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CHAPTER
XIII.
THE FIRE-DEPARTMENT. IN time of
fire,
the most important organization in the city government, as well as the
one
having the highest authority, is the fire-department. To that men
naturally
look for safety; and, in order that it may not be trammelled by too
much
red-tape ceremony, the law gives its chief a temporary lease of the
supreme
authority. We have already spoken of the great confidence which the
people had
in the sagacity and strength of its firemen, and the sacrifice they had
made
before it was realized that the fire was master. Boston has
been so
free from fires since the organization of the fire-department in its
present
form, that we naturally felt as if it would always be so, and that, at
last,
science and wise legislation had found a sure preventive of great
fires. The
men were selected with care; the steam fire-engines were of the latest,
best
pattern and workmanship; hooks, ladders, hose-carriages, hose, nozzles,
water-pipes, hydrants, and scaling‑apparatus, all were supposed to be
as nearly
in a perfect condition as the money and genius of man could make them. In this
were made
several mistakes. First, It is not for man to be so wise, that none of
the
interminable ways of Providence shall take him by surprise. Man cannot
provide
for all the contingencies and accidents of the future; and no
fire-department,
unless it be composed of prophets, can be so well fortified against
unexpected
and novel phases of burning as to meet with success all encroachments
of the
flames. Second, There was not an ample supply of water. In
1869, the Board of
Engineers, according to their published report, warned the city against
the
danger of a fire in the very locality where this began, and recommended
the
construction of reservoirs in that vicinity to draw from in case of a
great
conflagration. But it seems that the request of the fire-department was
unheeded: consequently there were more engines than water; and some had
to
remain idle, or go to unimportant points. The water-pipes were too
small to
supply the draught of more than two engines. Third,
There were
no horses to draw the engines and hose-carriages to the fire; all
having been
stricken with the prevalent “horse-disease.” Upon this matter there
existed a
great difference of opinion; and while the majority claimed that the
absence of
horses did not retard the progress of the engines, and that streams
were set
upon the fire as quick as they could have been if the propelling power
had been
supplied by horses instead of men, yet some there were, whose opinions
were
worthy of respect, who stated that the absence of horses made fatal
delays.
However that may be, it is a matter of history that the carriage of
Hose No. 7
was in the street by the burning building before the officer had time
to open
the signal-box and sound the alarm; and that Steamer No. 7 was “fired
up,” and
turned the corner by the fire, before the last bell of the first alarm
was
struck. The Officers of Steamer No. 7 (“The T. C. Amory”) were Daniel
T.
Marden, foreman; Charles Riley, engine-man; Henry J. Adams, fireman;
and George
W. Stoddard, driver. Immediately
after
No. 7 came No. 4 (“The Barnicoat”), with Joseph Pierce, foreman; Dexter
R.
Deering, engine-man; William T. Cheswell, fireman; and Russell White,
driver.
There can be no doubt but that the disposition of these two engines was
the
very best that could have been made; and that the wisdom shown by the
foreman
did prevent the spread of the flames to the southward, in which
direction the
wind was strongly blowing. Who could have believed that it would have
run with
such speed against the wind? These engines took all the water from the
pipe;
and the Others, as they arrived, were sent to different and more
inconvenient
points by Chief Engineer Damrell, who early arrived on the ground. He
made the
best arrangements he could for obtaining sufficient water; but greater
floods
were needed than the Cochituate took to Summer Street or into that
vicinity. They came
with the
speed of steam, — engines, carriages, and men. From the North End, from
the
West End, from East Boston, from the South End, from South Boston, from
the
Highlands, from every street almost, there came engines or implements
for the
extinguishment of fire. The alarm
was
sounded from Box 52, on Summer Street, five times, — viz., at 7.24
o’clock,
P.M., at 7.29, at 7.34, at 7.45, and at 8, — by which time the
connections were
consuming; and the next alarm, at 8.17, came from Box 123. When it was
found,
at 8.24, that a monster of such hideous and Cyclopean proportions was
to be
fought, Box 123 sent out the general alarm; and at 10.09 another call
for help
came from the bells striking Box 48. It was
before the
last general alarm in the city when Chief Engineer Damrell was
satisfied that
his department could not cope with the flames; and, with a creditable
forethought, he had the presence of mind to send for help to other
cities, and
at the same time to carry the responsibilities and care of his own
immense
department with careful calculation. Then, by
every
avenue which leads to Boston, came the engines, carriages, and
ladder-wagons of
the suburban cities, some drawn by horses, others by racing squads of
excited
men, rattling, roaring, puffing, yelling along, like divisions of
artillery
rushing on to certain victory. “George H.
