*San Francisco Fire of 1851*
The San Francisco Fire of 1851 (May 3–4, 1851) was a catastrophic conflagration that destroyed a quarter of San Francisco, California.
*History
Around 11 pm on the night of May 3, 1851, a fire (possibly arson) broke out in a paint and upholstery store above a hotel on the south side of Portsmouth Square in San Francisco.[1][2][3] Fueled by increasingly high winds, the fire was initially carried down Kearny St. and then, as the winds shifted to the south, into the downtown area, where the elevated wood-plank sidewalks provided extra fuel.[1][2][4] The fire, which was visible for miles out to sea, continued for about 10 hours and eventually extended to at least 18 blocks of the main business district, an area three-quarters of a mile long by a third of a mile wide.[1][4] Before it was checked by reaching the waterfront, it burned down some 2000 buildings altogether, amounting by some estimates to three-quarters of the city.[1][3] One 19th century account of the destruction observes: "Nothing remained of the city but the sparsely settled outskirts."[4] The total damage has been estimated at around $10–12 million, a good deal of it uninsured as no insurance companies had yet been established in the city.[4][5]
Among the properties destroyed that day were the Niantic whaling vessel, which had been run aground to serve as a store and would subsequently be rebuilt as a hotel; a general store founded by Domenico Ghirardelli, who would go on to found the Ghirardelli Chocolate Company; and all half dozen of the city's newspapers apart from Alta Californian.[2][4]*
One of the most difficult of duties for the early California sheriffs was the execution of prisoners who had been sentenced to death.
*At least nine lives were lost in the fire, some of them in new, supposedly fireproof iron buildings whose doors and shutters expanded with the heat, trapping people inside.[1][3][4]
This fire is considered the sixth and worst of a series of major fires that had burned parts of San Francisco in just the year and a half since December 1849. In terms of property value, it did twice the damage of all those earlier fires combined.[1]*
Drawing of the hanging of John Jenkins in San Francisco by the 1851 Committee of Vigilance.
FOLLOWING the period of the volunteer Fire Department came the romantic age of the horse-drawn apparatus. The man-drawn fire engines, with pumps operated by men, the hose reels, and the hook and . . . .. go to
*A vivid description of the fire occurs in author Frank Marryat's memoir Molehills and Mountains:[1]