READ: Poem about 1813 Fire
Every city has its memory of flame. December is the anniversary of fire in Portsmouth,
NH historians tell us. The three largest fires here, amazingly, all occurred on
Christmas week. The trio of Yuletide tragedies began Sunday December 26, 1802
at 4 am when the face of the city was suddenly disfigured by a devastating blaze.
It started on the site of the banking block in what is today Market Square and
obliterated the city along Daniel Street. In the central "Parade" only the North
Church and the Old State House were left standing.
On Wednesday morning December 24, 1806, the second great downtown fire moved
in from the Bow Street area, up Market Street and back toward the barely recovered
square. On Wednesday December 22, 1813, the third and worst fire took out 300
buildings along State Street, flattening the city like a bomb blast -- from where
the stone Unitarian Church stands today all the way to the Piscataqua River and
out to the tip of the pier there.
Blizzards, Yellow Fever, trade embargoes and the British War of 1812 combined
with the three crippling fires were almost more than the city could bear. Merchants
who had been burned out of Market Street and moved to the thriving State Street
area were burned out there too. Many quit their professions, while others quit
the city. Among them, the promising young NH attorney Daniel Webster, who lost
his Portsmouth house to the fire of 1813, relocated to nearby Massachusetts.

Fire feasts on wood, and until that time Market Square was a maze of one and
two-story timber-frame buildings linked by dirt roads half the width we know them
today. People kept barns, stored hay, used candles and oil lamps, burned wood,
cooked in their greasy fireplaces up creosote-choked chimneys. The threat of fire
was constantly with them in ways we can only imagine.
We have extensive records of earlier fires – a home torched by Indians here,
a barn lost from a stray cinder there – but it wasn’t until the population began
to grow and settle and shop in a central congested area, that such catastrophe
was possible. And it wasn’t until the city had gone to ashes three times that
influential (read "wealthy") townsmen were able to bring about the "brick laws"
that forbade the building of tall wooden structures downtown.
In this way, revolutionary and colonial Portsmouth changed into its industrial-strength
red brick era. So our "ancient" town is relatively new – all the tall brick buildings
we know downtown are from 1813 or later. Even the three main church buildings
are newer and the brick St. John’s Chapel by the river is a replacement for the
wooden one burned in Christmas 1806. Only wisps of the city that burned remain,
and for that reason we have lost touch with the architecture of the poor and common
people. Mostly, the distant homes of the rich remain with their wide protective
lawns. But tear off that awful marquee above the former Eagle Photo building and
you will see one of the oldest surviving wooden buildings downtown. The little
alley between it and the rebuilt North Church would have been a main thoroughfare
when Paul Revere stopped by in 1774. Multiply that little building all over town,
remove the brick, the lights, throw in hay carts and muddy streets and you begin
to see old Portsmouth before the great Christmas fires.
City fire "fighting" was a different battle then. Despite expensive "pumpers",
leather bucket brigades and the ultra-modern Portsmouth aqueduct, these three
winter infernos were unbeatable. From the mid-1700s, those who could afford to,
were members of Portsmouth "fire societies" at least two of which survive today
in symbolic social groups. Surprisingly, the main task of early volunteers was
not to battle Nature as much as to recoup their member’s worldly goods. Society
members carried "bed keys" used to dissemble the valuable family bed for hasty
removal. They wore black bags to carry off dishes and silver which they would
protect from vandals. They carried mops, presumably to clean up afterwards.
Despite the odds, they fought. An early newspaper report marveled at how the
women of Portsmouth did not flee in the face of the 1802 fire, but pitched in
and worked on the bucket brigades until they dropped from sheer exhaustion. Volunteers
from nearby towns were instrumental in spelling the spent firefighters and in
guarding valuables from the dozens of reported looters who many locals believed
were themselves the arsonists or "incendiaries" as they were called back then.

There are stories of charity. After the 1802 fire contributions came from around
the country for those who had lost their homes and shops. A reproduction of the
account book is in the files of the Portsmouth Athenaeum. All told, their gifts,
combined with local donations came to
$45,410.43. Damage was estimated then at $200,000 for the loss of nearly 200
buildings. Large sums were donated in 1806 and 1813 as well.
There are stories of treachery. One philanthropist, who rushed to contribute
$2,000 had his pocket cut away and his money stolen by thieves on his way to the
donation site. Newspapers played on the theme of arson and one local poem even
prayed, in rhyme, that those villains -- not punished by law -- would by punished
by God.
There are stories of valor too. In 1813 volunteers from Newburyport, Dover, Exeter,
Durham and surrounding towns saw the city in flames and came running, some bringing
their own "engines". Commander Isaac Hull, formerly commander of "Old Ironsides"
and newly installed at the Navy Yard, sent his shipyard firemen. According to
Nathaniel Adams’ "Annals" a group of 40 men arrived all the way from Salem, having
traveled 48 miles in six hours to relieve the fatigued locals. One man from Newburyport
rushed into a burning building and rescued a crying child.
But in all the tales of the Portsmouth Christmas fires, in article after article
and account after account, in three destructive days over more than a decade --
with over 500 buildings destroyed – we could find no record of a single death.
Not one, and that is the true miracle of the three Portsmouth Christmas fires.
READ: More Portsmouth Fires, 1846
TOP PHOTO: Detail from photograph by Aaron Rohde
Sources: Brewster’s Rambles and Nathaniel Adams 1823 "Annals of Portsmouth" reprinted
by Peter Randall Publishing; plus extensive files in Portsmouth Public Library
and Portsmouth Athenaeum. Ray Brighton’s "They Came to Fish" and "Rambles About
Portsmouth", Peter Randall Publishing;
Originally published (c) 1999. Revised 2005 by J. Dennis Robinson. All rights
reserved.
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THEFT, NOT FIRE, WAS HOT BUTTON
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