01 – How Public Support for Firefighters Has Changed
 18:15 – Theft, Sabotage & Rare Internal Incidents
 19:10 – When Hundreds Showed Up to Watch Everything (Pre‑Internet Era)
 22:14 – Major Incidents: Ice Jams, Anthrax Scares & Plane Crashes
 22:43 – The Mother & Three Sons Fire: A Tragedy That Changed the Town
 24:21 – Lunenburg Church Fire & Community Impact
 26:40 – Pride, Training & “Leave the Truck Better Than You Found It”
 27:22 – Firehall Camaraderie: Songs, Jokes & Brotherhood
 29:04 – Leadership Under Pressure: Trusting Your Crew
 30:17 – The “Holy F” Oil Truck Crash & Multi‑Agency Response
 31:10 – Communicating With the Public During Crisis
 33:38 – Working With Reporters: Honesty, Boundaries & Pressure
 37:16 – Safety Advice for Residents: Detectors, Driving & Common Sense
 40:27 – Mental Health in the Fire Service: What People Don’t See
 48:03 – Humour as Survival: Pranks & Firehall Culture
 57:18 – Staying Grounded During High‑Stress Calls
 59:39 – Brotherhood, Legacy & 150 Years of Service

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