|
Fire Through The
Ages: A
Timeline
Excerpted
from the 1984 FIRE ALMANAC
Published by the National Fire Protection Agency.
Quincy, MA. 1983
| 1600s
| 1700s
| 1800 -
1850s | 1851
- 1899 |
1900 -
1950s | 1951
- 2000 |
1607
First settlement in the "new world" founded
in Jamestown.
1609 --
January 7. Jamestown settlement destroyed by
fire. All provisions lost and many die of hunger
and exposure.
1613 --
Dutch trading ship Tiger burns in New York
Harbor, forcing her crew to be first settlers on
Manhattan.
1620 --
Pilgrims land at Plymouth.
1623 --
November 1. Fire destroys seven dwellings at
Plymouth and nearly ends settlement.
1630 --
Boston, MA was settled.
1648 --
Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of New Amsterdam,
appoints
four fire wardens to perform inspections of
chimneys. Fire prevention ordinances are passed and
fines are imposed to purchase and maintain fire
buckets, hooks and ladders.
1653 --
January 14. First of Boston's great fires
destroys one-third of the town.
1654 --
Joseph Jynks of Saugus, MA, builds first
American fire "enjyne".
1664 --
British take over New Amsterdam and the town
is renamed New York.
1666 --
September 2. Great Fire of London
England.
1676 --
November 27. Fire at Boston destroys large
part of North End, including Increase Mather's
church.
1679 --
Boston imports fire engines from
England.
1682 --
Town of Philadelphia is founded.
1711 --
"Towne House Fire" in Boston.
1718 --
Mutual Fire Society organized in Boston by
progressive citizens, This first volunteer fire
company in America only battled fire amongst its
members homes.
1731 --
Newsham engines arrive in New York from
London.
1736 --
Benjamin Franklin establishes the Union Fire
Company, the first fire organization in
Philadelphia and one of the first in America to
fight fires for the public good of all.
1740 --
November 18. Fire in Charleston, SC. All
houses and buildings from Broad and Church Streets
to East Battery are burned down.
1741 --
March 18. Fort George on lower end of
Manhattan burns. New Yorkers incited to rise
against "Negro Plot."
1743 --
First successful pumping engine built in
America, by Thomas Lote, New York.
1752 --
Philadelphia Contributionship started; first
successful fire-insurance company in America.
1770 --
March 5, the Boston Massacre. British troops
opened fire on a mob of colonists. The shooting may
have started when a wayward cry of "fire" was given
-- a cry intended to sound the town's church and
fire bells as an alarm.
1775 --
April 19. Paul Revere's famous ride.
June 17. Battle of Bunker Hill. Redcoats set
fire to 380 dwellings in Charlestown, MA.
1776 --
July 4. Declaration of Independence.
September 21. New York burned. American
patriots believed to have "scorched earth" for the
British by fire that destroyed 493 buildings.
1783 --
America wins her independence.
1785 --
A powerful new, American designed,
"Gooseneck" style fire engine was introduced.
1788 --
March 21. New Orleans destroyed by fire on
Good Friday. The fire was started by a curtain
blowing over an open candle. Over 900 buildings
(seven-eighths of town) burned.
1789 --
George Washington becomes first
President.
1791 --
Journals recording fire-company duty and
activities first used.
First double-deck/end stroke hand engine
built in Philadelphia.
1792 --
Insurance Company of North America was
formed.
1796 --
December 9. "Coffee House Slip" Fire in New
York.
1797 --
Newark, New Jersey organized a fire company
and purchased small hand-engine.
1800
English inventor John Carry, designed the
first crude automatic sprinkler but it went
undeveloped for a long period.
1803 --
Fort Dearborn (Chicago) founded.
Volunteer fire department established in
Cincinnati, OH.
Wooden hydrants installed in
Philadelphia.
1805 --
June 11. Detroit, Michigan destroyed by
fire.
1806 --
In the aftermath of a major fire in
Philadelphia, hydrant inspections began.
1807 --
Early fire prevention activity in
Washington, DC resulted in all chimneys being
cleaned.
1808 --
Fire Bucket Company formed in Cincinnati
Ohio.
NYC got first hydrant attached to
underground water main.
A new concept in fire fighting, leather
fire hose seam by copper rivets.
1809 --
The first fireboat (Engine 42 of New York)
was hand-rowed and hand-pumped.
1811 --
Philadelphia diverted water from storage
trunks in the street for use in fighting.
Philadelphia Hose Co. formed.
