The fire of 1776 commenced in
a small wooden house on the
wharf, near the Whitehall Slip.
It was then occupied by a number
of men and women of bad
character. The fire began late
at night. There being but a very
few inhabitants in the city, in
a short time it raged
tremendously.
It burned all
the houses on the East side of
Whitehall Slip, and the West
side of Broad Street, to Beaver
Street. A providential and happy
circumstance occurred at this
time. The wind was then
south-westerly. About two
o'clock that morning, the wind
veered to the south-east. This
carried the flames of the fire
to the north-westward, and
burned both sides of Beaver
street to the east side of
Broadway, then crossed Broadway
to Beaver lane, and burning all
the houses on both sides of
Broadway, with some few houses
in New street, to Rector street,
and to John Harrison, Esq.'s
three-story brick house, which
house stopped the fire on the
east side of Broadway.
From
thence it continued burning all
the houses in Lumber street, and
those in the rear of the houses
on the west side of Broadway to
St. Paul's Church; then
continued burning the houses on
both sides of Partition street,
and all the houses in the rear
(again) of the west side of
Broadway to the North River. The
fire did not stop until it got
into Mortkile street, now
Barclay street. The College
yard, and the vacant ground in
the rear of the same, put an end
to this awful and tremendous
fire.
Trinity Church being
burned, was occasioned by the
flakes of fire that fell on the
south side of the roof. The
southerly wind fanned those
flakes of fire in a short time
to an amazing blaze, and it soon
became out of human power to
extinguish the same, the roof of
this noble edifice being so
steep that no person could go on
it.
St. Paul's Church was in the
like perilous situation. The
roof being flat, with a
balustrade on the eaves, a
number of the citizens went on
the same, and extinguished the
flakes of fire as they fell on
the roof. Thus, happily, was
this beautiful church saved from
the destruction of this dreadful
fire, which threatened the ruin
thereof and that of the whole
city.
The Lutheran Church being
contiguous to houses adjoining
the same fire, it was impossible
to save it from destruction.
This fire was so furious and
violently hot, that no person
could go near it, and there were
no fire-engines to be had at
that time in the city.
The number of houses that were
burned and destroyed in this
city at that awful conflagration
were thus, viz.:-
From Mortkile street to
Cortlandt
street................167
From Cortlandt street to Beaver
street.......... ......175
From Beaver street to the East
River...................151
___
Total..............................493
There being very few inhabitants
in the city at the time, and
many of those were afraid to
venture at night in the streets,
for fear of being taken up as
suspicious persons.
An
instance, to my knowledge,
occurred. A Mr. White, a decent
citizen and house carpenter,
rather too violent a loyalist,
and latterly had addicted
himself to liquor, was, on the
night of the fire, hanged on a
tavern sign-post, at the corner
of Cherry and Roosevelt street.
Several of the citizens were
sent to the Provost Guard for
examination; and some of them
remained there two and three
days, until they could give
satisfactory evidence of their
royalty.
Mr. Hugh Gain, in his Universal
Register for the year 1787, page
119, says__"New York is about a
mile and a half in length, and
half a mile broad, containing,
before the fires on the 21st of
September, 1776, and 3d of
August, 1778, about 4,200
houses, and 30,000 inhabitants."