Women in the Fire Department
The Seattle Fire Department has grown through the years to accommodate Seattle's expansion, both in population and in size. The Department historically has been close-knit, proud of the loyalty of its members. From its early days as a volunteer unit to its founding after the Great Fire of 1889, its roots were as a social and fraternal organization. Gaining members from the armed services, the fire fighting unit developed a strong male culture by the mid-twentieth century, to the point where the public relations unit described the firefighter as "a man among men." The story of the women who changed the image of female firefighters from the unusual to the usual is one of courage, hard work, and perseverance.
On a national level, women were active firefighters as far back as the 1800s, but the positions were voluntary and primarily in rural, semi-urban and private fire departments. A trainee program for minorities was established in 1969, but women were not a focus until 1975. Six were admitted to the 1976 recruit class; none of them were successful, although a lawsuit later proved that the required medical exam was discriminatory, holding women to different standards than men and giving misleading diagnoses.
Barbara (Bonnie) Beers was the first woman to successfully complete recruit training, joining the department in 1977. She cited the physical rigor, as well as the monetary benefits and sense of personal accomplishment, as her challenges and rewards. The psychological burden of being the first woman in the department was heavy, with many of her male coworkers (and members of the public) making it clear they did not believe she belonged there.
Other women followed Beers into fire fighting careers. By the late 1980s the Seattle Fire Department was considered a national model for the recruitment, hiring and retention of women as firefighters, providing assistance to other fire service organizations across the nation. Ten years after the first woman firefighter was hired, the Department had 54 women firefighters. Discriminatory practices did not disappear, however. In 1987, two firefighters filed a lawsuit to force the relief association to provide disability benefits to pregnant firefighters as they did to other firefighters with temporary disabilities. As a result of the suit, the Department began offering light duty work to all firefighters who were temporarily disabled, improving working conditions for everyone.
An encouraging development within the Department was the promotion of several women firefighters. Bonnie Beers was the first to be promoted to Lieutenant, and Molly Douce the first to become Captain and Battalion Chief. Other women worked their way up the ranks to positions of greater authority and responsibility.
The high numbers of women entering the Department in the 1970s and 1980s were thinning out by the 1990s, however, and numbers of women entering were not as great. In 1998, Initiative 200 was passed in the state of Washington, banning ethnic and gender preferences in hiring; subsequently, the percentage of women recruits declined further. Discrimination charges had not run their course, either. In 1993, the City settled a sexual harassment suit with a female firefighter who had been on the force since 1983. Of 49 female firefighters who responded to a 1993 survey, 24 said they experienced some degree of sexual harassment.
Women had shown from 1975 through 2008 that one factor remained equal between the sexes, and that was motivation. It was no longer a question of whether or not women could do the job. As of 2008, 93 of the 1,038 firefighters in Seattle were women, close to 9% and much higher than the national average. Women were working in all areas of the Fire Department, as paramedics, dispatchers, and fire marshal inspectors, as well as firefighters. In 2009, Susan Rosenthal, who first joined the Seattle Fire Department in 1980, became the Department's first woman assistant chief and the department's highest-ranking woman.
Documents
Seattle Fire Department Culture 1927-1933
Annual Report - Fire Department Sports Association (1927)
Letter to H.S. Jenkins from Chief Mantor (February 20, 1930)
Exchange of letters between fire chiefs of Seattle and Tacoma regarding upcoming baseball game (1933)
Training and Recruiting 1964-1971
Profile of a Firefighter (1964)
What is a Firefighter? (1969)
SFD Training Division (1969)
SFD Training Division (1970)
SFD Training Division (1971)
Recruiting and Hiring Women in the SFD
Affirmative Action review of Seattle Fire Department (1974)
Flyer to recruit women for Seattle Fire Department (undated)
Personnel flyer about firefighter selection process (circa 1977)
Memo from Assistant Chief John Mancini about firefighter Barbara Beers starting at Battalion 1 (December 7, 1977)
SFD newsletter regarding pre-recruit program for women (July 1977)
Female Pre-Recruit Firefighter Program (circa 1977)
Women Firefighter Pre-Recruit Training Program (October 1978)
LEOFF Testing
Memo from Susan Lane to Mayor-Elect Charles Royer (December 29, 1977)
Memo to Susan Lane from Sara Theiss re LEOFF Medical Standards (January 16, 1978)
Civilian Opposition
Anonymous letter to Chief Hanson (February 1977)
Letter to Editor of Seattle Times from Susan Lane (June 15, 1978)
Later Years
"Pregnancy Benefits for Firefighters are Upheld", Seattle PI (March 1988)
Memo and review from Judy Bedell to City Council (August 10, 1990)
Letter from NOW to Mayor (July 31, 1990)
Oral History with Captain Bonnie Beers (February 2009)
Bibliography
Sources for further research at the Seattle Municipal Archives:
- Office of Women's Rights Subject Files, 1970-1992 (Record Series 8401-01)
- Office of Women's Rights Women Firefighters Project Records, 1974-1980 (Record Series 8402-02)
- Public Safety Civil Service Commission Women Firefighters Project Records, 1976-1977 (Record Series 6802-01)
- Fire Department Central Files, 1904-1983 (Record Series 2801-03)
- Fire Department Annual Reports, 1895-1991 (Record Series 1802-G4)
- Fire Department Slides, 1968-1985 (Record Series 2801-09)
Additional documents and images can be found in the online exhibit and additional images can be found on the Digital Collections site.
This exhibit was created in part with funds from the Women's History Consortium.