May 3 1. Fire destroys 250 buildings in
Newburyport, MA
1812 to 1814 --
The war with England brought major
conflagrations: Capitol Building, State and
Department, Treasury Building, Government Arsenal
all were destroyed by fire.
"Fire rafts" [burning ships set adrift)
were used to threaten and destroy the enemy.
1816 --
Richmond, VA organized the Richmond Fire
Society for the purpose rendering mutual aid.
1819 --
Philadelphia organized a special fire patrol
group to perform salvage work.
1820 --
January 11. Fire destroys 463 buildings,
mostly dwellings in Savannah, GA.
1821--
A volunteer fire company is organized in St.
Louis, Missouri.
1827 --
English chemist John Walter invented the
friction match containing phosphorus sulfate.
1825 --Erie Canal opened.
1829 --
George Braithwaite built first fire engine
using steam to pump water.
1830 --
B & 0 Railroad, (the first in America),
makes successful run.
Fire protection improvements in Richmond, VA
brought a water supply system reservoir, water pump
hose and private hydrants.
1832 --
Horses began pulling engines after Asiatic
cholera plague struck firemen.
Sectional ladders used by John Braidwood of
London.
1835 --
December 16. Great Fire in New York City.
Over 650 buildings, including most of the Wall
Street financial area are destroyed and result in
$20-40 million property loss. Following the
conflagration, private patrols were appointed to
cover the city in event of second fire.
1837 --
Depression and panic sweep America.
June 10. Broad Street Riot in Boston.
Firemen fight Irishmen all day.
Milwaukee, WI formed its first volunteer
fire company.
1840 --
Henry R. Worthington invented an
independent, direct-acting steam pump.
1841 --
Paul Hodge builds the first steam in America
fire engine. He is scorned by the volunteer
firefighters of New York.
1844 --
Samuel F. B. Morse invents the
telegraph.
1845 --
Dr. William F. Channing of Boston invents
the fire-alarm telegraph.
1845 --
April 10. Great Fire at Pittsburgh; 982
buildings burned, mostly dwellings.
1845 --
Potato famine in Ireland. Irish come to
America in great numbers.
1846 --
July 13. Fire in Nantucket; 300 buildings
destroyed. Brought an end to the town's whaling
supremacy.
1848 --
August 17. Fire at Albany, N. Y., destroys
600 buildings.
1849 --
California Gold Rush begins.
San Francisco. A conflagration caused by
arson results in $12 million in property damage.
Following the fire, vigilante groups are organized
to patrol the city and watch for more
arsonists.
May 17. A conflagration that began on the
ship "White Cloud" destroys twenty-six river boats,
418 buildings, and kills twenty in St. Louis,
Missouri
1850 --
Fire destroys 400 buildings in Philadelphia
and kills thirty-nine people.
1851 --
May 4. The worst of six big incendiary fires
that swept San Francisco between December, 1849,
and June, 1851. This one destroys almost the entire
city.
1852 --
First fire-alarm telegraph central office
and street box system inaugurated at Boston.
Patent issued for first sprinkler-perforated
pipe system. This was the first recognized
installation of fire protection equipment.
1853 --
Latta Brothers steam fire engine, "Uncle Joe
Ross," revolutionizes firefighting. Cincinnati
becomes the first American city to replace
volunteers with the horse-drawn steam fire engine,
and to form a paid fire department.
December 27. Great Republic, biggest clipper
ship ever built, burns in New York on eve of her
maiden voyage.
1854 --
Jennings Building fire causes four deaths in
New York City .
1856 --
Aurora, IL forms its first fire company,
"Young
America Fire Engine Company No. 1" and a hand
pumper and hose cart are delivered.
1857 --
St. Louis forms the second fully paid steam
fire department in America.
1858 --
Crystal Palace fire, in New York City .
1859 --
Baltimore, MD established its first paid
fire department.
1860 --
January 10. Pemberton Mills Fire in
Lawrence, Mass.; 115 killed.
February 2. Elm Street Tenement Fire in New
York City; 200 killed. Laws requiring fire escapes
were passed as a result of this fire.
1861 --
Milwaukee, WI establishes a paid fire
company.
Washington, DC fire department becomes a
fully paid organization and installs a fire alarm
telegraph.
Fort Sumter attacked. Civil War begins.
New York City firefighters organize the
first Fire Zouaves regiments and leave for the
battlefront.
December 11. Most of Charleston, South
Carolina is destroyed by fire.
1863 --
Battle of Gettysburg.
July. Draft riots in many United States
cities.
New York City draft riots occur.
New York City becomes paid fire
department.
1864 --
November 8. "Southern Conspiracy" to burn
New York City.
