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WERNISH, MRS. MARY, 341 Center street.
WERSKOWSKY, MRS., 125 Sangamon street.
WINDER, BARRY, 12 years old, 201 South Harvey avenue, Oak Park.
WOLF, SADIE, 26 years old, Hammond, Ind.
WOODS, MRS. J. L., 49 years old, 437 Sixty-fifth street.
Z.
ZEISLER, WALTER B., aged 17 years, University of Chicago student, son of Dr. Joseph Zeisler, 3256 Lake Park avenue. Identified by name on watch charm.
ZIMMERMAN, MISS BESSIE, 954 St. Louis avenue, teacher in public schools, died at St. Luke's hospital.
ZIMMERMAN, MARY E., 20 years old, 841 South Turner avenue.
RESIDENCE OF VICTIMS.
Aurora, Ill. 1 Barrington, Ill. 2 Bartlett, Ill. 2 Battle Creek, Mich. 2 Berwyn, Ill. 2 Binghamton, N. Y. 1 Bloomington, Ill. 1 Brush, Colo. 1 Burlington, Iowa 1 Cedar Rapids, Iowa 3 Chicago, Ill. 300 Clinton, Iowa 2 Custer Park, Ill. 1 Davenport, Iowa 1 Decatur, Ill. 1 Decorah, Iowa 1 Delaware, O. 8 Des Moines, Iowa 5 Des Plaines, Ill. 2 Detroit, Mich. 2 Dodgeville, Ind. 1 Elgin, Ill. 2 Eola, Ill. 2 Evanston. Ill. 12 Fargo, Minn. 1 Freeport, Ill. 1 Galesburg, Ill. 1 Geneva, Ill. 3 Gibson City, Ill. 1 Glen View, Ill. 1 Granville, Mich. 2 Grossdale, Ill. 1 Hammond, Ind. 4 Hart, Mich. 3 Harvard, Ill. 2 Janesville, Wis. 1 Jonesville, Mich. 1 Kansas City, Mo. 1 Kenosha, Wis. 7 Keokuk, Iowa 1 Kirkville, Mo. 1 Knox, Ind. 1 Knoxville, Iowa 1 Lafayette, Ind. 1 Lake Geneva, Ill. 1 Lakeside, Ill. 1 Laporte, Ind. 2 Lena, Ill. 1 Lincoln, Ill. 1 Lockport, Ill. 1 Logansport, Ind. 3 Lowell, Ind. 2 Madison, Wis. 1 Madison, S. D. 1 Martinsburg, O. 2 Mattoon, Ill. 1 Milwaukee, Wis. 3 Minonk, Ill. 2 New York City 2 Norwood Park, Ill. 3 Oak Park, Ill. 5 Ontonagon, Mich. 2 Ottawa, Ill. 3 Palo Alto, Cal. 1 Petersburg, Ind. 2 Pittsburg, Pa. 1 Plainwell, Mich. 2 Quincy, Ill. 2 Racine, Wis. 3 Rensselaer, Ind. 1 Rock Island, Ill. 1 Savannah, Ill. 1 St. Louis, Mo. 3 St. Mary's, Ind. 1 Thief River Falls, Minn. 1 Tolono, Ill. 2 Was.h.i.+ngton Heights, Ill. 3 Watertown, Wis. 2 Waukegan, Ill. 3 West Grossdale, Ill. 4 West Superior, Wis. 2 Wheaton, Ill. 3 Winnetka, Ill. 8 Woodford, O. 1 Woodstock, Ill. 2 Zanesville, O. 3 ---- Total 570
This remarkable table shows that victims of the fire were from thirteen states and eighty-six cities and towns.
CHAPTER XXVI.
THE STORY OF THE BURNING OF BALTIMORE.
All the world was startled on Sunday, February 7, 1904, just 39 days after the Iroquois theater horror, by another sickening visitation of the fire fiend. This time the devouring element fell upon the city of Baltimore and all but effaced it from the map. Millions upon millions in property were swept away, old established firms annihilated and miles of streets occupied by business houses laid waste. Fortunately this disaster was accompanied by no loss of life.
Twenty-seven hours elapsed before the conflagration was checked. Fire fighters hurried to the scene from a number of near by cities and aided the local fire department in subduing the flames. Strangely enough it was a coal yard that broke the onward sweep of the sea of fire and enabled the firemen to bring the fire under control. Even then it burned for days, feeding on the debris and wreckage that marked its early progress. The greatest danger past troops and police relieved the firemen who sought rest exhausted and maddened by the terrible ordeal through which they had pa.s.sed.
