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Fire extinction. United States. History. Juvenile literature.
Fire extinction. United States. History.
A significant look at the ten most deadly fires in United States history, this book details the disastrous loss of life, land, and city infrastructure through five centuries. Cooper skillfully traces the inventions, technology, and laws created in the aftermath of historic fires. The first major fire in 1760 Boston changed enforcement policies on building regulations. New York's 1835 fire devastated lower Manhattan businesses, prompting the building of a modern water system. The burning of the General Slocum in 1904 resulted in better life-saving equipment and training regulations. The fire at Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in 1911 inspired better fire safety laws to protect workers. The fires of 1871 Chicago, 1904 Baltimore, and 1906 San Francisco resulted in more modern organization of fire departments, proper fire-fighting equipment, firefighter training, reliable water supplies, and strong fire codes. The 1942 Cocoanut Grove Nightclub fire instilled the need for nonflammable decorations in public establishments and safe emergency exit measures for buildings. In the case of 9/11 and the Witch Creek Wildefire, communication would save or lose lives.Cooper's writing style is engaging and interesting while imparting historical information for educational value. This work is highly readable for both research and personal interest. The writing leaves readers feeling the emotional impact of the disasters without overdramatizing the tragedy. There is a great selection of illustrations depicting fire scenes and the devastation they caused. Later photos would have been better in color, but the black-and-white photos fit the layout of the book. The quotes from bystanders and witnesses add a descriptive depth to these historical accounts. This is an excellent read for those interested disasters or firefighting.Laura Panter.
School Library Journal (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)Gr 5-8 Fire has shaped the landscape of America since Colonial times. Cooper has taken this high-interest topic and used primary sources to relate how firefighters fought those blazes. He covers famous urban disasters, such as the 1871 Great Chicago Fire and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake/fire, among others. The firefighting and rescue efforts of September 11, 2001, are discussed in detail. Cooper also delves into lesser-known fires, such as the one aboard the excursion boat the General Slocum , in 1904, which killed 1,021 people. The author does an excellent job of relating advances in fire safety and firefighting techniques to the lessons learned from these tragedies. Relying upon sources that range from Colonial diaries to modern television news transcripts, he incorporates eyewitness accounts to strengthen his writing. The tone of writing is dramatic but not sensationalized. In all, this well-researched book should circulate if demand for firefighting materials is high. In addition, libraries in or around the areas featured (Boston, New York City, Baltimore, Chicago, San Francisco, and San Diego County) may wish to purchase for local interest. Lisa Crandall, formerly at the Capital Area District Library, Holt, MI
ALA Booklist (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2014)This well-researched book looks at 10 significant fires in U.S. history: Boston in 1760, New York City in 1835, Chicago in 1871, Baltimore in 1904, New York's General Slocum steamboat in 1904, San Francisco in 1906, New York's Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in 1911, Boston's Cocoanut Grove nightclub in 1942, New York's World Trade Center in 2001, and San Diego County's wildfires in 2007. Along the way, Cooper traces the history of firefighting in America, from citizen volunteers manning bucket brigades to a cooperative, international force of professional firefighters. The illustrations include a good selection of period prints depicting early fires as well as many photos of later blazes and the devastation they caused. Cooper organizes the material well, writes clearly, and refrains from sensationalizing the already dramatic stories. A must-read for young people intrigued by disasters, this book also offers plenty of solid, usable information for reports on specific fires.
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)Throughout history, fires have wreaked destruction but have also sparked innovation and reform. The Great Chicago Fire (1871) destroyed a third of the city but brought about a new architecture style; the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (1911) killed 146 people but led to the passage of laws protecting workers. Entries are lively, with dramatic illustrations to match. Reading list, websites. Bib., glos., ind.
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
National Council For Social Studies Notable Children's Trade
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Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
School Library Journal (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
ALA Booklist (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2014)
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
COLONIAL AMERICA’S BIGGEST FIRE
BOSTON, 1760
In the days of Benjamin Franklin and George Washington, big fires regularly destroyed towns and cities, but no city burned more than Boston.
Between Boston’s founding in 1630 and the start of the American Revolution in 1775, fires regularly devastated large sections of the city. It’s not hard to see why. The Puritans who settled on Boston’s hilly Shawmut Peninsula used wood from nearby forests to build practically everything—houses, churches, and shops. They even used it to make chimneys. And the colonists cooked meals and heated their homes with open fireplaces full of wood crackling and popping. At night, candles and oil lamps provided light.