1865 --
General Robert E. Lee surrenders.
April 14. President Abraham Lincoln
assassinated.
April 27. S.S. Sultana explodes in
Mississippi River; 1450 killed.
1866 --
Atlantic Cable successfully laid.
July 4. Great Fire in Portland, Maine. Firecracker
starts blaze that destroys 1500 buildings.
1867 --
Alaska purchased from Russia.
1869 --
Railroad spans America, coast to coast.
The City of Aurora reorganizes the fire
department. A new steam fire engine is purchased
for the East Side district. A high-pressure Holly
Pump water system is installed and the "Holly Hose
Co." is organized to protect the West Side.
1870 --
"Boss" Tweed era of corruption in New York
at its height.
Philadelphia PA gets a paid fire
department.
Daniel Hayes, a San Francisco fireman,
develops the first successful aerial ladder
truck.
1871 --
First volunteer firefighting unit organized
in Los Angeles, CA.
Rubber-lined, cotton-jacketed, fire hose
begins to replace the riveted leather hose.
October 8. The Great
Chicago Fire. 18,000 buildings burned, over 200
lives lost. Help comes from eight states to battle
the two-day conflagration. Aurora, IL sends a steam
fire engine and crew of eighty-five
firefighters.
Also on October 8, forest fires destroyed
the town of Peshtigo,
Wisconson (killing over 1,000) and raged
through parts of Michigan.
1872 --
November 9. Great Fire of Boston..
Great Fire of Boston destroyed 776 buildings
and one square mile of the business district.
More than seventy insurance companies went
bankrupt as a result of the Great Fire of Boston.
The companies that survived formed the National
Board of Underwriters and established safeguards
for insurance companies to follow.
1873 --
Quick-hitch collar and hames invented by
Charles Berry a fireman in Cambridge, MA.
Suspended harness invented by firemen in St.
Joseph, Missouri.
1873 --
First sliding poles, (made of wood), were
installed in some New York engine houses.
1874 --
Automatic sprinklers introduced.
First high-pressure water system for
fighting fires installed in Rochester, NY
1876 --
Telephone invented.
Big-league baseball is organized.
December 5. Brooklyn Theater Fire; 295
killed.
1879 --
Edison invents the incandescent lamp.
1880 --
Frederick Grinnell improved upon the
automatic sprinkler. Insurance companies cut rates
to businesses installing Grinnell sprinklers.
1889 --
Henry Ford builds his first car.
May 31. The Johnstown Flood, 2200 people
killed.
June 6. Fire destroys thirty-one blocks in
center of city and along the waterfront in Seattle,
Washington.
1894 --
Moving-picture machine invented.
New
Central Fire Station (now the home of the
Aurora Regional Fire Museum) is completed in
Aurora, IL.
1895 --
February 14. Fire at Lynn, Mass., destroys 300
buildings in center of city, mostly factories.
1897 --
Klondike Gold Rush.
1898 --
Spanish-American War.
1900 --
June 30. Fire sweeps through the Hoboken
water front; 400 killed.
September 8. Galveston (TX) Flood kills
5,000.
1901 --
May 3. Fire destroys 1700 buildings in
Jacksonville, Florida.
Marconi transmitts the first wireless
message across the Atlantic.
President McKinley is assassinated and
Theodore Roosevelt becomes President.
1902
Wright Brothers make first airplane
flight.
February 8. Fire burns 525 buildings in
Paterson, New Jersey.
1903
December 30. Iroquois
Theater fire, Chicago, Illinois (602 deaths and
250 injuries).
1904
Successful breathing apparatus invented but
not adopted for a number of years.
February 7. Great Fire at Baltimore. eighty
downtown blocks, 1343 buildings burined. The
Baltimore fire raised national attention for the
need to standardize fire hose couplings and screw
threads.
June 15. General Slocum, an excursion
steamer with combustibles on board, catches on fire
while crusing in New York's East River. 1,030 lives
were lost, mostly children. This fire lead to
inspection of ships in New York Harbor.
1906
April 18. San Francisco earthquake and fire
destroys 28,000 buildings; Over 492 deaths and $350
million in property damage.
1907
Gasoline-powered motors and pumps begin to
appear in the fire service.
Underwriters Laboratories initiated its
factory inspection service and began to issue
labels for "approved devices."
Invention of first pumper with a single
engine to do both driving and pumping.
1908
March 4. Fire at Lakeview Grammar School in
Collinwood, Ohio. 175 children and one teacher are
killed.
April 12. Conflagration in Chelsea,
Massachusetts, burns 3,500 buildings and kills
eighteen.
