John D. McKean (fireboat)

History
Flag of the City of New YorkNew York City Fire Department
Name Marine 1 John D. McKean
Operator New York City Fire Department
Builder John H. Mathis
Laid down 1954
Out of service 2010
Homeport Foot Of Bloomfield St., Manhattan
Status Undergoing restoration
Notes Predecessor: George B. McClellan Successor: Three Forty Three
General characteristics
Tonnage 334.75 gross tons
Length 129 ft (39 m)
Beam 31 ft (9.4 m)
Height 47.5 ft (14.5 m)
Draft 9.5 ft (2.9 m)
Propulsion Twin 1,000 HP Enterprise direct reversible diesel engines
Speed 16 mph
Capacity 19,000 gpm
Crew 7
Time to activate 1.5 minutes

John D. McKean is a fireboat that served the New York City Fire Department as Marine Company 1. She is named after John D. Mckean, who died in a 1953 steam explosion while trying to save a predecessor fireboat, the George B. McClellan.

Operational history

John D. McKean cost $1.4 million. She fought a notable fire at the Staten Island Ferry Terminal, in 1991. It was one of the fire boats, along with Fire Fighter and the retired John J. Harvey, that responded to Manhattan during the September 11th attacks to supply firefighters with water after water mains broke following the collapses. The boat helped rescue passengers from US Airways Flight 1549, when she made an emergency landing on the Hudson River in 2009.

Museum vessel

In 2010, John D. McKean was retired and put in reserve status, after being replaced by a new vessel, the Three Forty Three, named for the FDNY members who lost their lives in the line of duty on September 11, 2001.

On March 2, 2016, FDNY sold the John D. McKean at auction for $57,400. The vessel was purchased by Edward Taylor and Michael Kaphan, partners in several restaurants. The fireboat was turned over to the Fireboat preservation project which is a non for profit 501(c). The preservation project planned to turn the boat into a floating museum.

In the summer of 2019 the vessel underwent repairs to her hull that required her to be hauled out of the water.

As of 2022 plans were that John D. McKean would moored at Pier 25 in Manhattan, and it was expected to open in spring 2022.

In 2023 the ship was located at Grassy Point, Stony Point, New York at 41.22553°N 73.96491°W / 41.22553; -73.96491. As of March 2023, the museum had not yet opened.

Namesake

The vessel was named after a FDNY sailor, an engineer on the fireboat George B. McClellan. He died when he stayed at his post when his vessel was wrecked by an explosion.

See also