On the afternoon of June 6, 1889, a pot of glue destroyed Seattle the rough-and-tumble logging town, making way for Seattle the metropolis.
That fateful day, John E. Back was heating glue on the stove in Victor Clairmont's cabinet shop in the basement of the Pontius building at 922 Front Street. The unattended glue pot burst into flames. Attempts to put the fire out with water only spattered the glue around the workshop, and soon the whole building was engulfed.
John Back described the events of the day in an interview printed in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer: "I cut some balls of glue and put them in the glue pot on the stove [and] went to work about twenty-five feet away, near the front door. After a while somebody said Look at the glue.' Another fellow, a Findlander from New York, then took a piece of board and laid it on to smother the glue, but the board caught fire. Then I run and took the pot of water to smother the fire and poured it over the pot of glue, which was blazing up high. When I throw the water on, the glue flew all over the shop into the shavings and everything take fire (Lange 1999)."
On that dry, windy day, the fire quickly spread from the Pontius building throughout downtown Seattle. Firefighting efforts were hampered by low pressure in the town's privately-owned water system. In addition, fire hydrants had been installed only on every other street, and some of the water pipes were made from hollow logs, many of which burned in the fire (University of Washington). By the time the fire died out, twenty-five city blocks had been decimated, leaving Seattle without a downtown.
Rather than giving up and relocating, Seattle's businessmen banded together to rebuild the town. Most businessmen rebuilt on top of the ashes of their former business, but using more fire-resistant building materials and including improved plumbing to help prevent another disastrous fire.
The Seattle fire led to a number of improvements for the town. Most of the rats that had infested the commercial area were killed in the fire. The fire also led to a number of intentional improvements: some streets were raised to make the downtown more level, a professional fire department was established, and the town's plumbing system was taken out of private control and greatly improved.
Seattle's post-fire construction looked quite different from what had been there before. Following new construction ordinances, the new buildings were made of brick or stone rather than wood. The laws
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
By 1889, the business district of Seattle, Washington consisted of densely packed, poorly constructed, mostly-wooden buildings.
On the afternoon of June 6, 1889, a pot of glue destroyed Seattle the rough-and-tumble logging town, making way for Seattle
The significance of the Great Seattle Fire can be measured by the way the city handled the situation after the fire occurred.
On the beautiful afternoon of June 6, 1889, a young woodworking assistant named John Bachs accidentally allowed hot glue
by Wendy Lafond
The most significant consequence of the Great Seattle Fire was and still is the impressive positive influence that the overall
View All Articles on:
The significance of the Great Seattle Fire
Add your voice
Know something about The significance of the Great Seattle Fire?
We want to hear your view.
Write now!
Featured Partner
ResearchSEA - Asia Research News
ResearchSEA - Asia Research News is Asia's first research news portal. It is a one-stop center where journalists a...more
hide