1910
Fire in the Nelson Morris Co. Chicago,
Illinois. Twenty-one firemen killed by falling
wall.
New York City fire, Grand Central terminal
yard.
Transport of hazardous materials is quickly
becoming a great hazard.
1911 --
Aurora, IL places its first motorized fire
engine into service.
March 25. Fire
at the Triangle Shirt Waist factory in New York
City. Over 150 killed, mostly young women. This
fire aroused the public and labor against sweat
shops and child labor.
New York City created Committee on Safety
which led directly to Safety to Life Committee of
National Fire Protection Association. (the
NFPA).
1912
Equitable Building fire in New York
City.
Titanic sinks 1,513 lives are lost.
1913 --
Fire destroys 518 buildings in Hot Springs,
Arkansas.
Binghamton Clothing Factory fire results in
new standard for building exits (35 deaths).
Single-driving and pumping engine developed
to efficiency.
Life Safety Code®
is established.
1914 --
June 25. 1,600 buildings are destroyed when
fire sweeps through Salem, Massachusetts.
Panama Canal opened.
World War I begins.
1915 --
Telephone service from New York to San
Francisco is initiated.
The S.S. Lusitania is sunk.
1916 --
March 21. Fire burns 1440 buildings, nearly
the entire town of Paris, Texas.
March 22. Fire in Nashville, Tennessee burns
648 buildings, mostly dwellings.
March 22. 682 buildings burn in downtown
Augusta, Georgia.
July 30. "Black Tom Pier" fire and explosion
in New Jersey.
1917 --
Ammunition storage explosion kills 1,500 in
Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Eddystone Ammunition Corporation explosion,
Eddystone, Pensylvania (133 deaths).
April 6. United States enters World War
I.
May 21. Simultaneous fires destroy 1,938
buildings in Atlanta, Ga.
1918 --
International Association of Firefighters
Union organized.
October forest fires in Minnesota sweep
through fifteen townships destroy and kill 559.
November 11. Armistice is signed, World War
I ends
1919 --
Two-platoon system begins in New York City.
Many cities had already adopted shorter hours for
firemen, others were to follow soon.
1920 --
Prohibition in effect.
September 16. Wall Street explosion; 40
killed.
1921 --
New Stutz motorized fire engine is delivered
to Aurora, IL (this engine is now on display at the
Aurora Regional Fire Museum)
California passed a law forbidding wooden
shingles on roofs but pressure from the roofing
industry brought a repeal.
1922 --
President Harding issued first Fire
Prevention Week proclamation.
Standards for Municipal Fire Alarm systems
are adopted.
December 8. fire destroys 30 blocks in the
center of Astoria, Oregon during a rainstorm.
December 20. Last horse-drawn engine in New
York City is retired.
1923 --
Cleveland School Fire in Beulah, SC (77
deaths).
Tokyo and Yokohama earthquake and
conflagration, Japan (91,344 deaths).
United States Chamber of Commerce sponsors
National Fire Waste Council with contest for fire
prevention in cities by local chamber of
commerce.
Fire prevention education in schools
required by thirteen states.
September 17. Brush fire roars through
Berkeley, California and destroys 640
buildings.
1926 --
Shakespeare Memorial Theater burns in
Stratford-on-Avon.
1927 --
First sound movies.
Lindbergh flies from New York to Paris.
Annual Fire Prevention Week inaugurated.
1928 --
Fire in Fall River, MA burns 107 factories
and business blocks.
1929 --
May 15. Cleveland Clinic Fire.125 are killed
when X-ray films burn and give off poisonous fumes.
As a result of this fire, in laws require the use
of "safety film."
Stock Market Crash. The great depression had
devastating effects on fire department budgets.
resulting in losses of manpower and stations. Arson
fires increased.
1930 --
Ohio State Penitentiary fire, Columbus, OH
(320 deaths).
1930-1933 --
Comprehensive fire loss study estimates that
most fire deaths involving the very old and the
very young occur in ordinary dwellings.
1934 --
S.S. Morro Castle caught fire off the New
Jersey coast, 134 killed.
Conflagration in Hakodate, Japan destroys
one-half of the city and takes 2,018 lives.
Woolworth building fire in Aurora, IL. Three
firefighters are killed and six others were injured
when a wall collapsed.
May 19. Chicago Stockyards Fire.
Fire destroys 20 blocks in center of Nome,
Alaska on September 17.
1937 --
Consolidated School fire in New London, TX
gas explosion (294 deaths). This fire focused
attention on the need to safeguard buildings not
subject to municipal ordinances.
