Great Fire of 1901
The Great Fire of 1901 was a conflagration in Jacksonville, Florida, on May 3, 1901. It was one of the worst disasters in Florida history and the third largest urban fire in the U.S., after the Great Chicago Fire and the 1906 San Francisco fire.
Fire
Origin
In 1901, Jacksonville consisted mainly of wooden buildings with wood shingled roofs. The city had been suffering a prolonged drought, leaving building exteriors across the city dry and fire-prone. At around noon on Friday, May 3, 1901, workers at the Cleaveland Fibre Factory, located on the corner of Beaver and Davis Streets, left for lunch. Several minutes later, sparks from the chimney of a nearby building started a fire in a pile of Spanish moss that was laid out to dry. First, factory workers tried to extinguish it with a few buckets of water, as they had frequently done on similar occasions. However, the blaze was soon out of control due to increased wind from the east. A brisk northwest wind fanned the flames, which "spread from house to house, seemingly with the rapidity that a man could walk".[Image:Forsyth-st-ruins.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Forsyth Street ruins.]
In eight hours, the fire burned 146 city blocks; destroyed over 2,367 buildings, including the Afro-American Insurance Association, the first insurance company in the state; and left almost 10,000 residents homeless. It is said the glow from the flames could be seen in Savannah, Georgia, and the smoke plumes in Raleigh, North Carolina.
James Weldon Johnson, principal of a local school claimed, however, that firemen tried to save the fire from spreading to a white neighborhood, allowing black parts of town to burn down in the process:
"We met many people fleeing. From them we gathered excitedly related snatches: the fiber factory catches afire - the fire department comes - fanned by a light breeze, the fire is traveling directly east and spreading out to the north, over the district where the bulk of Negroes in the western end of the city live - the firemen spend all their efforts saving a low row of frame houses just across the street on the south side of the factory, belonging to a white man named Steve Melton."