The Fire of 1916
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The
Great Fire
- The Great Augusta Fire starts at Kelly
Dry Goods in the Dyer
Building at the northwest corner of Broad and Eighth Street. An
electric iron left on started the fire. Initial alarm to the fire
department came at 6:20 P.M.
- Fire departments assisting the Augusta
Fire Department were:
Waynesboro (14 volunteers and 2000 feet of hose); Macon (12 men, 1
motor pump and 22,000 feet of hose); Savannah (32 men, 2 American
LeFrance motor pumps); Atlanta (14 men, 2 steam fire engines, 2,000
feet of hose); Charleston (8 men, 1 steam fire engine, 2,000 feet of
hose); Columbia (men, 1 Robinson Motor Pump, 2000 feet of hose);
Greenville (14 men, 1 engine, 33,000 feet of hose).
- Before the church caught fire, many items
were removed and saved by
the Rector, G. S. Whitney, the Senior Warden, William K. Miller, and
several others who came to help, some of them completely unknown. This
process started in the Evening ("after supper") because it began to
appear evident that the fire may be slowly coming toward the church.
- A brief service was held by the Rector,
asking God that the church
might be spared. Then those present began taking out what removable
items were in the building and taking them to the Rectory and to the
house of William K. Miller on Telfair Street.
- Among the items that were removed to
safety were:
| -Silver and parish records
removed from the vault and taken to the Rectory. |
| -Most of the Vestments. |
| -The hangings. |
| -The Service Books. |
| -The movable memorials in brass. |
| -The Chancel Rail was taken out
by Dr. Fargo and a young woman, and buried in the yard. |
| -The wooden furniture of the
chancel including the bishop's
chair, reading desk, the litany desk, and the pulpit were removed by
Mr. Miller and some others. They were found the next morning near the
Southern Railway Bridge. |
- The steeple tower, or cupola, caught fire
first due to masses of
burning cotton sticking to its wooden construction. The sexton, Jeff,
rang the bell until the rope burned off. Then the bell continued to
ring due to the high winds. The flames were said to look like a flag
waving due to the high winds during the fire. Men in the tower put out
the fire "time and again" but it continued to catch fire. The cornice
of the church caught next, and soon thereafter the Vason Cotton
Warehouse next door exploded and enveloped the Parish House in flames.
- The Parish House, not yet three years in
use, was not fully paid for.
- Every tree and shrub in the churchyard
was killed by the fire
except in the northeast corner near the Celtic Cross where some elms
were unharmed.
- Among the major buildings that burned was
the YWCA on Reynolds
Street, in a rented building that belonged to Saint Paul's Charitable
Fund. Most of the assets of the Charitable Fund were tied up in real
estate that burned.
- 80 families at Saint Paul's lost their
homes, representing almost one third of the Parishioners that that time.
- The altar and other furniture was moved
to the Rectory at 723
Greene Street, where the bay window area was outfitted as a chapel,
properly vested with hangings and brasses.
- Lost in the fire:
| -20 residence blocks and 6
business blocks. (Whitney says 35 blocks). |
| -$5.5 - 6.5 million in value of
losses according to early estimates. |
| -600 residences were destroyed.
(Whitney says 700). |
| -3,000 people were homeless. |
| -29,500 bales of cotton were
burned up, worth an estimated $1.8 million. |
| -No lives were lost and no limbs
were broken. Just a few people were sent to the hospital with severe
injuries. |
- The extent of the fire:
| -West - the United States
Café in the 800 Block of Broad Street. |
| -East - East Boundary Street. |
| -North - The Savannah River. |
| -South - lower Greene and Telfair
Street, with one or two fires south of Telfair. |
- Major buildings that were burned:
| -In the 800 Block of Broad Street
- The Dyer Building,
$75,000; Richards Stationary, $25,000; Warren Block, $50,000; Contents,
$100,000. |
| -In the 700 Block of Broad Street
- Union Savings Bank,
$60,000; Postal Telegraph Building, $17,000; Empire Life Building (now
Lamar Building), $200,000; John J. Evans, $20,000; Western Union,
$20,000; Chronicle Building (now Marion Building), $180,000; Schneider
Building, $15,000; The Herald Building, $15,000; The Commercial Club,
$35,000; Masonic Temple, $30,000; Irish-American Bank, $25,000. |
| -600 Block of Broad Street
completely escaped the flames. |
| -600 Block of Reynolds, however,
was completely destroyed. |
| -All cotton warehouses north of
Reynolds and west of Saint
Paul's Church were destroyed, including Tubman High School (originally
built as First Christian Church). |
| -Houghton School on Greene Street. |
March 23, 1916: The Morning
After
Meeting of leading citizens is
called for
10:00 A.M. at the City
Council Chambers. Among those requested to attend to plan the relief
and clean-up efforts were William H. Barrett, Lansing Lee, W. P. White,
J. M. Hull, Rev. G. S. Whitney, Warren Walker, Bowdre Phinizy, C. S.
Castleberry, F. H. Barrett.
