Brenda Jukes, John Ford, Des Caden, Ian Beale, Rob Beale and Karen Timmins at the opening of the new Mungallala Rural Fire Station
Brenda Jukes, John Ford, Des Caden, Ian Beale, Rob Beale and Karen Timmins at the opening of the new Mungallala Rural Fire Station Ellen Ransley

Original brigade member part of his town's future

IN THE years since the Mungallala Rural Fire Service formed in 1957, John Ford has witnessed a lot of change, and the opening of the new station on Saturday saw him help cement the town's future.

"I've got a photograph of when we brought the first auxiliary trailer to town, it was a Coventry trailer brought over from England after the Blitz.”

He was one of the first to sign up to the new brigade at just 17, spending his time following his father, who was the first warden.

"We were once a bustling, self-sufficient town with our sawmill but today we're just a few (six members and 28 residents), but having something like this means so much to us, because it makes us feel like we haven't been forgotten.”

The brigade formed after a spate of fires in the 1950s and a resident was concerned the town's men were battling the flames without insurance.

"There was so much equipment involved and so much manpower.

"She was quite adamant that something was done. She saw there was a brigade we could join in Queensland that we could be a part of, so we started our faction in 1957.

PROUD VOLUNTEER: John Ford has been involved with Mungallala RFS since it's inception in 1957
PROUD VOLUNTEER: John Ford has been involved with Mungallala RFS since it's inception in 1957 Ellen Ransley

"I'm part of the land, my father was one of the original wardens and I followed him along.

"I was born and raised here and I've watched the town changed a lot. When I was going to school, there were about 80 students there and now we've only got about five.”

After years of campaigning, the team at Mungallala finally received the funding boost to build the new station, in what John said the RFS needed to ensure a future for the brigade, and the community.

"They don't take much interest in us now but there's no-one here. We're all getting pretty old,” he said. "But this will be here for generations to come, this is for our town's future.”


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