Seabrook Professional Fire Fighters - Local 2847 IAFF

Seabrook Professional Fire Fighters - Local 2847 IAFF Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Seabrook Professional Fire Fighters - Local 2847 IAFF, Government Building, Seabrook, NH.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1EXYjiJqLw/
05/13/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1EXYjiJqLw/

Join Us Friday May 15th, 2026 from 5 to 9pm on the Deck at the Brook (Seabrook). Tickets are $20 and include some appetizers. There will be a cash bar. The Brook does allow children on the Deck, with limitations. We kindly ask that to the best of your ability to keep this event 18 plus. If you would...

The members of the Seabrook Fire Department are saddened to share the passing of retired Fire Captain Furmer "Jake" Eato...
04/14/2026

The members of the Seabrook Fire Department are saddened to share the passing of retired Fire Captain Furmer "Jake" Eaton Jr. Jake dedicated over 40 years of service to the town of Seabrook, beginning as a call firefighter before becoming full time in 1974. Promoted to Captain in 1978, he was a leader and a constant presence in the firehouse, even long after his retirement. He will be deeply missed by all who had the honor of serving alongside him.

01/13/2026

Today, the members of the Seabrook Fire Department laid retired Fire Chief Everett C. Strangman to rest with the honor, respect, and gratitude he so deeply earned.

Chief Strangman dedicated decades of his life to serving this community and this department, leading with quiet strength, integrity, and an unwavering commitment to others.

It was a privilege to stand together one final time to honor a man who gave so much to Seabrook and helped shape the department we are proud to serve in today.

We extend our continued condolences to Sandra and the entire Strangman family.

Rest easy, Chief. Your watch is over, and your legacy will never be forgotten.

01/03/2026

Share Memories and Support the Family.

This afternoon the Seabrook Professional Firefighters donated 159 brand new, warm winter coats to the children of Seabro...
10/16/2025

This afternoon the Seabrook Professional Firefighters donated 159 brand new, warm winter coats to the children of Seabrook elementary school. Every child who wanted or needed a new coat got one courtesy of a donation by the Seabrook Professional firefighters charitable organization.

A big thanks to all the staff at the school for helping to make sure everyone got one.

Today, after 31 years of dedicated service to the Seabrook Fire Department, Deputy Chief Lawrence “Koko” Perkins has wor...
08/30/2025

Today, after 31 years of dedicated service to the Seabrook Fire Department, Deputy Chief Lawrence “Koko” Perkins has worked his final shift.

Deputy Chief Perkins began his career with the department on August 11, 1994, and was promoted to Deputy Chief in October of 2012.

In addition to his fire service, he also served as a New Hampshire State Representative from 2008 to 2014 — extending his impact beyond the department and into the community he proudly represented.

Throughout his career, Koko has been a cornerstone of the department – a respected leader, a trusted colleague, and a voice of experience for all who had the privilege of serving alongside him.

As Koko steps into retirement, it’s more than just the end of a long career — it’s the close of a chapter that’s helped shape the department for decades. His knowledge, leadership, and steady presence will be deeply missed.

Please join us in thanking Deputy Chief Perkins for his many years of service to the Town of Seabrook, and in wishing him all the best in retirement.

Today Marks the End of an Era After 32 years of courage, commitment, and leadership, Captain Kevin Janvrin worked his fi...
06/30/2025

Today Marks the End of an Era

After 32 years of courage, commitment, and leadership, Captain Kevin Janvrin worked his final shift yesterday, with the Seabrook Fire Department.

Captain Janvrin started his career in Seabrook on August 20, 1993, and went on to became one of the town’s first paramedics. He was sworn in as Captain of shift 4 on November 13th, 2015, known as “O4” for the past 10 years.

Throughout his career, he has been a steady presence in the firehouse — a trusted mentor, a reliable leader, and a valuable source of knowledge for generations of firefighters.

