This page contains basic information about the Great Boston Fire of 1872, which occurred on Saturday and Sunday, November 9 & 10, 1872. The fire destroyed 776 buildings across 65 acres of land, with the assessed value of the properties at nearly $13.5 million and personal property loss of of $60 million dollars. The downtown area of Boston had undergone a rapid development in the years after the Civil War, but improvements, especially water mains, had not been upgraded during these years. The fire department at the time was dealing with an epizootic, a disease which affects equine animals, thus affecting the horses that pulled the heavy fire apparatus. The fire spread rapidly, creating its own energy or firestorm, due to the tremendous heat generated. Although many or most buildings were made of brick or stone, the window frames and other fixtures were made of wood, thus allowing the fire to communicate to nearby structures. During the course of the fire, which burned uncontrolled for more than 12 hours, buildings were blown-up using black gun powder in a controversial effort to create a fire break.
The fire started in a building at 83-85 Summer Street, at the corner of Kingston Street, in the downtown area. The first alarm was received at 7:24PM from Box 52 located at Summer and Lincoln Streets. The fire had nearly total possession of the building of origin upon the arrival of the first fire engine, Engine Co. 7 from their quarters at 7 East Street, near South Station. Hose Company 2, from Hudson Street, is credited with getting the first water on the fire. Additional alarms were struck at 7:29, 7:34, 7:45 and 8:00PM. Further alarms were struck for Box 48 and Box 123. Urgent calls for help were sent by telegraph, but help was delayed due to many telegraph offices having closed for the evening. Nearly all the cities and town surrounding Boston sent help. Some cities sent steam engines by railroad, with many coming great distances, including from New Haven, CT. Chief Engineer John Damrell was in command at the fire, but his attention was frequently interrupted by city officials seeking meetings to discuss strategy and the political impact of the fire.
The fire was finally stopped at corner of Washington and Milk Streets through the efforts of the firefighters to save the Old South Meetinghouse, on the opposite corner of Milk Street. The Old South, a fixture since colonial days, was (and remains) an important symbol of Boston’s heritage and every effort was made to save it. Most accounts of the fire attribute credit for saving Old South to the Kearsarge Engine 3 of Portsmouth, NH, although that point is still debated. Despite the enormity of the fire, only two Boston fireman were killed, with the total deaths numbering between 13 and 20, depending on the source. Chief Damrell was heavily criticized and much of the blame for the fire was directed at him, despite his record of having sought improvements in the city’s fire safety infrastructure. By 1874, he was replaced with a Board of Fire Commissioners. He later served many years as the commissioner of the Boston Building Department.
Much has been written about this fire in books, journals, periodicals, newspapers. Many photographs were taken in the aftermath of the fire, but none exist (to date) of the actual fire. Use the links below to find articles, stories, books, photographs, maps and other publications related to this fire.
See stereograph photos of the aftermath of the Fire. Stereographs
Nine firefighters were killed during the Fire, two after the Fire, along with perhaps fifteen civilians. The firefighters killed at the scene were:
- Foreman William Farry, Boston Ladder Company 4
- Assistant Foreman Daniel Cochrane, Boston Ladder Company 4
- Volunteer Henry Rogers, Boston Engine Company 6
- Volunteer Lewis P. Abbott, Charlestown Fire Department
- Volunteer William S. Frazier, Cambridge Fire Department
- Volunteer Frank D. Olmstead, Cambridge Fire Department
- Member John Connelly, Ladder Company 1, West Roxbury Fire Department
- Member Walter S. Twombly, Hose Company 2, Malden Fire Department
- Member Thomas Maloney, Worcester Fire Department
Dying later from injuries received at the Fire were:
- Member Martin Turnbull, Hose Company 3, Charlestown Fire Department
- Volunteer Albert C. Abbott, Charlestown Fire Department
Publications
- Map of Boston and the Burnt District, 1872
- Close-up map of the Burnt District
- Boston Public Library Photograph Collection
- Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Investigate the Cause and Management of the Great Fire in Boston,
City of Boston, 1873 - A Complete History of the Boston Fire Department, 1630 to 1888, page 273, by Arthur Wellington Brayley, 1889
- History of the Great Fire in Boston, November 9 and 10, 1872 , by Russell Herman Conwell, 1873
- The Story of the Great Fire, Boston, November 9-10, 1872 , by Charles Carleton Coffin, 1872
- The Boston Fire, November 9, 1872, by the Boston Chamber of Commerce, 1922
- Damrell’s Fire, by Docema.com
- The Great Boston Fire, “The New England Magazine”, by Robert G. Fitch, 1900
- Remarks at the November 14, 1872 meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society
- Capt. John S. Damrell’s Address Before Boston Veteran Firemen, February 2, 1886, on Great Fire of 1872.
- The Book of Boston, 50 Years Recollections of the New England Metropolis, by Edwin Monroe Bacon, 1916
- Letters Written by a Gentleman in Boston to his Friend in Paris, Describing the Great Fire, by Harold Murdock 1909
- The Boston Fire, November 9th and 10th, 1872: Its History…(etc), by Frank E. Frothingham, 1873
- “On This Date” by Mass Moments
Additional Items
- Newspaper Story: 11/09/1902 – 30th Anniversary of Great Fire of 1872
- Newspaper Story: 11/10/1912 – 40th Anniversary of Great Fire of 1872
- Newspaper Story: 03/03/1898 – Portsmouth NH fireman who went to Boston dies
- Newspaper Story: 03/30/1903 – Portsmouth NH fireman who went to Boston dies
References
Boston On Fire, A History of Fires…, by Stephanie Schorow (2003)
Chandler & Co.’s Full Account of the Great Fire in Boston… (1872)
The Great Boston Fire – 1872, A Disaster with a Villian…by Boston Globe (1972)
The Great Boston Fire of 1872, by Anthony M. Sammarco (1997)
A Half Century of Boston’s Buildings, by Charles S. Damrell (1895)
The Epizootic Fire, by John P. Vahey