| The Independent Fire Company engine house, currently          called Engine House No. 6, predates the Baltimore City Fire Department          itself. Built between 1853 and 1854 by Reasin & Wetherald, it was          the third building erected by the volunteer fire fighters group to house          its equipment. In 1858, when the City of Baltimore established a paid          Fire Department, they purchased the building for $8,000. Engine House          No. 6 is the only engine house remaining from that era of the City’s history.Architecturally unique, Engine House No. 6 has a 103-foot  brick Italianate-Gothic tower which is said to be a copy of Giotto’s campanile  in Florence, Italy. In 1874, the City of Baltimore added a stone facade, but few  changes have occurred otherwise. Recently the building stopped housing the firefighters  and equipment in order to host the Baltimore City Fire Museum. Engine House No. 6 is located at 416 North Gay St. at the corner of Gay and Ensor Sts. Now the Baltimore City Fire Museum, it is open Thursday 9:30am to 12:00pm, Friday 6:30pm to 9:30pm, and Sunday 1:00pm to 4:00pm, and by appointment. Call 410-727-2414 for further information. | Engine House No.6, Photo by G. S. Redden, National Register of Historic Places | 