History affords no parallel of the conditions in fire-swept Baltimore on the following Tuesday when its people awoke to the mighty task of reconstruction looming up before them. After having suffered a loss estimated at $125,000,000 a cry of rejoicing went up among them because of the absence of casualties. Not a life was lost in the avalanche of flame and only one person was seriously injured--Jacob Inglefritz, a volunteer fireman from York, Pa. While the hospitals were full to overflowing the injuries sustained were of a minor nature. A strange comparison with the Iroquois theater fire of a month before! In that instance 600 met death and a host were seriously injured in a fire of fifteen minutes' duration confined to one building that suffered insignificant damage. Here in a fire that swept for days over the business heart of a great city not a life was lost. Such is the strange operation of providence.
Other conflagrations suffered by American cities have nothing in common with Baltimore experience. Fire destroyed 674 buildings in New York on Dec. 26, 1835, causing a property loss of $17,000,000 without causing loss of life. Thirty-six years later Chicago burned, wiping out 17,450 buildings and 250 lives and entailing a loss estimated at $200,000,000.
The following year, 1872, fire laid waste 65 acres of property in Boston, causing a property loss of $80,000,000 and killing fourteen persons. The partial destruction of Ottawa and Hull, Canada, April 26, 1900, inflicted a loss of $17,000,000 and brought death to seven. On June 30 of the same year the North German Lloyd dock fire in Hoboken, N. J., cost 150 lives and $7,000,000 in property. Jacksonville, Fla., lost $10,000,000 through a visitation of fire that swept through an area 13 blocks wide and two miles long. The last in the list was the Paterson, N. J., fire of Feb. 8, 1902, which destroyed 75 buildings valued at $18,000,000.
As fire and water have ever been recognized as the most potent agencies of death and destruction it will readily appear that seared, scorched Baltimore was fortunate indeed in the absence of casualties. On the calm of a restful Sabbath, marred only by the presence of a high wind, the consuming storm broke upon the doomed city. To that wind and the presence of hundreds of old fas.h.i.+oned highly inflammable structures nestling among the sky sc.r.a.pers may be attributed the indescribably rapid spread of the flames.
The start of the fire was in the bas.e.m.e.nt of Hurst & Co.'s wholesale dry goods house. After burning for about ten minutes there was a loud report from the interior of the building as the gasoline tank used for the engine in the building exploded. Instantly the immense structure collapsed, sending destruction to adjacent buildings in all directions and causing the fire to be beyond control of the firemen.
Spreading throughout the wholesale section, the fire burned out every wholesale house of note in the city, swept along through the Baltimore and Fayette street retail sections, destroyed all the prominent office buildings, leveled banks and brokerage offices, as well as the Chamber of Commerce and Stock Exchange, in the financial section, then sped on through the wholesale and export trade sections centering about Exchange place. It finally stopped at Jones falls, a creek that runs through Baltimore, but swept along the creek to the lumber district and the docks.
As soon as the threatening character of the fire was realized appeals were sent broadcast for help and desperate measures were adopted to prevent the spread of the flames. To gain that end huge buildings were leveled through the agency of dynamite. Eleven fire engines and crews were hurried from New York by a fast special train and they joined in the battle early and fought like demons until exhausted. Philadelphia, Wilmington, Was.h.i.+ngton, Frederick, Md., Westminster, Md., and York, Pa., each sent brave contingents of men with an equipment of apparatus to reinforce the desperate firemen of Baltimore.
The first attempt at dynamiting was in the large building of Armstrong, Cator & Co., but it failed to collapse and attention was turned to the building at the southwest corner of Charles and German streets, where six charges of dynamite, each charge containing 100 pounds, were exploded. The tremendous force of the explosion tore out the ma.s.sive granite columns that supported the building and left it with apparently almost no support, but the walls failed to collapse and stood until the flames had crossed Charles street and were eating into the block between Charles and Light streets.
Meantime the fire had been communicated to the row of buildings on South Charles street, between German and Lombard streets, and all those places, occupied princ.i.p.ally by wholesale produce and grain dealers, were in flames. Before midnight the Carrollton hotel was in flames and the fire was sweeping toward Calvert street with irresistible fury.
It was a terrible Sunday afternoon and night! People forgot their usual devotions at church to pack their most valued possessions ready for flight. Men of wealth left their families and firesides to join in the work of suppressing the flames. Women prepared to flee with their valuables before the wave of fire they momentarily expected to roll down upon them. Wealth and employment were disappearing under the advance of the fiery element and gloom, fear and dark forebodings settled down upon the doomed munic.i.p.ality. But there was neither sleep nor rest for man, woman or child.
Firemen working on the south side had succeeded in checking the flames at Lombard street and, as the wind was blowing from the northwest, there was no danger of it spreading farther in that direction. The western limit had also been reached at Howard street and the danger was confined to the east and north.