Foster,”
Steamer No. 1, and Hose 3, of Somerville; Steamers Nos. 2, 3, and 4, of
Cambridge; “Howard,” Steamer No. 1, and two Navy-Yard engines, with
Hose
Companies Nos. 1, 3, and 4, of Charlestown; Steamers Nos. 1 and 2 of
Newton;
“Col. Gould,” Steamer No. 1, of Stoneham; the “Gov. Lincoln” and “A. B.
Lovell”
of Worcester; No. 1 from Natick, with others from Watertown township,
Watertown
United-States Arsenal, Waltham, Lynn (2), Salem (2), Hyde Park, Fall
River,
Wakefield, Reading, Brookline (hose, hook-and-ladder, and hand-engine),
Brighton (hose), Lawrence, Taunton, Haverhill, New Bedford,
Newburyport, West
Roxbury, Chelsea (2), and several other places, came rushing into the
city;
which, with the twenty-two engines of the Boston department, would seem
enough
to drown the whole district. But many
of the
engines from the suburbs had hose too large or too small; the couplings
were of
the wrong make to fit the city hydrants, or some other part of their
apparatus
was unfit for use in the city; and much delay and annoyance were the
result.
The Wakefield hand-engine was drawn in by a hardy and noble set of
fellows a
distance of twelve miles, because there were neither horses nor
steam-conveyance
to be had. Other
States sent
in their men and steamers, including engines from Newport and
Providence, R.I.,
New .Haven and Norwich (2), Conn., Manchester (2) and Portsmouth, N.H.,
and
Biddeford, Me. Many places sent in offers of assistance; and would have
sent
their fire-departments, had they not been told that the city contained,
at the
time they telegraphed, all that could work to advantage. Others were
present of
whom no record was made, because of the excitement and press of other
duties on
the fire-department, but who came and went with a quiet modesty as
impressive
and creditable as were their zeal and their hard labor while they
remained. It was one
of the
severest conflicts in the history of firemen. There were deeds as
brave, and
acts as self-sacrificing, as the battle-field or the ditches of a siege
could
furnish, — real, true heroism, genuine daring, cool intrepidity. They
stood on
dangerous places; they faced the fire until it scorched them to a
blister; they
clambered into windows and along projections, risking their lives to
save the
property of others; they dashed into smoke-filled halls and stairways,
walked
through flames, and stood firm at their post, when sparks and steam and
heat
seared them with unceasing torture. Some fell
from
dizzy heights, and were broken and torn; some were run over by the
sudden
shifting of apparatus; while some, alas! went down, down, into billows
of fire,
and mingled their ashes with the dust of ruined temples; and others
were buried
in the crushing piles of broken timber and masonry, there to hear the
surging
of the coming tide, and the shouts of friends whose efforts to uncover
them
were unavailing, and at last slowly and surely to die the awful death
of fire. The heart
beats too
quick, the tears are too thick, and the soul sends its shudders through
the
frame too solemnly, to write calmly. The pen quivers, and is slow to
answer the
demand of the intellect, when we recall that dreadful scene and those
piercing
cries. The great
difficulty which the firemen met with in their combats was in getting
the
streams of water as high as the tops of the buildings. The roofs were
nearly
all of the Mansard pattern; which, while they are attractive in an
æsthetic
way, are but tinder-boxes of pine and tar in time of fire. Against
these
combustible roofs, set up out of reach, Chief Damrell had often
protested: but
men do not think of these things before a disaster as they do in the
days which
follow it; and hence they kept the wooden roofs, and shared in the
conflagration
which those combustible piles drew into their warehouses. No sooner was
the
fire under headway than the currents set in motion in the atmosphere
began to
whisk and whistle around the upper stories, completely cutting off the
water
before it reached them, sending off in spray or steam the largest and
the most
powerful streams. It seemed like a work against fate. As the
conflagration swept onward, crossing street after street in its march,
it was
decided to blow up all the buildings on Milk Street on the south side
from
Devonshire Street, to and through Morton Place, as many of the
buildings in
this locality were of a very combustible nature, and would endanger the
entire
northern section of the city. This was between twelve and one o’clock
on Sunday
morning: but a sufficient quantity of powder could not be obtained in
this city
at that time; and Alderman Jenks despatched a police-officer to the
Navy Yard
with a request to Commodore Parrott to furnish a quantity of that
article. With
commendable promptness, the commodore ordered five one-hundred-pound
kegs of
powder to be placed in a hack; and the officer soon reported back, when
the
blowing-up of buildings on Washington, Devonshire, and Water Streets,
was
commenced. To make the corner of Milk and Washington Streets the
objective
point in the ravages of the fire northward, every effort was made, and
fortunately proved successful. Then, to stop its crossing State Street,
and
sweeping the section of the city lying beyond that point, a number of
buildings
were mined on the south side of that street and on Devonshire Street,
between
Water and State Streets; but, before these extreme measures were
required, the
dreaded element was under control, and all further danger avoided. In a
report of an
interview with Chief Engineer Damrell, we find the following reference
to the
use of powder: — “At no
time did Mr.
