Meet Anne Arundel County’s Fire Chief, Trisha Wolford, and step inside her home…an iconic firehouse
Spend time with Trisha Wolford in her downtown Annapolis home and you almost hear the men. They’re playing pinochle in the front room. You see them sitting ‘round the worn, wooden table doing crossroad puzzles or reading—waiting for “the call.”
Wolford is Anne Arundel County’s Fire Chief and the first female to occupy the post. Her home is the second-floor condo inside what was once the Water Witch Hook and Ladder Station, one of Annapolis’s oldest and most iconic firehouses.
How the Fire Chief came to occupy the firehouse—and how it frames her life today—reveals as much about her personality and professionalism as it does about the prized site itself.
Becoming Chief
Wolford never intended to be a firefighter, let alone live in an historic home. Born and raised in Rockford, Illinois, she was two when her parents divorced. Her father was a police officer. Her uncle and cousin were firefighters, so a firehouse was familiar territory. “I remember trying on my cousin’s turnout gear and it was massive,” she recalls.
Describing herself as very “hands-on,” she was an athlete in high school, a volleyball player, and very physical. It never occurred to her that women could not be firefighters.
After earning her Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Arts from Shepherd University in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, in 2000, Wolford worked briefly in graphic design for a restaurant chain. “I was home, sick for a week. When I returned, it felt like my life was having no impact.”
That was the turning point.
After applying to fire departments in the region, she joined Anne Arundel County’s in 2006. She spent five years as a firefighter and paramedic before she was selected to train at the Police Academy—fewer than 10 percent are—and was sworn in as a law enforcement officer in 2012. Assigned to the Fire and Explosives Investigation Unit, she was promoted to Lieutenant in 2014.
Then her career took another turn.
“I wanted to be better, to do more,” she says. “I felt somewhat trapped inside a big system where it would take me years to advance. The only way was to take control of my career or allow the department to.”
Working on a Master’s Degree in organizational leadership and management, she carefully discerned what the fire department needed. The areas of strategic planning, arbitration, and union negotiating required more attention. To learn more about them she’d have to go elsewhere.
In December 2015, Wolford accepted a position as Deputy Fire Chief and Fire Marshal in Bozeman, Montana. The department was 133 years old with 50 personnel, but had never had a female.
“People don’t realize that the City Fire Marshal is one of the most powerful people in the City.”
Trim and fit at 5’9” and 130-plus pounds, Wolford found herself having to take on Bozeman’s developers. “Lots of old ranch money,” she notes. “I wore very high heels. Anything I could to make myself look bigger, taller, and stronger.”
In 2018 she moved to Spokane, Washington, to become the “number 2” as the department’s Assistant Fire Chief. A year later she learned through social media that the top post in Anne Arundel County was open. On January 28, 2019, exactly three years after she’d left, County Executive Steuart Pittman hired her. He recalls, “she was highly recommended by firefighters who knew her during her time in Anne Arundel, and her resume since then was stellar. But it was the interview that sealed the deal. She told us exactly where our department needed improvement, and how she could deliver.”
Wolford became the 12th Chief in the 54-year history of the department. She stepped into the role of running one of the largest fire departments in the country with a $130 million budget and nearly 1,000 career firefighters, 450 operational volunteers, and 900 administrative volunteers.
She’d landed the job. Now she and husband Tim Tharp needed a place to live.
Photography by Stephen Buchanan
Finding Water Witch
For the first year the couple rented a condo at Annapolis Town Center, but Wolford wanted to live in Annapolis’ Historic District in “something unique, historic.” In customary style, just as she’d done to prep for her chief’s role, she began a methodical search in Eastport and downtown neighborhoods for just the right fit.
Then she found it. A girlfriend showed her the listing. The ad read “Come preview this beautiful 2nd floor condo…Fantastic opportunity to reside in the Water Witch Hook and Ladder #1 firehouse!...Steps from the City Dock and Main Gate of the Naval Academy.” Wolford told the realtor, “If the buyers want to rent it, I’m in.”
In a meant-to-be moment, new owners John and Linda Greene of Edgewater loved the idea of renting their newly-purchased historic firehouse to none other than a fire chief. John recalls seeing the property in a Pepsi commercial, perhaps during the 1984 Olympics, and “fell in love with it then.” He never imagined they would one day own such an historic site. The Greenes purchased the condo in June 2020 and two months later Wolford and her husband moved in.
At first, Tharp, who retired as a battalion chief with the Prince George’s County Fire Department 13 years ago and now works with the Maryland Health Department overseeing vaccination sites, feared the place would be too small. But not only did it have surprisingly sufficient storage, Wolford soon realized she loved researching and discovering everything about her home.
“I love taking care of this place,” she beams. “Getting the job was a dream come true. And now living here…it’s perfect.”
Recalling its Roots
According to Buckets to Pumpers, a history of firefighting in the City of Annapolis, by Ed Bosanko published in 1993, the first building on the Water Witch site was the Hay Scales building. When the “Water Witch Hook and Ladder Company” was organized in 1885, its leaders had nowhere to hold their meetings. Charlie Cadle, photographer and historian for the Annapolis Fire Department for the past 66 years, doesn’t know how they did it, but the city somehow moved the Hay Scales building from near City Dock to the lower East Street location. Soon after, the City Council determined the city needed a hand-drawn hook and ladder wagon. A horse-drawn wagon would come later.
Cadle says several buildings and renovations followed until 1913 when the City of Annapolis erected the “Water Witch Hook and Ladder Station #1.” Records with the Maryland Historic Trust describe the building that stands today:
“Designed in an Italianate-style of architecture, the main building is a two-story brick structure with corner towers rising about the roofline and a large arched opening for the fire trucks on center of the façade. In 1926, the building was enlarged by a sympathetically designed one-story addition with a larger arched opening, built to abut the east elevation of the main building.”
