Hodge was born on 15 July 1808, at
St. Austell in
Cornwall,
South West England. He immigrated to the United States around 1836 and worked initially as a
draftsman for the locomotive builder
Thomas Rogers in
Paterson, New Jersey. Under the sponsorship of an insurance company, in 1840–1841, Hodge designed and built the first steam-powered
fire engine in the United States. The horizontal cylinders lined up with the pump cylinders and worked with a pair of driving wheels. At the front axle, ahead of the smoke-box, was an air vessel that activated a bell. In 1896 the fire engine was reported to have weighed around seven or eight
tons, and was long. The large back wheels of the fire engine were lifted off the ground by a built-in
jackscrew when pumping water for use on a fire, whereupon they served as
flywheels for the engine as it pumped. Hodge's fire engine was unpopular with the
firefighters of the Pearl Hose Company #28 in New York City because its weight made it unwieldy to move down the streets. It was ultimately sold to another fire department and used as a stand-alone
pumping engine that was not self-propelled. This was the only fire engine built by Hodge. No progress was made in that direction by anyone in the following decade. In 1847 Hodge moved back to England and became an eminent engineer there. His business address at the time was 140
Strand in London. One of his business activities was as a writer of technical manuals for steam engines. == Patents ==