The progress of the flames toward the north had in the meantime been so rapid as to be simply appalling. From structure to structure they flew, licking up the ma.s.sive buildings as if they were composed of paper. In the block between German and Baltimore streets they flew along and almost before it could be realized the buildings along Baltimore street were blazing from roof to bas.e.m.e.nt.
For a time it was hoped the fire could be kept from crossing the north side of Baltimore street and the firemen made a desperate effort to prevent it. The effort was useless, however, and soon the tall, narrow building of Mullin's hotel began to dart out tongues of flame and the remainder of the buildings between Sharp and Liberty streets were ablaze and the fire was marching north. The flames flew rapidly from place to place and soon the entire south side of Fayette street was in their grasp.
Down Fayette to Charles they swept and in a short s.p.a.ce of time the building occupied by Putts & Co. was doomed.
Seeing that nothing could save it, it was decided to destroy the building with dynamite in the hope of preventing the fire from crossing Charles street. The explosion was successful in accomplis.h.i.+ng the object as the entire corner collapsed instantly. This had, apparently, no effect upon the progress of the fire, for almost before the sound of the falling walls had died away the building on the east side of Charles street began to blaze, and it was evident the block between Charles and St. Paul streets were doomed.
In a desperate but futile effort to prevent the fire going further to the east building after building was dynamited in this block, but it was all of no avail and the fire swept steadily onward.
The Daily Record building was soon in flames and not many minutes later the fire had leaped over St. Paul street and the lofty and ma.s.sive Calvert building began to emit smoke and flame. The Equitable building, just over a narrow alley, quickly followed and these two immense buildings gave forth a glare that lighted the city for miles around.
It was thought that the fire could be prevented from crossing to the north side of Fayette street and here again a desperate stand was made by the firemen. Again it was useless and soon the large building of Hall, Headlington & Co., on the northwest corner of Charles and Fayette streets, was blazing brightly. With scarcely a pause the fire leaped across to the east side of Charles street and enveloped the handsome building of the Union Trust company, while at the same time the large buildings to the west of Hall, Headlington & Co., occupied by Wise Bros. & Oppenheim, Oberndorf & Co., were aflame throughout.
Down Fayette street to the east the flames swept, and soon the new courthouse was ablaze. The fire area then extended along Liberty street north to Fayette, east to Charles, north to Lexington, south on Charles to Baltimore street, east on Baltimore to Holliday and from there in spots to Center Market s.p.a.ce.
When it was seen the courthouse could not be saved the court records were all removed to the northern police station, two miles and half away. The Continental Trust building, a thirteen-story structure, caught at the tenth floor and was totally destroyed after burning like a great torch.
The private bank of Alexander Brown, located at Baltimore and Calvert streets, in the very heart of the fire district, a one story stone structure, miraculously escaped annihilation, the surviving building out of a great spread of two square miles of costly structures that caught the early morning sun that fateful day. Sunrise that disclosed naught save ruin, chaos and confusion.
Thus raged the warfare of man against a relentless hungry element for 27 hours. It was 11:40 Sunday morning when the fire started. At 2:40 Monday afternoon the joyful news was spread that the allied fire departments had the flames within control. Hotels, banks, business houses, factories--in fact everything in the heart of the city was swept away. All the local newspapers save one were destroyed, the street car systems were without power to operate and the lighting facilities were sadly crippled. Towering ruins loomed up on every hand, swaying in the breeze and jeopardizing life. And still the countless fires in the burned district raged on, illuminating the heavens and clouding the atmosphere with dense smoke against which myriads of sparks twinkled like miniature stars.
The last places to go before the fire started to burn itself out, were the icehouse and coal yard of the American Ice company. The coal yard, which spread out about 200 yards south of the icehouse, was the means of staying the march of the flames on the south and Jones falls on the east. The Norfolk wharf of the Baltimore steam-packet company, which was stocked with barrels of resin and other miscellaneous merchandise, was destroyed before the ice company's plant was reached.
At 10 o'clock Monday the fire was reported under control, but a little later the flames were sweeping along the harbor and river men began taking their vessels rapidly out into the middle of the stream. There were about seventy-five of these vessels and they were hastily anch.o.r.ed down the bay.
The buildings of the Standard Oil company and the Buckman Fruit company along the water front were soon in flames. This renewal of the energy of the fire continued until well along into the afternoon of the second day.
Following is a partial list of the princ.i.p.al buildings destroyed in the baptism of fire or by dynamite in an effort to stay the flames:
The courthouse, loss, $4,000,000
The postoffice, $1,000,000
Equitable building, twelve stories, $1,135,000
Union Trust Company building, 11 stories, $1,000,000
Continental Trust building, 16 stories, $1,125,000
Baltimore & Ohio general offices, $1,125,000
Calvert building, $1,125,000