New York's Great Fire of 1835, as seen from Williamsburg in Brooklyn. |
George Templeton Strong, the 19th century New York City
diarist, loved to chase fires. He lived in a place and time place rich in fire
hazard. Many a night the alarm bells, the smell of smoke or the lurid
flame-painted sky called him to some ravaging conflagration.
Strong began keeping his diary at the age of 15 in 1835.
That December, the Great New York Fire destroyed 17 blocks and an estimate 600
buildings. Strong made only passing mention of this fire in his diary. He
missed another famous fire in 1865 when Phineas T. Barnum’s American Museum at
Broadway and Ann Street burned.
The P.T. Barnum museum fire in 1865 |
On many another day or night, Strong rushed to the scene of
a fire. Here is a typically vivid account of a busy night:
Jan. 27, 1840 – This has been an igneous evening. When I left
the office at half-past seven, there was a fire in Broad Street, or rather in
Water near Broad. . . . I didn’t stay to see the end of the combustion, for
there were so many “soap locks” and “round rimmers” and other amiable persons
there congregated, and so much hustling and swearing and rowdying going on,
that I concluded to clear out – and walked out for a ramble uptown.
Got a little way up when I saw that another fire which had
broken out an hour or so before in South Street was making quite a show and the
temptation was irresistible so I made for the scene of action, the corner of
Dover Street. I couldn’t get in front of the fire and was unable to make out
whether two or three stores were burning, but it was quite a showy affair: the
fire reflected on the snow and lighted up the masts and rigging of the ships,
the groups of firemen on the docks with their engine and lamps, the crowd and
bustle in front of the buildings, the raging fire, and just above it the cupola
of Thomas H. Smith’s big store blazing away and half-hidden by the eddying
smoke – altogether made quite a display.
Thomas H.’s store I think must have been saved; I didn’t stay to see the finale,
being rather tired of wet feet and obstreperous rowdies. . . .
At three o’clock [this morning] I was waked by a furious
alarm of fire which seemed so near and so terrible that I roused the old
gentleman and we bundled on our clothes and made streaks. On reaching Wall
Street we saw it wasn’t there, but the cinders were showering down like a
snow-storm in Pandemonium or a “sulphur shower” in Padalon, and the fire shown
as brightly on top of the Exchange and other elevated buildings as if it were
only one block off.
It was the Thomas
H. Smith store, probably the finest and largest, twice over, in the city, and I
never saw such a scene as Peck Slip presented: the store extending from South
to Front Streets was burning like a volcano, one body of fire from top to
bottom. It was crammed with hemp, cotton, and tea, and the fire was so intense
it was impossible to come near it.
There were only two engines and perhaps a couple of hundred
men. Several other stores had caught and were burning fiercely; in fact the
whole block was on fire from Smith’s store to Dover Street, but everything else
sank into insignificance before the big store. It seemed as if the whole area,
where the roof had been, 50 feet by 200, wasn’t wide enough for the flames to
get out.
Jan. 28, 1840 – The loss last night is estimated at $1,500,000.
Everything from Smith’s store to Dover Street on South and Front Streets has
gone in fumo. Went down to the scene
of action with George Anthon; they were demolishing walls, etc., and I noticed
in pulling down a five-story brick front, entirely supported by side-walls,
that a rope passed in at the fourth story window and out at the third so as to
form a noose, when pulled through the wall shook and tottered and cracked in
every direction, actually tore through
the wall intermediate the windows, as if it had been made of wet paper,
bringing out just bricks enough to come through – a pretty specimen certainly
of modern masonry.
Smith’s store still burning fiercely. Two whole cargoes of
tea in it just in from Canton, and I noticed the melted lead of the chests
streaming down from the piles of ignited matter that are piled within the
ruins. It is most fortunate that there was no wind when the fire took place.
Had there been any, half the city might have been used up, as the firemen were
exhausted and totally inefficient. As it is, the shipping seems to have escaped
by miracle; they were mostly frozen in and couldn’t be hauled out of the docks.
Check this out as well. "The whole sky was lit up with a bright soft crimson glow, almost of uniform brilliancy. The snow reflected it back—streets and roofs were all tinted with the same color." http://www.geoffwisner.com/index.php/blog/strong_reviews_a_fire/
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