With his retirement, we’re not just saying goodbye to a firefighter — we’re closing a chapter filled with decades of experience, instinct, and dedication that only time on the job can build. His impact on this department will be felt for years to come.

Please join us in thanking Captain Janvrin for his exceptional service and wishing him all the best in his retirement.

Kevin, from the members of L2847, you surely will be missed

12/21/2024

On December 17th at 19:33, the Seabrook Fire Department received multiple calls of a possible building fire in the area of 76-78 South Main St.

Box 43 was transmitted for the reported building fire, with E1 and T1 as the initial response.

E1 arrived on scene and were faced with a rapidly advancing fire and limited access to the structure, making it a difficult situation from the start.

Firefighters immediately began working to establish a water supply and assess the best course of action. Due to the severity of the flames and compromised entry points, crews faced a significant challenge in attacking the fire.

Captain Janvrin ordered the 1st alarm at 19:55 bringing companies from Hampton, Salisbury, Amesbury, Newburyport, and Hampton Falls to the scene. Exeter, East Kingston, and Merrimack provided station coverage.

SEABROOK — Sunday, Nov. 3, will always be a very special day for Ken Cash and his family. Not only is it the day his dau...
12/10/2024

SEABROOK — Sunday, Nov. 3, will always be a very special day for Ken Cash and his family. Not only is it the day his daughter Brenda was married, it’s also the day he didn’t die.

The morning began normally for the 57-year-old father-of-the-bride when he rose at 7, or at least as normal as possible for any dad preparing for his daughter’s big day.

“Sunday morning I was getting ready to go to my daughter’s wedding when I started having chest pains,” Cash said. “That was around 8. I sat down and rested, but the pain kept getting worse.”

When Cash’s wife, Ronda, asked if he wanted to go to the emergency room, his answer was “Yes.”

His wife drove him to Portsmouth Regional Hospital's Seabrook ER around 9 a.m., he said, as the pain grew more severe. Ushered into the examination room, Cash said, the emergency physician brought over a machine and performed a test.

“After that, I remember him saying, ‘He’s having a heart attack. Call Seabrook Fire Department,” Cash said. “I don’t remember much after that.”

His lapse of memory is a blessing, according to Seabrook Fire Department Capt. Kevin Janvrin and other medical professionals who worked feverishly that day to keep Ken Cash alive.

The call went into Seabrook Fire dispatch at 9:05 a.m., but Cash wasn’t transported to Portsmouth Regional Hospital until 9:59. For that entire time, ER and Seabrook Fire Department staff fought for Cash’s life. Seabrook Fire sent an ambulance and paramedics Rich Curtis, Nate Mawson and Bryan Wittman, Janvrin said. Arriving quickly, they and Seabrook ER nurses Alexa Palasciano, Rebecca Harget, Haley McHatten, led by Dr. Douglas Mailly, worked to stabilize Cash for transport.

But once they got him in the ambulance, the situation grew dire.

“He went into cardiac arrest,” Janvrin said. “So they took him back into the ER.”

Needing more helping hands, Janvrin and paramedic Mark Potvin also responded to Seabrook ER, and for about half an hour everyone labored to get Cash’s heart beating again.

Manual CPR was performed by the paramedics, the ER staff administered cardiac treatment and medication while imparting information to Portsmouth Regional Hospital’s cardiac team. Seabrook paramedics placed the Lucas machine on Cash’s chest, which performed continual automated chest compressions.

But Cash’s heart still wasn’t beating on its own.

Then, Janvrin said, a call came from Portsmouth Regional Hospital's cardiac catheterization unit saying they had readied the cath lab to handle Cash immediately. The paramedics should rush Cash straight to the cath lab for the emergency procedure.

While administering CPR with the Lucus machine, Janvrin said, paramedics put Cash in the ambulance and raced to Portsmouth Regional Hospital. They continued cardiac care treatment, he said, though they remained worried. Cash’s condition wasn’t improving.