- A mass meeting of all Augusta citizens is
called by the Merchants'
and Manufacturers' Association. The purpose was to find a means to
alleviate suffering and to "officially let the world know that Augusta
is alive and will come out ahead as usual."
- A "Committee of Fifteen" is placed in
charge of relief, with
William H. Barrett acting as its spokesman. They needed in excess of
$50,000, with $35,000 immediately subscribed. They had received $4,000
for Bon Air guests. Those needing assistance were to fill out cards,
with confidentiality assured.
March 26, 1916
On the first Sunday after the
fire,
services were held in the Hall
of the Daughters of the Confederacy at the Courthouse. Offers had been
made to use the Sanctuaries of Saint John Methodist, First
Presbyterian, First Baptist, First Christian, Holy Trinity Lutheran and
the Synagogue. The Church of the Atonement and the Church of the Good
Shepherd also extended their offer of assistance.
- On the Sunday following the fire, Augusta
was filled with about
10,000 visitors who came to see the damage by automobile and train.
Hotels and restaurants did a booming business.
March 27, 1916
The Chronicle reported that about
75
insurance companies sustained
losses of about $1,550,000. Mr. Glander of the Metropolitan Insurance
Company went into his office in the Chronicle Building and saved their
company records. They had approximately 30,000 Augusta policyholders.
Many insurance companies immediately set up temporary offices in
downtown hotels to deal with claims.
- Remarkable buildings that did not burn in
the fire included Jeff
Thomas' frame house on the South side of Broad Street, the Widow's Home
on Greene Street, two frame houses on the northeast corner of Greene
and Elbert Streets owned by Jinks Burrus and A. H. Porter.
- Fire Chief Reynolds blamed the fire on
the following factors:
| -The Dyer Building's method of
construction caused it to be impossible to contain. |
| -Many open windows caused a large
draft inside the building. |
| -The open elevator shaft was
circled by wooden stairways, creating a flue effect for the fire. |
| -Although it had concrete floors,
they were laid over wooden supports, which burned and collapsed one
floor at a time. |
| -The building had inadequate fire
escapes. |
| -As the glass blew out, flames
shot across the street, catching the Union Savings Bank. |
| -Shoddy construction due to lax
building codes and inadequate enforcement of the laws that did exist. |
| -Lots of wooden back porches,
stairways and outbuildings in close proximity to one another on the
backs of lots. |
| -A wind from the Southwest of
30-50 miles per hour continued to spread the flames. |
| -Low water pressure made the use
of fire hoses ineffective. |
| -Shingle roofs served as kindling
in spreading the fire from house to house. |
March 28, 1916
Apparently in response to a discussion within the congregation, the
Senior Warden and attorney wrote a letter to former Rector, C. C.
Williams, expressing his opinion that if the church did not rebuild on
the site, that the property would revert to the state. This was based
on the wording of the original acts that required it to be used as a
place of permanent worship and that the burial grounds be maintained.
April 2, 1916
Confirmation services
are held in the rear of the church as previously planned, on the second
Sunday after the fire. The Celtic Cross was the altar, with pews from
the Grovetown and Saint Andrews Missions placed for an overflowing
congregation. Bishop Reese presided with a class of 26 Confirmands.
April, 1916
A large tent with a
wooden floor was placed on the west side of the churchyard for services
during Holy Week. A small altar was borrowed from the Saint Andrew's
Mission. The tent was 50 feet in diameter and accommodated 300 people,
but the heat soon caused services to be cut back to one in the early
morning and one at 6:00 P.M. This site was discontinued in July 1916
due to the heat under the tent. Thereafter all services were held in
the Hall of the Daughters of the Confederacy at the Courthouse.
April 24, 1916
The Easter Monday
Easter egg hunt was held as usual in the back yard of the church,
conducted by the Sunday School Department. 60 children attended the
hunt and ate ice cream cones. The 100th Annual Meeting of the Parish
was also held, with the election of the Churchwardens and Vestry, and
much discussion about the rebuilding of the church upon the foundations
of the old church. Tentative plans for rebuilding by H. T. E. Wendell,
the architect, were presented for discussion.
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Worship Services
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Sunday
7:45 - Rite I
9:00 - Rite II
11:00 - Rite II
Beginning May 27
8:00 - Rite I
10:00 - Rite II
Wednesday
Noon - Rite II in Chapel
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