Damrell or his associates apprehend that the fire would cross
Washington Street
from Summer to Milk Streets; and, to prevent such a catastrophe, a
considerable
number of engines were massed along that part of Washington Street. The
chief
regrets that he yielded to the pressing demands of prominent citizens
in the
blowing-up of buildings, as the corse pursued in consequence of their
urgent
entreaties, instead of arresting the conflagration, as they supposed
would be
the case, had the effect to shatter the windows in adjacent warehouses
filled
with goods, and furnished additional fuel for the flames. His judgment
and that
of his assistants was, that a square of buildings quite a distance in
advance
of the fire should be demolished, and thus open a gap where a large
force of
the department cold be thrown, and resist further destruction. “Nevertheless,
the
destruction of buildings by these means served materially in preventing
the
spread of the flames in certain directions; and it proved, it seems to
us, one
of the most important elements in battling the flames. No active
measures were
taken to blow up any buildings, or to mine them in preparation for such
an
event, until many hours after the fire broke out. The right to cause
the
destruction of buildings to prevent the spread of a conflagration is
not vested
in the mayor, as many doubtless suppose, but solely in the chief
engineer of
the fire-department. Capt. Damrell was not of the opinion that the
exigencies
of the occasion demanded these measures; and the necessary steps were
not taken
until Gen. Burt and other citizens urged the matter strenuously.
Details of
citizens were made to take charge of the different streets leading to
the fire,
and of different sections of the threatened districts, to take any
steps deemed
necessary under the circumstances. Among those appointed upon this
detail were
George O. Carpenter, Edward Atkinson, Alderman Jenks, Col. E. O.
Shepard, and
other well-known citizens. To the members of the Boston Insurance
Brigade, for
the most part, was intrusted the important duty of handling the powder,
placing
it in position, &c.; and, although great personal risk was incurred
in all
this, it is not known that the slightest accident occurred. The members
of the
brigade, and all others engaged in the dangerous business, performed
their
duties admirably. “The first
building
blown up was on Milk Street, near Devonshire Street; and, soon after,
the
street below and the cross-thoroughfares were cleared for further
operations of
the same sort. But this was a work which ought to have been done long
before,
if it was to be done at all. A building on Milk Street opposite
Federal, and
another on the south-east corner of Milk and Congress Streets, were
soon after
sacrificed. The first explosion took place between two and three
o’clock. At a
later hour, the large building at the south-west corner of Water and
Congress
Streets was mined, and blown up with much better success than in some
of the
previous attempts at other points. The mode of distributing the powder
seemed
to differ at different points, and there was doubtless much disparity
in the
amount of powder used in different cases. In few instances, probably,
was
especial pains taken to ‘tamp the powder; that is, to place braces
against the
kegs, or to cover them with some heavy materials so as to compress the
explosive powder as much as possible. Where the powder is placed in the
cellar,
and thus confined, the effect is to bring down the whole structure
inward. The
consequences are something after the style of what follows an
earthquake-shock. “Some of
the early
explosions availed but little; and the first really successful blow-up
was at
the building on the south-east corner of Milk and Congress Streets,
recently
cut away for the purpose of widening the latter thoroughfare. At this
point, we
believe, two attempts were made; the last proving effectual. Efforts
were made
to destroy all the buildings on the north side of Milk Street, between
the new
post-office and Congress Street. Gen. Burt had previously planned the
blowing-up of buildings on Morton Place and the vicinity; but the
powder sent
for did nOt arrive in time. The first powder used came from Read’s
gun-store.
Further supplies were brought from the magazine in Chelsea and the Navy
Yard.
The buildings on the north side of Milk Street actually blown up were
numbered
from fifty-eight to seventy inclusive. At the building on the corner of
Milk
and Congress Streets powder was placed in the cellar, and also in the
second
story; and, when the explosion took place, that in the second story
only was
fired. The rest was probably fired when the building caught fire. “Major-Gen.
