On Thursday May 10, 1877, at a meeting of the Laurel Fire Company, the
contract for the construction of the Laurel engine house was awarded to Philip H., Schnable and Harrison Stair for $6,780. Both men were active members of the fire company. At the June 1877 meeting of the Laurel Fire Company, H.P. Schnable notified the Laurel that the firm of Schnable and Stair had been dissolved. By unanimous vote of the members in attendance the Laurel awarded the contract to build the engine house to Harrison Stair. Stair submitted his bond to the Laurel and a crew began tearing down the old building standing on the lot to prepare the lot for construction. On Tuesday evening, July 24, 1877, a ceremonial laying of the
cornerstone was held at the construction site for the Laurel engine house. The ceremony was opened with music from Professor Kissinger's Worth Infantry Band, followed by a prayer from Reverend J. O. Miller, D.D. James B. Ziegler, Esq., President of the Laurel Fire Company, delivered the address, followed by the laying of the cornerstone in place. Reverend Doctor Miller again addressed the crowd, and the band played again as the crowd dispersed. On Saturday November 17, 1877, the Little General
weather vane was relocated to the tower of the Laurel's new engine house. On February 22, 1878, the new Laurel engine house was completed and occupied. The new Laurel engine house was situated on the northeast corner of South Duke Street and East King Street. The engine house was 33 feet wide on the Duke Street side, 80 feet on the King Street side, and had an open yard of 33 by 50 feet. The main building is 42 feet tall, and a tower, 12 feet square, stands 57 feet tall to the top of the brick work, with a wood
belfry of 19.5 feet, atop which was a flag pole of 35.5 feet. The tower projects 24 inches from the main building on both sides. The building was painted a light stone color, with the hoods,
quoins and
cornice painted an imitation of brown sandstone. Two double doors enter the tower on the west and south sides, a double door was on the south side of the building near the southeast corner of the building, and on the east side a double door on the northern half opened into the yard. Mr. Beaton Smith was the
architect. On the interior of the building, on the ground floor was an apparatus room with 15 foot high ceilings, The walls were covered with plaster with a sand finish, laid off in courses of
ashlar. The walls had four foot high
wainscoting. Running down the center of the room was a girder supported by two Corinthian
columns. Behind the apparatus room was a
parlor or meeting room, 19.5 feet by 32 feet, separated from the apparatus room by a
partition wall. The floor was covered by a Brussels carpet. At the rear of the parlor was a door leading to the
lobby at the King Street exterior door, and a stairway led to the second floor from the lobby. On the second floor, was a large hall, 30 by 70 feet with 18 foot ceilings. The walls were finished with a plaster cornice, and the ceiling had three plaster center pieces from which three chandeliers were to be hung. A small
ante room in the tower provided access to a stage at the west end of the hall. At the east end of the hall was a small room that could serve as a
cloakroom or dressing room. ==Laurel Stables==