Another lower, one-story addition was built after 1954 and abuts the west side wall of the 1926 addition.
The building was occupied by the Water Witch Fire Company until 1986. At that time then Annapolis Fire Chief Charles H. Steele proposed consolidating Water Witch with two other downtown stations into a modern, centralized station on Taylor Avenue. The next year, the property was sold to the Chesapeake Bay Foundation which renovated it for office space. In 2002, it was sold again and converted into two residential condominium units.
Photography by Stephen Buchanan
Remembering the “Community Firehouse”
Annapolis Fire Chief Doug Remaley appreciates how unique it is to have the county fire chief occupying such a famous city site. But he can’t help feel nostalgic reflecting on the downtown firehouse of decades ago.
According to Remaley, who was pulled out of retirement after serving 32 years and made chief in 2019, Water Witch was headquarters for the city fire department until 1973. He explains “when you faced the building the far right was the chief’s office, the middle held a second ladder truck, and the far left held a ladder truck.
“It was one of those community firehouses that were really in the community. You could open the windows and talk to your neighbors.”
Danny Clark, a member of the city’s Independent Fire Company, recalls there were always at least two men on duty. The bunkroom could hold as many as five men. Pipes rattled and made lots of noise. The iconic fire pole was in the back of the house so the “tillerman could slide down right into the back of the truck” that took up most of the first-floor bay. The original bay had hooks in the ceiling, “big iron bolts that held the harnesses” so “you could just drop ‘em right onto the horses.”
Captain Robert Rawls, who served in the Annapolis Fire Department from 1964 to April 1, 1998, loves reminiscing about his time there. According to Rawls, the spiral stairs were located where the elevator is today. A pool table once stood in the living room. The guys typically played cards, one whittled with a small carving knife, and what did Rawls do? “Mostly I agitated everyone, just ‘cause it was fun!”
In those days the all-male crew wore light gray shirts and pants. When they activated the siren that later replaced the bell in the tower to alert the volunteers, Rawls remembers “you hoped and prayed that somebody would show up.”
His favorite memory is how intrinsic to the neighborhood they were.
“We became part of the neighborhood. Parents would come home from work and ask where their kids were. We always knew where every kid was. We were like an information center. We just kept track of people.”
Photography by Stephen Buchanan
Making Water Witch “Home”
Fortunately for Wolford, many of the materials and architectural features of the earlier building remain.
At the end of a long day, she pulls her car into what was once the bay for the ladder truck. Access to the second-floor residence is via an exterior, fire escape stairwell, or by internal stairs off the garage. An elevator has proven useful to lift heavy packages and groceries from the garage bay.
The interior living space is open and sunny with high ceilings and the bell towers that lend a modern, skylight feature. Wolford’s background as an artist is reflected everywhere. Large, colorful, and dramatic posters and paintings brighten walls throughout the open kitchen-living area, hallway, master bedroom, office, and back guestroom.
There is the telltale evidence of living as a downtown resident. Wolford and Tharp are midshipmen sponsors. One corner of the back room reveals a neat pile of casual Navy clothing. A Murphy bed is cleverly tucked into the wall and helps expand the condo’s 2,000 square feet of space. An avid runner, logging four to five miles, five days a week, Wolford also enjoys yoga here.
Fire memorabilia blends with pieces that carry additional meaning for her. In her office hangs the leather apron her father wore when he fashioned furniture and other pieces as a hobby.
The entire place is spotless. It could stand up to any inspection. “I’m a very good cleaner,” she notes.
But it’s the feel of the home that is most memorable, and Wolford accentuates that. Standing in the living room, visitors can look up into what was once the bell tower. The bell is one of three from former downtown firehouses that is now located outside the Taylor Avenue Fire House. In the back room where mids sleep on weekends was once the kitchen. In that same area at the rear of the condo is the former “hose tower” where pulleys pulled up the hoses after a fire, after they were washed and cleaned downstairs. Then, they hung there to dry. Wolford exercises on the same garage bay floor that held the ladder trucks.
“It all happened here,” she says. “The bell goes off, and they hop into the rig below and go. That flow of life of a 24-hour shift…it was all here.”
Younger than the average chief, Wolford feels connected to what her firefighters do every day, and she wants to stay that way. “My job is to get the newest members of the department to do well, and to care for them until they retire. The only way I can do that is to stay connected to the bottom, to stay grounded.”
Apparently, her boss believes she is doing just that. Says Pittman, “She’s a superstar. She is an incredibly effective advocate for the needs of her agency, works brilliantly with other department leaders, and steps up to serve in ways that nobody else had considered.”
Photography by Stephen Buchanan
Looking to the Future
That drive to make an impact which propelled her into firefighting continues to inspire her. She expresses great pride in her colleagues and admires how proud they are to be firefighters. About to complete her second master’s degree, this time an MBA, she envisions a greater ability one day to make changes to improve more lives. Whether that’s in her current role, or expanding to a state or national platform, Wolford remains open to possibilities. She doesn’t rule out the possibility of political office.
Nor does she rule out the possibility of one day owning a piece of history, like Water Witch. She isn’t hesitant to say that living in the house has a direct link to how she approaches her work.
“I’ve been a firefighter, an EMT, and a paramedic. I’ve done what this building is all about. I can be in this house and just feel very lucky that I got time in the firehouse.”
In words that best summarize her philosophy and reflect the hauntingly spiritual surroundings of her home, she says, “I love taking care of this house and preserving it and adding to it. I never imagined how connected I’d feel. It constantly reminds me: I never want to lose touch with ‘the floor.’”