Colonial Boston had its first recorded fire in 1631, when a chimney caught fire and burned a house down. Soon afterward the colonies had their first fire code: “noe man shall build his chimney with wood, nor cover his house with thatch.” New regulations followed each big fire. Boston’s Board of Selectmen, which was like a city council, required residents to clean their chimneys regularly. The selectmen also decreed that “no dwelling house in Boston shall be erected and set up except of stone or brick and covered with slate or tyle.”
In 1678, the selectmen purchased the latest firefighting equipment, an English-made “hand tub fire engine.” At the time the word engine simply meant a tool or instrument. It was a rectangular wooden vessel with a pump, a short leather hose, and handles on each side for carrying. During a fire, a line of men, women, and children, which was called a bucket brigade, drew buckets of water from a creek or well and passed them to firefighters to fill the engine. Several men pumped the engine while one held the hose, which spurted water 15 to 20 feet.
The selectmen chose a dozen men to operate the engine. The man in charge was called the engineer. They were paid for each fire they fought, which gives Boston its claim to having had America’s first paid firefighters.
Some twenty Bostonians in 1718 organized a mutual fire society, pledging to help one another if a fire started in their homes or shops. The rules required that “each Member confidently keep together in good Order in his Dwelling House, Two Leather Buckets, a Bed Winch, and two Bags.” During a fire, the society’s members filled their bags with dishes, clothing, and other small items. With the winches, they dismantled beds, often a family’s most valuable possessions.
Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston, and at age five he witnessed the Great Fire of 1711, which destroyed some one hundred buildings in the center of town. In 1736, as an adult living in Philadelphia, Franklin helped to organize America’s first volunteer fire company, the Union Fire Company. Franklin’s firefighters were “Brave men, men of Spirit and Humanity, good Citizens or Neighbours, capable and worthy of civil society, and the Enjoyment of a happy Government.” Boston and other colonial cities soon organized their own volunteer fire companies.
As in Philadelphia, Boston’s volunteers included the town’s leading citizens. “It is of some Importance in Boston,” noted John Adams, America’s second president, “to belong to a Fire Clubb and to choose and get admitted to a good one.” Many Bostonians who distinguished themselves in the American Revolution, such as Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and Paul Revere, were volunteer firefighters.
Boston also organized nighttime street patrols or fire watches. This practice dated back to ancient Rome, when men on night patrol were called “vigils” because they were vigilant, or watchful. Time is of the essence when fighting a fire. By discovering a blaze quickly, alerting residents, and summoning firefighters, vigilant patrols saved property and lives.
In the spring of 1760, Boston’s population of fifteen thousand people made it the third-largest city in the colonies. In addition to its building codes, mutual societies, and night watchmen, the city had nine fire engines and about one hundred volunteer firefighters. The city appeared prepared but wasn’t.
The regulations requiring that dwellings and shops be built of brick or stone had never been strictly enforced. Many buildings along the narrow, winding streets in the oldest part of Boston were wood. In fact, wood was everywhere. Stacks of logs for heating and cooking sat beside every house and shop. Plus, bakers, blacksmiths, brewers, coopers, and tanners kept piles of logs for their ovens and furnaces.
Little rain had fallen for several weeks, so all of this combustible material was especially dry. Making conditions worse, a strong March wind blew across the peninsula.
At 3:00 A.M. on Thursday, March 20, a watchman saw flames in the Brazen Head Tavern and Inn on Pudding Lane in Cornhill, a neighborhood between the Boston Common and the harbor. The fire probably started when embers popped out of the inn’s fireplace. Summoned by church bells, firefighters carrying ladders and buckets and pulling engines, which were now on wheels, ran to Pudding Lane. Unable to save the Brazen Head, the men tried to stop the fire from spreading.
The firefighters threw water on neighboring buildings and used their hooks and chains to pull down several shops and homes to create a firebreak. A firebreak is an open space cleared as much as possible of flammable material. The demolished buildings also made it easier for firefighters to soak the rubble and extinguish firebrands as these airborne embers landed. But that night, nothing worked.
