History of Fire Fighting and Prevention Reading Answers

Sayantani Barman

Oct 25, 2023

History of Fire Fighting and Prevention Reading Answers is an academic reading subject about history of prevention of fires. History of Fire Fighting and Prevention IELTS reading answers have a total of 13 questions in total. The specified topic has three question types, no more than 3 words, choose the correct letters, and Yes/No/Not Given. Candidates should read the IELTS Reading passage thoroughly in order to recognize synonyms, identify keywords, and answer the questions below. IELTS reading practice papers, which feature topics such as History of Fire Fighting and Prevention Reading Answers. Candidates can use IELTS reading answers to enhance their performance in the reading section.

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Section 1

Read the Passage to Answer the Following Questions

History of Fire Fighting and Prevention

More than two thousand years ago, Roman emperor Augustus organized a group of watchmen whose job was mainly to look out for fires and sound an alarm in the event of one. For many centuries that followed, fire equipment was limited to buckets of water that got passed from person to person. The axe was later found to be a useful tool both for removing fuel in large fires and for opening holes to allow smoke and flames to escape from burning buildings.

Watchmen also learned to create firebreaks with long hooked poles and ropes in order to pull down structures that provided fuel for a fire. In 1066, in order to reduce the risk of fire in thatched-roof houses, King William the Conqueror made a ruling: Citizens had to extinguish their cooking fires at night. His term couvre-feu, meaning "cover fire," is the origin of the modern day term curfew, which no longer carries a literal translation.

The event that had the largest influence in the history of fire fighting was the Great Fire of London in 1666. The devastating blaze originated at the King's Bakery near the London Bridge. At the onset, Lord Mayor Bludworth showed little concern for the fire, assuming it would extinguish itself before he could organize a group of men to attend to it. However, the summer of 1666 had been uncharacteristically hot and dry, and the wooden houses nearby caught fire quickly. Within a short time* the wind had carried the fire across the city, burning down over 300 houses in its path.

Although the procedure of pulling down buildings to prevent a fire from spreading was standard in Britain, the mayor grew concerned over the cost it would involve to rebuild the city and ordered that the surrounding structures be left intact. By the time the king ordered the destruction of buildings in the fire's path, the fire was too large to control. It was not until the Duke of York ordered the Paper House to be destroyed in order to create a crucial firebreak that the London fire finally began to lose its fuel.

When it became clear that four-fifths of the city had been destroyed by the fire, drastic measures were taken in London to create a system of organized fire prevention. At the hands of architects such as Christopher Wren, most of London was rebuilt using stone and brick, materials that were far less flammable than wood and straw. Because of the long history of fires in London, those who could afford to build new homes and businesses began to seek insurance for their properties.

As insurance became a profitable business, companies soon realized1 the monetary benefits of hiring men to extinguish fires. In the early years of insurance companies, all insured properties were marked with an insurance company's name or logo. If a fire broke out and a building did not contain the insurance mark, the fire brigades were called away and the building was left to burn.

The British insurance companies were largely responsible for employing people to develop new technology for extinguishing fires. The first fire engines were simple tubs on wheels that were pulled to the location of the fire, with water being supplied by a bucket brigade. Eventually, a hand pump was designed to push the water out of the tub into a hose with a nozzle.

The pump allowed for a steady stream of water to shoot through a hose directly at the fire source. Before long, companies began to utilize water pipes made from hollowed tree trunks that were built under the roadway. By digging down into the road, firemen could insert a hole into the tree-trunk pipe and access the water to feed into the pump.

Fire fighting became a competitive business, as companies fought to be the first to arrive at a scene to access the water pipes. After a series of fires destroyed parts of London,fire-fighting companies were forced to reconsider their intentions.

By the eighteenth century, fire brigades began to join forces, and in 1833 the Sun Insurance Company along with ten other London companies created the London Fire Engine Establishment. In 1865, the government became involved, bringing standards to both fire prevention and fire fighting and establishing London's Metropolitan Fire Brigade. Though the firemen were well paid, they were constantly on duty and thus obliged to call their fire station home for both themselves and their families.

New technology for fighting fires continued to develop in both Europe and the New World. Leather hoses with couplings that joined the lengths together were hand-sewn in the Netherlands and used until the late 80s, when rubber hoses became available. The technology for steam engine fire trucks was available in Britain and America in 1829, but most brigades were hesitant to use them until the 1850s.

It was the public that eventually forced the brigades into putting the more efficient equipment to use. In the early 1900s, when the internal-combustion engine was developed, the trucks became motorized. This was a timely advancement in fire-fighting history, as World War I put added pressure on brigades throughout the world.

Section 2

Solution and Explanation

Questions 14-20

Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text for each answer.

Cause Effects
- Men used poles and ropes to pull down buildings near a fire. - The fire did not have 14……..
- Thatched-roof houses burn down easily. - The King ordered people to 15…..their fires nightly.
- At the time of the Great Fire of London, the weather was 16…….. - The fire spread quickly.
- The Mayor of London thought it would be too expensive to 17……… - He told people not to pull down buildings in the fire's path.
- The Great Fire destroyed most of London. - People built new buildings out of 18………
- There had been many 19_ _ in London over time. - People started to buy insurance to protect their homes.
- Insurance companies did not want to pay for rebuilding clients' houses destroyed by fire. - Insurance companies hired men for 20…………

Question:14

Answer: FUEL
Supporting statement: “.....The axe was later found to be a useful tool both for removing fuel in large fires and for opening holes to allow smoke and flames to escape from burning buildings.......”
Keywords: holes, flames
Keyword Location: para 1, line 4
Explanation: It is given that the axe was used to remove the fuel from the large fires. It was also used for removing smokes and flames.