Benham
visited City Hall at an early hour, and proffered his experienced aid
to Chief
Damrell and the mayor for the purpose of directing the mining
operations. One
of Gen. Benham’s first recommendations was, that the building on the
corner of
Washington and Milk Streets, adjoining ‘The Transcript’ office, and
occupied by
Messrs. Currier and Trott, and also the building on the west side of
Congress
Street occupied by J. E. Farwell and Co., printers, and ‘The
Saturday-evening
Gazette,’ be destroyed, — the former to save the Old South Church when
‘The
Transcript’ building should take fire, and the latter to interrupt the
progress
of the flames toward State Street. Another plan proposed by him was to
blow up
the buildings lying north of Water Street, near Kilby Street, and
running
through to Hawes Street; this being designed to stop the fire before it
should
reach Robinson and Brother’s liquor-store, from which it was sure to
communicate to the post-office and United-States sub-treasury. “The
Currier and
Trott building was subsequently operated upon; and at about nine
o’clock, when
the fire was working through Congress Street toward State Street, the
building
at the corner of Congress Street and Congress Square (occupied by I. M.
Learned
and Co. as an eating-house, and forming a continuation of the building
occupied
by Farwell and Co. and ‘The Gazette’) was blown up. The explosion in
Currier
and Trott’s building did not work the entire destruction of that
edifice; but
it had a singularly good effect upon the ruins of ‘The Transcript’
office, which
was then in flames. It gave the latter a gentle shaking-up; and every
thing of
an inflammable character was precipitated between the walls. Between
eight and
nine o’ clock, one or two buildings on Lindall and Kilby Streets were
hoisted
by a liberal application of gunpowder. “When the
fire
threatened State Street, Gen. Benham counselled the blowing-up of
different
buildings on Kilby Street, and also the destruction of buildings above
and
below the Old post-office building; but this was not done. At another
time,
under charge of the fire authorities and citizens’ detail, the
post-office
itself was mined, with the intention of causing its destruction; but
this plan
was not carried out, as the onward march of the flames was checked. “A large
amount of
powder was used in the various operations in Milk, Water, Congress,
Lindall,
and Kilby Streets. At least one hundred pounds of powder were used in
each
building; and sometimes two hundred pounds, three hundred, and even a
greater
amount, were brought into requisition. Most of the powder was brought
from the
Navy Yard and other United-States depositories, or from the powder-boat
in the
harbor. Gen. Benham also ordered up two tons of the material from Fort
Independence; and it was brought up on the engineer’s steamer
‘Tourist,’ and
landed at Central Wharf.” Whether
time and
investigation shall ever decide that there are better means of battling
fire
than with powder cannot be decided now; and though engineers may in
theory
object to its use, and the taxpayers may grumble when they are
compelled to pay
the full cash value of every building so destroyed, whether it would
have been
burned or not, it is yet doubtful if any thing can open a gap before a
fire, in
which to work in advance of it, so effectually as powder under the
scientific
management of careful hands. At a meeting of the chief engineers of
Eastern
Massachusetts, held in Charlestown several days after the fire, the
course of
Chief Engineer Damrell during the fire was fully indorsed. It is
pleasant to record
how the brave firemen were remembered by the people, and their needs
supplied
with such liberal hands. Jordan, Marsh, and Co., the largest dry-goods
dealers
in the city, gave all the firemen blankets on the night of the fire,
and
afterwards subscribed ten thousand dollars toward their relief fund;
and were
followed by “The Boston Herald,” a thousand dollars; the Merchants’
National
Bank, five thousand dollars; and then by a long and honorable list of
donors,
who gave, for the families of the injured and killed, sums varying from
a
hundred to two thousand dollars. How much
Boston
does owe its firemen and those of sister-cities! A debt of gratitude it
is, as
sacred and as binding as that we acknowledge toward the soldier who
defends
with his life our firesides and our families. The Board
of
Engineers, at the time of the calamity, consisted of Messrs. John S.
Damrell,
chief; Joseph Dunbar, Zenas E. Smith, William A. Green, George Brown,
John W.
Regan, John S. Jacobs, Phineas A. Allen, Rufus B. Farrar, James Munroe,
John
Colligan, Joseph Barnes, Sylvester H. Hebard, Levi W. Shaw, George W.
Clark,
assistant engineers; Henry W. Longley, secretary; and Charles R.
Classen,
assistant secretary. |