A sailor from Nova Scotia named David Perry described the scene in his journal: “While we were here the town took fire in the night … the wind in the north-west and pretty high; and in spite of all we could do with the engines, &c. it spread a great way down King’s Street, and went across and laid all that part of the town in ashes, down to Fort Hill. We attended through the whole, and assisted in carrying water to the engines.”
The inferno lit up the sky. People sixty miles north of Boston reported seeing the red glow. By dawn, the fire was “a perfect torrent of flame,” recalled Bostonian William Cooper. “It is not easy to describe the Terror of that Fatal morning.… The distressed Inhabitants of those Buildings wrapped in Fire scarce knew where to take refuge.”
At the harbor, about half a mile from where it started, the fire burned Hallowell’s Shipyard and Wendell’s Wharf, where a storehouse full of gunpowder exploded. The blaze destroyed one sailing ship and damaged nine others before burning out at the water’s edge.
Surprisingly, no one died. “In the midst of our Distress we have great cause for Thanksgiving,” Cooper wrote, “that not withstanding the rage of the fire, the explosion at the Small Battery, and the falling of the walls, and chimneys, Divine Providence, who so mercifully ordered it, not one life has been lost and few wounded.”
But the rest of the news wasn’t good. The “Great Fire of 1760” was the worst fire of the colonial era. In ten hours, the fire had destroyed 349 buildings, mostly in the South End. Because of the wind’s direction, the Meeting House was spared. Many protests a few years later against British policies, such as the Boston Tea Party, began at the Old South Meeting House.
Prominent Bostonians offered explanations for the fire that might seem odd to reasonable people today but were widely believed then. The Reverend Jonathan Mayhew, the man later credited with coining the phrase “no taxation without representation,” gave his “Sermon Occasioned by the Great Fire” at Old West Church on Cambridge Street. Mayhew told his congregation:
But it seems that God, who had spared us before beyond our hopes, was now determined to let loose his wrath upon us, to rebuke us in his anger, and chasten us in his hot displeasure.… Soon after the fire broke out, he caused his wind to blow; and suddenly raised it to such a height, that all endeavors to put a stop to the raging flames, were ineffectual.
Why was God angry? Because Bostonians were skipping church and “profaning” the Sabbath by working.
Despite believing that mortal men couldn’t prevent destructive fires, the selectmen became tougher about enforcing building codes—especially the ones requiring that new houses and shops be made of brick or stone, with tile or slate roofs. The city widened and straightened narrow streets that would act as firebreaks and give firefighters more room to maneuver. It also bought more ladders and dug new wells.
But these improvements did little to help the Great Fire’s victims. The blaze had destroyed the wooden tenements of free African Americans and the brick homes of wealthy merchants. Once-prosperous families were penniless and homeless. Carpenters, coopers, and coppersmiths had lost their tools and couldn’t earn a living. Fire insurance, which would have helped them replace their property, wasn’t common at that time. Other colonies and merchants in England sent money and goods, but not enough.
Boston’s selectmen wrote a letter to King George and to Parliament in London, asking “most humbly … to take their calamities case into their compassionate consideration, and grant them such relief as to the great wisdom and goodness of this Honorable House shall deem proper.” Two years later, the selectmen received a reply. The letter simply stated their request had been received, but no aid was offered.
Some historians have wondered if the Great Fire of 1760 added to the grievances that led to the American Revolution. Already frustrated by Parliament’s and the king’s indifference to their plight, Bostonians grew angrier when Britain imposed the Sugar Act of 1764, the Stamp Act of 1765, and other new taxes. Their resentment led to a revolution, which began on April 19, 1775, at the Battles of Lexington and Concord.
Copyright © 2014 by Michael L. Cooper
Excerpted from Fighting Fire!: Ten of the Deadliest Fires in American History and How We Fought Them by Michael L. Cooper
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
From colonial times to the modern day, two things have remained constant in American history: the destructive power of fires and the bravery of those who fight them. Fighting Fire! by Michael L. Cooper brings to life ten of the deadliest infernos this nation has ever endured: the great fires of Boston, New York, Chicago, Baltimore, and San Francisco, the disasters of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, the General Slocum, and the Cocoanut Grove nightclub, the wildfire of Witch Creek in San Diego County, and the catastrophe of 9/11. Each blaze led to new firefighting techniques and technologies, yet the struggle against fires continues to this day. With historical imagesand a fast-paced text, this is both an exciting look at firefighting history and a celebration of the human spirit.