“But around the time we got passed the toll booth, we had a (heart) rhythm back,” Janvrin said. “By the time we arrived at the hospital, his heart was beating on its own and his pupils were equal and reactive. That’s important for someone who’d been in cardiac arrest that long. It meant there’s probably no brain damage.”

Portsmouth Regional Hospital cardiologist Dr. Christopher Lawson, whose team was waiting in the cath lab, agrees. Not only is time a factor in the successful prognosis in major myocardial infarction (heart attack) patients, he said, but so is the patient having a blood pressure, which requires a heartbeat.

In the model for treating an emergency like Cash’s, Lawson said, their goal is taking the patient from the ER to an open blood vessel in 90 minutes.

“And we’re able to do that about 90 to 99% of the time,” Lawson said, as they did in Cash’s case.

From what Cash was told, his heart attack was the result of the major artery in his heart being almost completely closed.

“They put in a stent,” he said, a tiny wire mesh tube that re-opens the artery allowing blood to flow to the heart again.

Unfortunately, Cash doesn’t remember his daughter’s wedding, which did take place that Sunday in Franklin. He didn’t remember anything until he woke up in his room at Portsmouth Regional Hospital the following evening.

“The nurse asked me if I knew what day it was,” Cash said. “I asked her, ‘Who won the Patriots’ game?’ She told me the Patriots played yesterday, and it was Monday night.”

Teamwork: The practice that kept a heart beating

A little more than a month after he was stricken, on Monday, Dec. 9, Ken Cash got to meet the men and women from Seabrook Fire Department, Seabrook ER and the cath lab who worked so hard for him Nov. 3. Gathering at the Seabrook Fire Station on Monday afternoon, Cash had a message to deliver, from the bottom of his heart.

“People need to know how important first responders are,” Cash said. “They saved my life. I can’t thank them enough.”

Getting that message and this story out is important, according to Andrew Mason, Portsmouth Regional Hospital’s director of emergency medical outreach, who acts as a liaison to the region’s local first responders.

Too often, Mason said, outcomes of serious medical situations like Cash’s don’t have positive outcomes. When they do, the people involved should know how vital their roles are to saving lives.

“It’s really important to celebrate the wins,” Mason said.

According to Janvrin, Seabrook’s paramedics and the staff of healthcare professionals with Seabrook ER and Portsmouth Regional Hospital, Cash’s win was fostered by everyone working together as a team on behalf of a patient.

“The proof is in the pudding,” Lawson said. “They all did a great job resuscitating (Mr. Cash). Ninety percent of the work was done by the time we got him. It’s very engaging to go to work with people with a high level of skills and who care.”

Janvrin returns the compliment. After getting back to Seabrook Fire Station on Nov. 3, someone from the cath lab called to give the paramedics a positive update on Cash’s condition, Janvrin said. It meant a lot, he said, showing respect for the concern and efforts made by all the team members.

As for Cash, he’s the first to say sharing Thanksgiving with his family this year was very special. He admits he has a long way to go in his cardiac recovery program, but he’s glad he has a chance to do it.

Cash, along with Lawson, has some advice for those — even men or women as relatively young as him — who experience persisting chest pain.

“People need to pay attention,” Cash said. “If they’re having any kind of chest pain, get to an ER or call for help.”

Janvrin said the men and women at Seabrook Fire Department want people to know “we’re here when you need us.”

Seabrook Firefighters were out today at Wal-Mart collecting toys for the Toybank.  A special thank you to Aboul Khan for...
11/29/2024

Seabrook Firefighters were out today at Wal-Mart collecting toys for the Toybank. A special thank you to Aboul Khan for helping out today. We will be back on 12/14 from 10a-3p.

Address

Seabrook, NH
03874

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Seabrook Professional Fire Fighters - Local 2847 IAFF posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Seabrook Professional Fire Fighters - Local 2847 IAFF:

Share