Jacques Kelly: Great Baltimore Fire of 1904
The Sun’s Jacques Kelly (whose grandmothers were present in Baltimore when the fire occurred) speaks more on the fire that ravaged and destroyed parts of downtown Baltimore and its aftermath.
The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 started on Feb. 7 and raged on until 5 p.m. the next day. The fire began inside the John E. Hurst & Company building, causing an explosion that sent flames on to adjacent buildings. In minutes, surrounding buildings were ablaze and the fire continued to sweep through parts of downtown, in large part due to wind and lack of standardized fire-fighting equipment. Calls for help were telegraphed to other cities including Philadelphia, New York, and Washington D.C., who sent assistance. According to the Fire Museum of Baltimore, some 1,231 and 1,200 National Guardsmen were needed as part of the effort. In about 30 hours, 140 acres of downtown Baltimore had burned, taking down 1,526 buildings and 2,500 businesses in its fury. Two years later, The Baltimore Sun reported that the city had risen from the ashes and “one of the great disasters of modern time had been converted into a blessing.”
Tip: Click the “captions” button at the bottom of the player to view each photo’s caption.
Photo: This panorama of downtown Baltimore after the “Great Fire” in 1904 shows the incredible destruction of the two day blaze. The downtown scene today is an ever changing one. Photographer and publication date unknown.
trebort49
Mar 03, 2013 @ 11:24:19
The captions essentially are worthless. It would be more helpful if the caption for each photograph showed the reader what is being visualized; you know, the journalistic canon of “who, what, when, where, and why.”
Stokely Baksh
Mar 03, 2013 @ 13:58:32
Thanks for your message. The captions are based on available information via our archives. The audio recording by Jacques Kelly provides more details about the Baltimore Fire of 1904.