German Zeppelin Hindenburg burned as a
result of an engine spark igniting flammable
hydrogen (36 deaths).
1939 --
World War II begins. Incendiary bombs
dropped on European cities.
1941 --
December 7. Bombing of Pearl Harbor resulted
in loss of 2,383 lives and 19 American ships. Other
losses - $25 million damage to aircraft, $25
million damage to buildings, supplies and
ammunitions, 88 ships damaged and 960 persons
missing. Pearl Harbor experience led to fire
training program of the US Navy.
Japanese and European cities continue to be
destroyed by war conflagrations.
1942 --
November 28. Coconut Grove Night Club fire,
Boston, MA (492 deaths). This fire showed the need
for practical improvements. UL stepped up research
on combustibles in public places.
1943 --
"Rain of Terror," in Hamburg, Germany. Fire
storms killed 60,000 to 100,000 people.
1944 --
July 6. The Ringling Bros.and Barnum &
Bailey circus
tent catches fire in Hartford, Connecticut. 167
are killed and nearly 500 are injured.
Gas explosion and fire at the East Ohio Gas
Co.in Cleveland, Ohio causes 130 deaths.
Munitions Depot explosion in Port Chicago,
California (300 deaths).
1945 --
Dresden, Germany, explosive incendiary bomb
raid ( 300,000 deaths).
Eastern Air Lines DC-3 near Florence, S.C.,
fire in flight (22 deaths). Empire State Building
struck by aircraft (14 deaths).
Germany surrenders. Japan surrenders after
atom bombs are dropped..
1946 --
June 5. Sixty-one die in a fire at the
LaSalle Hotel fire, Chicago, Illinois.
December 7. Winecoff Hotel fire in Atlanta,
Georgia (119 deaths).
1947 --
The Morkoy, petroleum tanker fire in Los
Angeles, CA. Fireboats used to fight miles of
waterfront fire.
April 16. Ammonium nitrate being loaded on
the S.S. Grandcamp explodes in Texas
City, Texas. More than 600 are killed,
including entire membership of volunteer fire
department.
Centralia Coal Co., Centralia, IL dust
explosion (111 deaths).
October 23. Forest fires burn in Maine burn
1,200 buildings and kill 16.
1948 --
DC-4 accident at Chicago Municipal Airport
(12 deaths). This fire recognized the need for
specialized aircraft rescue and fire fighting
vehicles for airports.
The US Postal Service issues a three-cent
stamp honoring volunteer firemen
1951 --
Sparky
the Fire Dog created as a symbol of fire
prevention for children.
1954 --
Cleveland Hill School fire, Cheektowaga. New
York (15 deaths).
Oil refinery fire in Whiting, Indiana
resulted in $16 million loss, explosion and
boilover.
Junior Fire Department in Los Angeles, CA
organized.
1958 --
Our Lady of
Angels School, Chicago. IL, rubbish fire spread
through open stairway (95 deaths).
1965 --
Multiple fires resulting from Watts riots in
Los Angeles, California. After 34 lives were lost,
special gear was used to protect fire fighters as a
defense.
1966 --
Chief E. J. Bauman establishes the Aurora
Fire Department Museum. Lieutenant Charles 0.
Goodwin is appointed as Curator.
1967 --
McCormick Place fire, Chicago, Illinois
Apollo Space Capsule fire, Cape Kennedy,
Florida, 3 astronauts died.
A fire resistive fabric, Nomex,® came
into existence.
Forrestal aircraft carrier fire off coast of
Vietnam (131 deaths).
1974 --
Aurora, IL firefighters begin Emergency
Medical Technician (EMT) training at Mercy Center
Hospital.
1975 --
A 727 plane crash and fire in New York.
Spilled fuel ignited after crash (113 deaths).
1976 --
Social Club fire, Bronx, New York (25
Nursing home fire in Chicago, Illinois kills
24.
1977 --
Fire at the "Beverly Hills Supper Club" in
Southgate, KY results in 165 deaths.
1980 --
MGM
Hotel fire, Las Vegas, Nevade (85 deaths).
Stouffer's Inn hotel fire, Harrison, New
York (26 deaths).
1981 --
Hyatt-Regency Hotel walkway falls, killing
114 in Kansas City, Missouri
1995 --
Oklahoma City Bombing, 169 Dead.
2001 --
September 11. Terrorist attack the World
Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in
Washington DC. 189 are killed in the Pentagon
attack. In New York, both of the 110 story world
trade towers collapse killing nearly 3,000
including 344 firefighters and 87 police officers.
A third hijacked plane crached in rural
Pennsylvania.
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