Firefighters Visored Field Cap

SKU: 74.GOR.01.02.001

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  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Profile
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Obverse
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Left
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Right
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Back
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Interior
  • Firefighters Volunteer Enlisted Ranks Visored Field Cap Insignia Detail

Attributes

  • country
    Germany

History


Before the NSDAP’s rise to power in 1933, firefighters and their regulations were overseen by the individual German states. Fire services were more or less run by the communities as they saw fit. Larger towns and cities featured professional fire services (Berufsfeuerwehr), while rural areas featured volunteer fire services (Freiwillige Feuerwehr).

Under Third Reich rule, fire services were to be unified on a national level and therefore placed under the control of the German Police. National socialist doctrine was infused and the fire services militarised in preparation for war and the anticipated bombing of German cities.
Between 1933 and 1938, the professional fire service was referred to as “Feuerlöschpolizei” (fire extinguishing police), while between 1938 and 1945, they were referred to as “Feuerschutzpolizei” (fire protection police) as a subdivision of the German Police.
Volunteer firefighters were classified as part of the Hilfspolizei (police auxiliary forces).

Firefighter uniforms had generally been made of dark blue material, predominantly in Prussia. This colour was still used during the 1930s, but then changed in 1939 when members of the professional fire service received a green uniform similar to that of the German Police. The uniform garments featured carmine piping and initially black, later dark brown (as of September 1942) collars, cuffs, and cap bands as identifiers. However, volunteer firefighters kept wearing dark blue uniforms with carmine piping until the end of the war.

A Werkfeuerwehr was an industrial fire brigade. Every large company protected its factories by employing their own private fire brigade. Members of these fire brigades wore uniforms very similar to regular firefighter uniforms, albeit with a few key differences concerning their insignia.

The visored field cap is in the M43 style, similar to the one worn by the German Army and other organisations of the Third Reich period. It is dark blue with carmine piping around the crown for professional fire service members. The cap features a two button flap closure at the front above the visor. The insignia worn was either a silver-coloured metal or a white on black machine-woven Police eagle emblem above the buttoned front closure.

In the case of volunteer firefighters, lower ranks wore the cap without piping while higher ranks had silver-coloured piping.

Werkfeuerwehr members wore a similar visored field cap, but simpler, lacking the side flaps and consequently the button front closure. The cap is in charcoal-grey and instead of the regular Police eagle emblem it features the emblem used by the Werkschutz (factory protection), an eagle with spread wings and a slanted shield with a black swastika on it in front of its chest.

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    $175 USD

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