Question:15

Answer: PUT OUT
Supporting statement: “.....King William the Conqueror made a ruling: Citizens had to extinguish their cooking fires at night.....”
Keywords: ruling, cooking
Keyword Location: para 2, line 3
Explanation: It is given that the King William made a statement the people have to work to extinguish the fires during the night time.

Question:16

Answer: HOT AND DRY
Supporting statement: “.... However, the summer of 1666 had been uncharacteristically hot and dry, and the wooden houses nearby caught fire quickly. .....”
Keywords: hot, wooden
Keyword Location: para 3, line 5
Explanation: It is given that the summer at that time as hot and dry. Hence the word hot and dry is the correct choice of words.

Question:17

Answer: REBUILD THE CITY
Supporting statement: “....the mayor grew concerned over the cost it would involve to rebuild the city and ordered that the surrounding structures be left intact......”
Keywords: rebuild. intact
Keyword Location: para 4, line 2
Explanation: It is given that the mayor was concerned about the cost that would be spent in rebuilding the city. Finally ordered that the surrounding structures should be left as they are.

Question:18

Answer: STONE AND BRICK
Supporting statement: “....At the hands of architects such as Christopher Wren, most of London was rebuilt using stone and brick, materials that were far less flammable than wood and straw......”
Keywords: rebuilt, flammable
Keyword Location: para 5, line 2
Explanation: It is mentioned that the architect Wren was responsible for the rebuilding of London and it was built by stones and bricks.

Question:19

Answer: FIRES
Supporting statement: “.....Because of the long history of fires in London, those who could afford to build new homes and businesses began to seek insurance for their properties......”
Keywords: fires, insurance
Keyword Location: para 5, line 4
Explanation: It is given that the city of london has a long history for fires. It clearly indicates that there has been many cases of fires in the city.

Question:20

Answer: EXTINGUISH FIRES
Supporting statement: “....As insurance became a profitable business, companies soon realized the monetary benefits of hiring men to extinguish fires......”
Keywords: profitable, monetary
Keyword Location: para 6, line 1
Explanation: It is given that the insurance companies became a profitable business. Hence they started exploiting the monetary benefits of hiring men to extinguish fires.

Questions 21-23

Choose the correct letters, A-C, and write them on lines 21-23 on your answer sheet.

  1. The first fire engine
  1. carried water to the site of the fire.
  2. used hand pumps.
  3. had very long hoses.

Answer: A
Supporting statement: “.....The first fire engines were simple tubs on wheels that were pulled to the location of the fire, with water being supplied by a bucket brigade......”
Keywords: tubs, fire
Keyword Location: para 7, line 2-3
Explanation: It is said that the first fire engines were only tubs which were carried on wheels so that it could be moved to the fire site.

  1. In 1865,
  1. London was destroyed by a series of fires.
  2. fire brigades began to join forces.
  3. the Metropolitan Fire Brigade was established.

Answer: C
Supporting statement: “.... In 1865, the government became involved, bringing standards to both fire prevention and fire fighting and establishing London's Metropolitan Fire Brigade........”
Keywords: standards, prevention
Keyword Location: para 10, line 3
Explanation: It is given that in 1865, the government was involved in the fire prevention measures and hence they established the metropolitan fire brigade.

  1. Firemen who worked for the Metropolitan Fire Brigade
  1. earned low salaries.
  2. lived at the fire station.
  3. were not allowed to marry.

Answer: B
Supporting statement: “....Though the firemen were well paid, they were constantly on duty and thus obliged to call their fire station home for both themselves and their families......”
Keywords: firemen, obliged
Keyword Location: para 10, line 5
Explanation: It is given that the firemen were very well paid by the government. Also they are on duty most of the time, hence were living in the fire station along with their families.

Questions 24-26

Do the following statements agree with the information in the reading passage?

On lines 24-26 on your answer sheet, write:

YES: if the statement agrees with the information
NO: if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN: if there is no information on this in the passage

  1. Leather hoses for fire fighting were made by machine.

Answer: NO
Supporting statement: “....Leather hoses with couplings that joined the lengths together were hand-sewn in the Netherlands and used until the late 80s.....”
Keywords: coupling, sewn
Keyword Location: para 10, line 3
Explanation: It is given that the leather hoses that were made for the fire fighters was hand sewn in the Netherlands.

  1. Steam engine fire trucks were used until the early 1900s.

Answer: YES
Supporting statement: “...The technology for steam engine fire trucks was available in Britain and America in 1829, but most brigades were hesitant to use them until the 1850s......”
Keywords: steam, brigades
Keyword Location: para 11, line 3
Explanation: It is written that the steam engine was used by Britain and America in the 1829 and it was popular until the early 1900s.

  1. Fires caused a great deal of damage in London during World War I.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Explanation: there has been no mention of the damage that has been done by fire during the world war I. Hence nothing can be claimed about that time.

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