By Don Sutherland
Everybody talks about the John J. Har-
vey, and quite a few of them are doing
something about it. The chipping, scrap-
ing, and painting you'd expect a 74-year-
old fireboat to require has proceeded since
the vessel became privately owned in
1999, but that's only the beginning of the
discussion. For within the city the fireboat
served for its first sixty years, a peculiar
love/hate seems to have developed toward
the harbor. That, more than leaks, can
influence the future of the most historic of
vessels, even as it affects contemporary
ones doing their daily chores.
The John J. Harvey was built for these
waters in 1931, launched into them by the
Todd shipyards at Brooklyn and serving
them steadily, reliably, even heroically.
She was New York's first fireboat with an
internal combustion engine, and is charac-
terized as the first "modern" fireboat. Her
missions included the harrowing fire
aboard the ammunition ship El Estro in
1943, and the fire that doomed the Nor-
mandie the year before. She was placed in
reserve in 1991, and declared surplus in
1995. After all that time, after all that
work, the vessel might have been consid-
ered as inseparable a symbol of the city as
the Statue of Liberty. A fixture of the har-
bor diorama for three generations, it
would seem appropriate to find the old
boat in retirement cruising her waters at
leisure, as a human retiree might stroll
Central Park.
Notwithstanding its nobility and service
and even its good looks, a fireboat is a
tool. Tools wear out, and they get
replaced. They may have earned grati-
tude, but how to express it? The men at
the FDNY possibly thought someone
should do something about the John J.
Harvey. But as an agency, their mandate is
putting out fires. If somebody wants to
preserve the sight, the symbol, the inspi-
ration of this grand old icon, they're per-
fectly welcome to come to the auction.
Which is exactly what a group of citi-
zens did, outbidding the scrappers by an
intended ten dollars. Interesting to consid-
er how the outcome might have been dif-
ferent, at today's steel prices.
Cold Potato
Initially a half-dozen owners pooled
cash to buy the old fireboat and see to its
upkeep, but two in particular are most
quoted. "I think I must have had too much
to drink one night," said Huntley Gill, an
architectural preservationist who had been
restoring a wooden boat at Pier 63, North
River, "and decided it would be a cool
thing to have a fireboat." Pier 63's opera-
tor, John Krevey, had previously interest-
ed himself in restoring another retired
fireboat, the Archer, but plans fell
through. There seemed to be little enthusi-
asm for providing dockage by the propri-
etors of the Hudson River Park, which
controls most of the Manhattan shore
from the Battery to 59th Street. Then the
Harvey became available, and Mr. Krevey
already had fireboat-restoration plans on
paper. "It was a no-brainer. All I needed
was a few fools to help pull it off."
Mr. Krevey had taken the water route to
find his fools. Raised in Seattle, which he
describes as a sliver of land surrounded by
boats, an electrical contractor by trade, he
found himself one day in Maryland, buy-
ing the lightship Frying Pan. It had been
sitting on the bottom for a couple of years.
"Why buy a sunken lightship? You wake
up one morning, and it seems like a good
idea." The mind can easily skip the tactics
and strategies required to restore a sunken
vessel, and go straight to the fruits of it all.
"It's like having a country house - except
that with the country house, you always
go back to the same place. That's boring.
With the boat, we could go anywhere."
40 • MarineNews • June, 2005
HISTORYTHE YEARBOOK
Talking About the
John J. Harvey
July 4, 2004, the Harvey makes a detour on its way to the East River fireworks, and pays a call to the Fire Fighter, its 1938-built cousin still in service at Stapleton, Staten Island. (Photo: Don Sutherland.)
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